If you are like many people, you may be guilty of too many details. Take an honest look at your kitchen. Is it too cluttered? You can easily sidestep this problem by taking a few things away or simply rearranging your storage system to keep the extras from view. A new kitchen may emerge just from this one step. If you have no choice but to display all of your appliances and dishware for a lack of storage, you're going to have to get some! Buy a cart, bring an extra piece in, or invest in some attractive bins and containers. If you stick to whites like a piece of rice, you risk ending with a kitchen that seems hospital-like and cold. Add a few accent colors that are bright and cheery to make it seem warm, lived in, and loved. Choose certain spots for your color. The seating? The lighting? An area of the countertop? In addition, do not feel pressure to stick to just one -- different hues of the same color work well together -- and remove the pressure to find the exact right tone. Plants and flowers add lively decoration to any room and are good for the environment. Add a functional decoration to your kitchen by creating a window box with fresh herbs, or replace fresh-cut flowers in a kitchen table vase every few days to keep it looking new.  Make sure they match your theme! A simplistic, neutral kitchen would benefit nicely from a simple Easter Lily or two while a kitchen with more pizzazz might look better with a bunch of carnations or daisies. What flower fits your kitchen's personality? Herbs are not grown in factories, you know. To kill two birds with one stone, grow them yourself in your kitchen window! What a cute little way to spruce up your kitchen and jazz up your meals. For those of us that don't have a massive budget to install gold-flecked countertops lined with rubies, a fun way to spruce up your kitchen's ambiance is to spice up your fridge! There are loads of fun choices available that you can cater specifically to your personality. Sometimes it's the little things in life. Buy a whole bunch of magnetic letters and leave your roommate a nice message about how you drank the last diet Coke, or even put magnets on the back of photos from favorite vacations. If it sticks, it's a possibility. When you have one look going on in your kitchen (probably smooth and flat), it can look one-dimensional and blah. To add an extra zing to your cooking space, work in texture, too. Go for textured containers, textured linens, and textured wall hangings or curtains. A little bit here and there will go a long away against the smoothness of the countertops, the table, and the cabinets. Long gone are the days when the kitchen was just the kitchen. Now, the living room is the dining room, the kitchen is the common area, and the dining room could even be for show. While you don't have to embrace the lifestyle, consider jazzing up your kitchen with no-exactly-meant-for-the-kitchen pieces. A china cabinet, armoire, or credenza is a good way to start expanding the look of your kitchen. If you have a great piece, make it the focal point. Voila, instant theme! Add bookshelves, a bench, or other multi-purpose pieces to seal the deal. After all, this is your kitchen. One way to give the whole room a cohesive theme is to choose one pattern for your curtains, tablecloth, and hand towels and create a matching set of linens. The only hard part of this is committing to just one! Give your kitchen a celebratory feel by changing out linens, curtains, or dishes for special holidays. Rotate these items, which all complement the personality of your kitchen, with the changing seasons to add seasonal colors and elements. This has one extra (albeit teeny) benefit: with the seasons, you can give it a good cleaning. Kitchens are the rooms that get dirtiest, and if you schedule four annual overhauls, your appliances, dishware, and linens will stay good as new.
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One-sentence summary -- Declutter. Use color to make it cozy. Add fresh flowers. Jazz up your fridge magnets. Use texture to your advantage. Add unexpected pieces of furniture. Change the linens. Switch décor seasonally.

Q: If you ended your first date with a promise to call, follow up within the next few days.  If you reflected on the date and realize you're no longer interested, give her the courtesy of letting her know you don't think it's going to work out. If you want to continue the relationship, don't play hard to get. Be consistent in your communication. Once you've gone on a few dates, a great way to get to know each other better is to introduce the girl you're interested in to your friends. If they hit it off, you might be encouraged to take the relationship to a deeper level. Consistency is important when you're dating, but you should also throw in some romantic surprises. The surprises will depend on the personality of the girl - maybe she'd love it if you cooked dinner for her, sent her flowers at work, or planned a fun weekend trip. She'll be impressed by your thoughtfulness if you mix it up sometimes.
A: Call her when you say you will. Introduce her to your friends. Throw in some surprises.

Article: It's at the top-left corner of the screen. All of the stored data will display in the right panel. This button is the lower left corner of the data display panel. This deletes the selected data from iCloud. You can repeat these steps for each app.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Click the Apple menu . Select an app from the list. Click Delete below the list.

Article: Just like the heart-shaped copper wire, this homopolar motor uses a simple AA battery sitting atop a neodymium magnet in a vertical position with its positive pole oriented above the negative pole.  Loop some copper wire around the magnet.  You need not make the whole loop touch the base; an ovular loop which touches the battery at just two points is as acceptable as a circular loop which grips the whole magnet. Once the loop around the base is complete, bend the wire up and away from the loop around the magnet.  The corkscrew’s diameter should be just a few millimeters wider than that of the battery.  Stop the corkscrew about halfway up the length of the battery. At a point about three millimeters above the highest point on the battery, press the wire inwards at a ninety degree angle toward the center of the positive pole.  Once the wire is over the positive pole’s central divot, bend it down so that it touches the divot, then races back up and away from the divot in a hairpin turn. Instead of a heart shape, bend the copper wire into the shape of a ballerina, arms outstretched.  Begin by turning the wire, now pointing straight up, in a ninety degree bend about one and a half inches above the positive pole of the battery.  Approximately one centimeter along this length, pull the wire into a hairpin turn, angling it back toward the ninety degree turn you just made. This will be the dancer’s head.  Once on the other side of the dancer’s “neck,” bring the wire back down on the other side of the dancer, mirroring the bends you just made.  You should end up with a “T” shape with a circle above the central junction.  You cannot end where you began, though (touching the central divot on the positive pole of the battery), and so will need to clip the wire at a point about half a centimeter above the positive pole of the battery. It may help to use a template or outline you’ve drawn or printed from the internet when shaping the wire into the ballerina form.  You can print the ballerina outline or template, then lay the wire over it, bending along the outline to get the desired shape.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Begin by making a loop which fits around the magnet. Twist the wire up into a semi-corkscrew. Change the wire’s direction into a perfectly vertical line. Make a tiny dancer. Angle the wire up in a ninety degree turn and pull the wire into a roughly circular shape about the size of a nickel.