In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: Throwing your foam topper into the garbage can be detrimental to the environment. Instead, find local recycling centers and ask them to point you in the direction of recycling programs and dropoff sites for memory foam. Don't set it out with your standard recyclables, as it needs to be processed in a specialized facility. Visit Home for Foam for dropoff and pick-up locations: https://www.homeforfoam.com/foam-101/foam-recycling-centers. Some memory foam manufacturers will take your old foam bedding through buy-back or disposal agreements. Check your warranty and look for information on these kinds of transactions.  Visit your manufacturer's website and check their contact page for information on getting in touch with them. If you purchased your topper from a local store, call and ask if they can recycle if for you. Many public works departments and local health boards have recycling programs that specifically subsidize mattress recycling. Although created for mattress recycling, most of them also take related materials, including foam, steel, and wood, which are separated and used in new products. Take a look at Bye Bye Mattress to find a program near you: https://byebyemattress.com/find-a-facility/.
Summary: Drop your mattress topper off at a recycling center. Contact your mattress topper's manufacturer and ask about a recycling program. Call your municipality's board of health and inquire about a recycling.

In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: Once you’ve drafted your analysis, read it over and make sure that it flows in a logical way. Make sure that there are clear transitions between your ideas and that the order in which you present your ideas makes sense. For example, if your essay currently skips around between discussions of the red and blue elements of the poster, consider reorganizing it so that you discuss all the red elements first, then focus on the blue ones. When you’re writing an analysis, it’s easy to accidentally leave out details that might make your arguments clearer. Read over your draft carefully and look for any areas where you might have left out relevant information. For example, you might look for places where you could provide additional examples to support one of your major arguments. Check your essay for tangents or extraneous details that don’t support the main focus of your analysis. Remove any sentences or passages that aren’t directly relevant to what you’re trying to say.  For example, if you included a paragraph about Dorothy Plotzky’s previous work as a children’s book illustrator, you may want to cut it if it doesn’t somehow relate to her use of color in advertising. Cutting material out of your analysis may be difficult, especially if you put a lot of thought into each sentence or found the additional material really interesting. Your analysis will be stronger if you keep it concise and to the point, however. Once you’ve spotted any major organizational issues, go over your analysis carefully. Look for any problems with spelling, grammar, or punctuation, and correct them. This is also a good time to make sure that all of your citations are correctly formatted. You may find it helpful to have someone else go over your essay and look for any mistakes you might have missed.
Summary: Check that the organization of your analysis makes sense. Look for areas where you might clarify your writing or add details. Cut out any irrelevant passages. Proofread your writing and fix any errors.

In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: These handheld tools allow you to reach right against the edge of the wall. If using an orbital sander, you probably already reached the walls. In this case, you can skip this section, and remove the finish at the corners with any handheld sander. For this small remaining area, you may be able to skip some of the steps you used on the whole floor. That said, you will need to start with a coarse grit to remove the old finish. Move the edge sander back and forth along the wall in small triangular movements. This is less likely to leave marks than a side-to-side motion. Most tools are designed so moving right (clockwise) along the wall is easier than the other direction. You can now skip straight to 80-grit sandpaper. Sand carefully until the edge matches the rest of the floor. If you want to finish with 100-grit sandpaper, you'll need special techniques to avoid burning the floor and paper. You'll need a sander with a slow speed setting, and preferably an "open coat" sandpaper. Your floor is now ready to be stained and/or waxed. Try to keep dirt, abrasives, and heavy objects off the floor until it is finished.
Summary:
Use an edge sander. Start with 36-grit. Sand in a clockwise zigzag pattern. Repeat with finer sandpaper. Vacuum up the dust.