Q: Check with your local government or visit a community recycling day. They may accept pure antifreeze or direct you where to go. Other good places to check are machine shops and oil change shops. Many of them accept antifreeze for recycling. Wastewater management places may also accept small amounts of antifreeze.  Search for facilities by searching your city’s website, searching online for mechanics in your area, or calling disposal companies in the area. There may be a small facility usage fee when recycling antifreeze. These fees will be greater at hazardous waste disposal facilities. Even a drop of oil or gas in antifreeze taints it. This tainted antifreeze is considered hazardous and must be shipped to a different facility than normal used antifreeze. Look at it for signs of muddiness. Normal antifreeze is brightly-colored and smells sweet. Damage to a vehicle can cause fluids to mix. If you aren’t sure, consider the antifreeze polluted. Store the antifreeze in containers such as old antifreeze bottles. Make sure these containers are well-sealed. Both types of antifreeze must be shipped to different places, so label them to remember which one is which. When flushing antifreeze out of a vehicle, use a different drain pan and funnel than you use for oil and other fluids. This antifreeze can’t be recycled. Since it is considered hazardous, only a hazardous waste disposal facility will accept it. Ask your local government. Mechanics at repair shops may also be able to tell you where they dispose of their antifreeze. You can’t ship antifreeze in the mail. You have to bring the container to the facility. A commercial hauler or waste oil service may also do it for you. Once you reach the facility, get a receipt that shows where you delivered the antifreeze.  Hiring a commercial hauler for hazardous antifreeze makes the process easier. This is only necessary for shipping large amounts of antifreeze. If you transport it yourself, you will need to provide your own documentation about using the truck. Always consult your government for disposal regulations.
A: Contact recycling centers for antifreeze disposal locations. Identify antifreeze that looks dirty or smells like gas. Place tainted and pure waste antifreeze into separate containers. Find hazardous waste disposal centers for tainted antifreeze. Drive the antifreeze to a recycling facility.

Q: When you try to remove black dye, it sometimes turns this reddish, brassy color. If this is the shade of red that you are going for, you are done and don't need to dye your hair! If this is not the shade that you are doing for, then read on to learn how.  Be aware that the brassy color may affect the final outcome. It will make the final color look brighter with golden undertones. Even if the color is close to what you want to achieve, you may still want to cover it with a semi-permanent gloss that is a shade or two lighter than your hair color. Stripping the color from your hair makes it more susceptible to hair dyes, which may yield a darker result than you want. To avoid going too dark, choose a shade of dye that is 1 to 2 shades lighter than the color you want to achieve. Hair dye can get messy, so put on an old shirt or drape an old towel around your shoulders. Apply petroleum jelly to the skin around your hairline, the back of your neck, and the tips of your ears. Pull on a pair of plastic dyeing gloves and cover your counter with newspaper or plastic bags. Prepare the dye according to the instructions. Section off your hair, then apply the dye starting from the roots. Allow the dye to sit on your hair for the time recommended, typically 20 to 30 minutes, then rinse it out with cool water.  Do not use hot water to rinse the dye out, or you risk fading it. Use only the conditioner included with the dye kit. If you must use shampoo, use a color-safe, sulfate-free shampoo. However, if you are using a permanent color, then you will need to shampoo your hair after rinsing out the dye to prevent the dye from getting darker. While not absolutely necessary, this will make your hair look a lot nicer. Apply the "step 1" part of the treatment first, leave it on for the recommended time, then rinse it out. Follow up with the "step 2" part of the treatment, wait for the recommended time, and rinse it out as well.  The "step 1" part of the treatment can make your hair feel crunchy. This is normal. You may be able to find this in a grocery store, but you'll have better luck in a beauty supply store. Again, this is not completely necessary, but it will help protect your new hair color and keep it from fading. When it comes to red hair dye, this is especially useful; red hair dye is known to fade faster than others. An ion treatment is another product that you apply to your hair then rinse out. You can find it in a beauty supply store. Wash your hair with color-safe, sulfate-free shampoos and conditioners. Use cool water when washing and rinsing. Limit the use of heat-styling tools, such as flat irons and curling irons, and apply a heat protectant when you do use them. Cover your hair with a hood, scarf, or hat before stepping out into the sun, or apply a UV heat protectant.
A: Decide whether you actually need to dye your hair red. Select a dye 1 to 2 shades lighter than your desired color. Protect your skin, clothing, and work space. Apply your desired dye according to the instructions on the package. Follow with a 2-step protein treatment to make your hair stronger. Finish with an ion color treatment to protect the color. Use color-safe products to preserve your hair color.

Q: Steel bars Bronze
A: Browse through of the various articles:

Q: In Minecraft, skins are essentially pieces of paper folded around your character to change its appearance. You can edit the color of pixels, or little squares, to make designs, outfits, and costumes. You are limited to editing individual squares, and cannot make complex curves or shapes. Skin editors simplify this process by letting you “paint” your design right onto your character. A quick internet search for “Minecraft Skin Maker” will reveal a host of sites that let you make your own skins.  Some popular sites include MCSkinner, SkinEdit, Minecraftskins, Novaskin, and Minecraft Skin Editor. While very difficult, you can make a custom skin without an editor in Microsoft Paint or Photoshop. This takes careful precision to fit perfectly on your character. You can design almost anything, from astronauts, pirates, and monsters to a version of yourself. The editor will automatically turn your image into a skin, so have fun and be creative. Some sites let your upload your skin directly to Minecraft, but most require that you save the skin and add it to your character yourself. If you want to tweak someone else’s design, or you want to change your own, open the .png file in a photo editor like Photoshop. Here, you can change the colors or edit the pattern. You must stay within the boundaries of the skin, or the skin will not fit your Minecraft character. The site paint.net lets you edit skins with ease. Use the same username and password you used to register for the game to log onto the website. This is your personalized page where you can edit your account. You can navigate directly to www.minecraft.net/profile instead. Click on your homemade skin and press “Upload.” Wait for a confirmation message before continuing. If you already have Minecraft open, restart it. Don’t forget to hit F5 to change your view and see your skin. If you have not updated Minecraft since version 1.3, you will not see your new skin. Update your version of Minecraft to the latest edition to make sure you can see the fruits of your labor. As of May 27, 2015, the newest edition of Minecraft for PC is 1.8.
A:
Understand how skins work. Navigate to a “skin customizer” online. Use the pre-made colors and accessories to make a custom skin. Save the skin as a .png file. Alternatively, customize pre-made skins in a photo editor. Log on at Minecraft.net. Click on the “Profile” tab at the top of the page. Click on “Browse” and select your skin. Start Minecraft to see your new skin. Remember that the earliest versions of Minecraft do not allow skin changes.