INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Buy a liquid concealer 1 shade lighter than your skin for the most natural look. This will help you cover any blemishes or trouble spots apparent through your full-coverage foundation.  Avoid choosing a concealer that matches your skin exactly, as it may darken rather than camouflage trouble spots. Your local beauty supply store or department store associate can help match you for a concealer of the appropriate lightness. Use a small, pointy makeup brush to dab concealer on the darkest point of your under eye circles, typically right below the inner and outer eye corners. Avoid applying concealer to your lower eyelid, which can collect product in its many creases. If you feel you need additional under-eye coverage, focus your application on the shadow your dark circle creates in your tear trough rather than on the puffiness below the eye itself. Examine your skin to notice any blemishes still poking through your full-coverage foundation. Apply concealer to the head of the blemish and directly underneath it to mask the dark shadow that a raised pimples can create. Avoid applying lighter concealer above a blemish to cover it. This may actually highlight the blemish, making it appear more prominent. Using a kabuki brush, dust the powder on in a W shape. Start at your hairline on one side and move down your cheekbone to the apple of the cheek, up the bridge of your nose, down the bridge of your nose to the other cheek, then up the opposite cheekbone to your hairline on the other side.  Avoid matte finishing powders, which can make your makeup look cakey. Use a translucent powder with a little sheen to reflect the light and help your makeup look natural. If you don’t have a kabuki brush, use the puff that comes with your powder. Before applying the powder, tap any excess powder off the puff on the side of the compact. Puffs can hold a more concentrated amount of product than a brush, and doing this will prevent you from applying excess product.

SUMMARY: Use a concealer 1 shade lighter than your skin. Use your concealer to cover under-eye darkness. Use your fine concealer brush to touch up blemishes. Finish the look with a luminous powder.

In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: Before you start making calls of your own, you need a solid handle on what turkey calls sound like. You can’t imitate what you don’t understand. Find recordings of different turkey sounds, or better yet, sit down in the forest and listen to them.  Recognize that turkeys are social animals'; they travel in groups and make noises to communicate. Your turkey calls will be best if you think of them as language, not just noise. A variety of turkey calls can gain turkey's attention, pull or push them in certain directions, and either soothe or scare them. This type of call is popular and reliable, and is well-known for being the easiest to learn for novices. Because it is so easy to use, you can start using the box call as you develop an ear for sounds. Experimenting with it will help you differentiate between the calls, and what it takes in terms of pressure, friction, and duration to produce them.  Box calls can be purchased over the Internet, but many like to buy them in person, so they can test them beforehand. You can get a solid one for around $15 (USD), but many cost $30 or more. Wooden box calls have been around for over a century. There are many types of wood available, all valuable for their versatility and timbre.  Aluminum box calls are also useful, as they last longer in wet weather. Before you practice with your box call or set out to hunt with it, rub down the moving surfaces with a wax-free chalk. (This should be available where you purchase your other hunting supplies.) It’s a good idea to do this at least once during your hunting session, as well. Yelps are some of the most well-known turkey calls, so they’re a good one to master. Slide the lid of the box, across the open box with pressure to create friction. Swing it smoothly to create a full sound--don’t stop in the middle.  This sound imitates the noise a turkey makes when trying to reconnect with its flock.  Hold the paddle gently instead of pulling it firmly.  You can vary the sound of the yelp by changing the speed and friction you use. Yelps are a good basic, but not the end-all be-all of turkey calls. Don’t rest on your laurels once you’ve mastered this sound--keep learning new ones. Hold the box call vertically (so that its long end is perpendicular to the forest floor). Now, shake it vigorously so that the lid clatters against the box. Do this a bit more slowly to make a gobble (a noise meant to attract female turkeys and challenge tom turkeys). Moving more quickly will produce a cackle (which turkeys use to communicate their locations to one another).  Use this call to provoke the turkey to gobble in response, thus give away its location. As you do this, don’t move around too much. Because the box call requires physical activity, the motion can easily spook the birds if they are nearby.
Summary: Listen to turkeys. Buy a box call. Chalk it up. Try a yelp. Gobble and cackle.

INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Your t-shirt may get stretched out in the mask-making process but you should be able to wear it again. Your arms should not go into the t-shirt. Slide your t-shirt neckline down so that the neckline rests above your eyebrows and on the bridge of your nose. This will give your mask a more streamlined look. Folding the collar also covers the shirt tag. Tie them tightly so that the knot does not come loose later. If you are planning on wearing a full ninja costume, tuck the rest of the t-shirt into the shirt of your ninja costume.

SUMMARY:
Take a black or dark colored T-shirt and turn it inside out. Slip the t-shirt over your head but do not pull it past your shoulders. Fold both the top and bottom collar in so that the seams are not showing. Take the sleeves and tie them behind your head. Spread the rest of the t-shirt over your shoulders.