Write an article based on this "Find the image for which you want to change the background. Right-click the image. Select Open with. Click Paint. Select the drawing tool. Change the drawing tool's width. Double-click the light green box. Draw carefully around the part of the image you want to save. Use the light green color to fill in the surrounding space. Save the image. Use a different program to replace the green screen."
article: Go to the image that you want to use for this project. You can use any image, but keep in mind that a higher-resolution image will be easier to work with. Doing so prompts a drop-down menu. It's near the middle of the drop-down menu. A pop-out window will appear. This option is in the pop-out menu. Doing this will open your photo in Paint. Click the pencil-shaped icon in the "Tools" section of the Paint toolbar to do so. Click the Size drop-down box, then click the thickest line in the resulting drop-down menu. It's in the upper-right side of the Paint window. This will help create a boundary between the image for which you want to change the background and the section of the photo that you'll replace with a green screen. You can zoom in by clicking the + icon in the lower-right corner of the window. The best manner for doing this will vary depending on your image; for example, if the left side of your image is mostly background that you want to delete later, you can select the rectangle drawing icon, click Fill, click Solid color, and then click the Color 2 box and double-click the light-green option. You can then click and drag across the section you want to remove to block it out with a large green box. When you're done, you should have a green background surrounding your subject. Once you've added the green screen background to your image, save the image as a new file by doing the following:  Click File. Select Save as. Click JPEG picture. Enter a file name, then click a save location (e.g., Desktop). Click Save. Unfortunately, MS Paint can't replace your green screen with a different image; you'll have to use your preferred photo manipulation option (e.g., Photoshop) or video editor to do this. Since the whole background is the same color, any green screen editing should leave you with only your initial subject on whatever background you select.

Write an article based on this "Hang hooks on either side of your window. Measure the height and distance between the hooks to size your voile. Drape the voile Tie the voile to the hook with yarn or thread. Adjust the voile from the untied side until you’re happy with how it hangs. Tie the voile around your second hook to secure it in place."
article: Measure 6 in (15 cm) out from each side your window and 2 in (5.1 cm) above the top of the window so to place your hooks. Install the hooks so they’re level with one another or else your voile will hang crooked when you drape it.  You can screw decorative hooks, or finials, into your wall or you can use adhesive-backed hooks if you don’t want to cause any wall damage. Make sure to get hooks that match the aesthetic of your room. Use a tape measure to find the length from the floor up to the top of your hooks. Then measure how far apart your hooks are. Multiply the height you found by 2 and add that product to the distance between your hooks. Add about 12 in (30 cm) to that length so you can drape the voile without pulling it too tight. over the hooks so it frames your window. Stand on a step ladder to drape the voile over the top of the first hook. Move the ladder to the other hook so you can put the voile over it. Lightly pull on the ends of the voile to adjust the lengths on each side until they’re symmetrical. You may also set a curtain rod on the hooks and loop the voile around the center of the rod. This can add a small decorative touch to the top of your window. When you’re happy with how one side of the voile hangs, tie a knot around the hook and voile so it doesn’t move. Be sure the thread or yarn you use is the same color as the voile so it doesn’t clash. Keep the knot tight enough where it holds the voile in place, but loose enough so you can still make adjustments if you need to. You don’t have to tie the voile to the hook if you don’t want to. Pull on the end of the voile that isn’t tied to change how far it drapes in the center of your window. Make sure the voile isn’t pulled tight across the top of the window, or else it won’t look as nice. Take a few steps back from the window and look at it after you make an adjustment to see if you’re happy with how it hangs. Use the same type of knot you used on the other hook so your voile doesn’t move around. Make sure the thread or yarn you use doesn’t have any elasticity, or else it may stretch and start to sag. Secure the knot tight enough so the voile doesn’t fall, but so you can still make changes to the length if you need to. Use thread that’s the same color as your voile so it’s not visible.

Write an article based on this "Choose an ideal area for your baseball field. Set up home plate. Determine the location of second base. Find your pitcher’s mound. Locate first and third base."
article:
Pick a spot that’s level and free of obstructions. If any part of the ground rises slightly above the rest, plan to make this your infield. If possible, select an area where strong, dense grass already grows for proper turf.  Although the infield’s measurements are standardized, the size and shape of the outfield may vary from field to field. To have a total distance of 400 feet from home plate to the backend of outfield, you will need an open field of roughly 195,000 square feet.  If you’re constructing a baseball field for official play (as opposed to one for neighborhood pickup games) and no ideal patches of turf are available, choose one where the grass can be easily nurtured back to health. If no such area exists, hire a professional landscapist to plant adequate turf. To maintain quality, install both an irrigation and drainage system if your field is for official play. Determine where “home” will be. Position your plate. Face the flat portion of the plate toward the field so that the back corner points away from it. For official play, plan to remove the grass surrounding home plate. Once you’ve positioned your plate, measure a 13-foot circle encompassing it, with the back corner of the plate as its center. Use spray-paint to trace the circle of turf to be removed later. Begin your measurement from the back corner of home plate. From there, extend your tape measure straight forward from home plate into the infield. Measure a distance of a 127 feet and 3 3/8 inches (38.795 meters). Mark this measurement with a stake in the ground. If you’re only setting up a diamond for a friendly neighborhood game, go ahead and place your second base down now, with the mark from your stake as its center. After you’ve marked second base, keep your tape measure fully extended. Slowly retract your tape measure until you’re 60 feet and 6 inches away from home plate. Stake the ground here to mark where the front of your pitcher’s rubber will be.  For a temporary field, go ahead and place your pitcher’s rubber now, with the front of the rubber centered at the mark you’ve just made in the ground. Position the rubber so that it’s parallel to the front of home plate. For a permanent field to be used for official play, plan to create a pitcher’s mound. Once you’ve marked where the front of the rubber will be, continue to slowly retract the tape measure toward home plate by another 18 inches. Stake the ground here to mark the center of your mound. With this mark as your center, measure an 18-foot circle surrounding it. Use spray-paint to trace the area for later turf-removal and/or added soil to elevate the mound. To find each base, use two tape measures. Begin one measurement from the back tip of home plate. Start the other from the center of second base. Extend each tape measure in the direction of either first or third base until they both read 90 feet. Stake the ground where the two tape measures meet..  To set up a diamond right away for immediate play, set the bases down now with the back corners of each (the ones pointing away from the infield) positioned at the marks you’ve just made in the ground. For a professional field, use spray-paint to trace all of the baselines from stake to stake for turf-removal. Also measure and trace a 13-foot radius around each base within the square created by the baselines for the players’ slide areas.