Doesn't water-resistant fabric cancel protection if there are no zipper garages or Aquaguard zippers? Trying to figure out what are the most important things to prevent leak?
"ä" and "å" are NOT "a", nor anywhere close to it. They are completely separate letters, much as C and G are. For a quick and dirty way, to get somewhere in the ballpark of a correct pronunciation of "ä" and "å": Treat "ä" as "e", and "å" as "o". Saying /reven/, is still quite far from räven, but it's far better than saying /raven/. The same being true of /konken/ vs /kanken/. Also "æ" in Norwegian/Danish, is the exact same as Swedish/German "ä", so treat that as "e" as well. I do not, however, have a similar tip, for getting in the ballpark of correct, with "ö". (or "ø", in Norwegian/Danish)
Looks like this can be used for gadgets too... as a tech organizer. Thoughts?
The world is your oyster 😃 Absolutely!
-Eric
Doesn't water-resistant fabric cancel protection if there are no zipper garages or Aquaguard zippers? Trying to figure out what are the most important things to prevent leak?
get one that is water proof than... water resistance is not water proof
"ä" and "å" are NOT "a", nor anywhere close to it. They are completely separate letters, much as C and G are. For a quick and dirty way, to get somewhere in the ballpark of a correct pronunciation of "ä" and "å": Treat "ä" as "e", and "å" as "o". Saying /reven/, is still quite far from räven, but it's far better than saying /raven/. The same being true of /konken/ vs /kanken/.
Also "æ" in Norwegian/Danish, is the exact same as Swedish/German "ä", so treat that as "e" as well.
I do not, however, have a similar tip, for getting in the ballpark of correct, with "ö". (or "ø", in Norwegian/Danish)
Has anyone used this as a purse?