Here's the commercial:
Picture a grandma serving salad to the family. Someone lifts a fork to
their mouth and horrors! It's black and full of sprocket holes!
Junior says "GRANDMA! That was my science project! Not dinner!"
Dad pours on the Thousand Island and munches away.
8*}
>>> Judy asked on 28 Nov.1995:
>>> >Maybe there's a language warp at work here, but you seem to be saying
>>> >that you do something to your negatives in a salad centrifuge...would
>>> >that be what we whirl lettuce leaves in to dry them?
>>> >Hunh?
>>> >What?
>>> >Would you tell us more
>>> Hi Judy,
>>> Of course I am not a native speaker , but some time ago I was fed up
>>>with the
>>> stains on my negatives. Even using distilled water and/or AGEPON was not a
>>> satisfying solution. Especially thin negs or larger black area's caused
>>> problems.
>>> By seeing a salad centrifuge working the idea was born.
>>> After washing the negs , I put them -before taking them out of the reel-
>in this
>>> centrifuge , the heart of the reel points to the wall of the centrifuge. A
>>> little whirling and there are no drops on the negs anymore.
>>> IKEA sells them for less than 5 US Dollars :-)
>>> greetings Henk
>>>
>>
>>Whoa there, Henk!
>>
>>Do you realize you could get rich from this idea?
>>(if you're not already)
>>Let's market that sucker to the photog market for $49.95.
>>We can call it the "Centrifuge Aerator".
>>A Highly technical scientific devise that
>>cost millions in research to develop.
>>
>>:*}
>>
>>Martine Sherrill
>>martine@wfu.edu
>>
>>
>
>Slogans, anyone? For openers, how 'bout "Lettuce take your film for a spin."
>
>Peter Bacon
>kato@cts.com
Martine Sherrill
Wake Forest University
Winston-Salem, NC
martine@wfu.edu