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Oh Jackie 💖 I lovelovelove your pages. They turned out so beautifully. You achieved such a harmonious combination between the meaning your memories have for you and the design of the collage. What a precious memory. And it reminded me of having eaten my first clams and calamari during a biology lesson, because our teacher wanted us to expand our food experience. That was in the late 60ties. Later, as a student, I liked them, because I knew them already. And your video brought back so many memories of my two grandmothers. I will have to digest that over this whole Sunday. Oh my dear 💓! You are such a darling, Jackie ❣ Lots of hugs, Britta
Britta! How brave you were to eat clams during biology 😳😍 I'm glad you liked them enough to enjoy them outside of school too. I'm glad to have given you a reason to think about your grandmothers again. 🥰
What a heartwarming story behind all of this. I have an old recipe book from my mom. I had a scrapbook one. But I think we tossed it because it was just crumbling away. 😢❤
I’m so excited… my family dr gave me a whole role of medical exam paper! can’t wait to experiment….. can’t wait to see your experimentation! Thank you for sharing your talent.
I’m going to guess you look like your father because you definitely have Uncle Mick’s smile! I also have been lucky enough to be the keeper of my grandmother’s recipes, tho she did not write down most of them unfortunately. I tear up every time I see her handwriting, I’m not sure why because writing is not something I associate with her, but it is so much part of my memory of her❤ Lovely page, Jackie! ❤
Thank you very much, Cindy - the handwriting gets a lot of people 💜 I actually wasn't a blood relative to Uncle Mike. He was my aunt's husband, having said that, I do look like my Dad - especially his long toes 😂 - but really everyone in my family has a big smile. 😀🥰
Hi, lovely clam girl 🤩! A very special and touching episode from your art studio celebrating nostalgia and honouring family members. Nostalgia is often perceived as waste of time and superfluous, but it's nurishing and invigorating when you don't get stuck inside memories. Your grandmother's handwriting is like the cherry on top! And then ... that XXXXL graphite stick 😲! So funny! I was lost for words like you!, girl! I've never seen that one before! Thank you for introducing it and making me laugh🤣! The marks are wonderful! I will try your glaze recipe one day ... looks amazing ... and I have to memorize "shoot from the hip-collage" ! Aloha from Berlin & a lovely weekend ❤🧡💛💚💜
WOWSA!!! wonderful! You really gave me many techniques to advance my beginner project and at the same time you showed me how to use art as a way to develop storylines through the preservation of past memories that honor the lives of your ancestors that shaped your own beingness. Thank you so much! I.will watch this video over and over again!
Thank you very much, Sally - I am so happy that this video connected with you. I love it when I find new and unexpected ways to use my creativity and I hope you do too. 🥰
Oh, wow, I’ve been wanting to do something like this, so thank you for this tutorial. By the way this Wisconsin ole girl married a Gloucester Boy back in 1953. His father and three Uncles were Gloucester fishermen. His grandfather was lost at sea. On March 24, 1906 The Gloucester Times wrote an article about Captain James H. Goodwin of the School of Agnes was swept from the deck and drowned. My husband was named after his Grandfather. Last summer my family and I visited Gloucester. I wanted to show them where their Grandfather lived and Great Great Grandfather lived. It was a wonderful time to see Good Harbor Beach and Rockport. Thank you for stirring up the good memories.
The life of a fisherman has always been hard and dangerous. What I didn't share was that Uncle Mike was lost at sea in the late 1950s. My grandmother took care of and raised my aunt, my mother, and my cousin (Uncle Mike's daughter) all under one tiny roof. She did a great job - they all are/were lovely, independent, and strong women. I haven't been to Gloucester in about 8 years - it's time to go back. 🥰
Beautiful, as always :) Your description of how much your Grandmother meant to you at the tender age of 11, was also beautifully written. How lucky I feel to be a part of your community 💜
Jackie, I’m at a loss for words with this spread….my Grandmother also had a love of foods, numerous recipe books, and recipes torn from a magazine or newspaper. She was always making something new. Our family had our family reunions every year in Bristol, PA over Labor Day weekend…I think we made it to almost 100 consecutive years! We ALWAYS had bushels and bushels of clams for steamed clams every night of the reunion. Most years there would be at least 65 of us, but usually a lot more. I now live in WA and haven’t been to a reunion in forever. Thanks for the trip down memory lane.
Oh Jackie, I am speechless!! And many tears have flooded my face while watching you recreate wonderful memories while sharing another huge chunk of your heart with all of us who've been blessed to find you and your joy! xoxoxo Deanna
I always include my handwriting in art journals or scrapbooking and encourage others to do the same just for that reason! Many years from now, other people in my family will be looking at those pages.
Beautiful Jackie! My grandmother wrote a recipe book when she was in hiding during the 2nd ww and she and my grandfather were hungry. They started fantasizing about food and she wrote it all down and we cherish it. I also have a lot of manuscript left from my father and use that in my collage as well. I think he would love that idea (just as your grandmother probably would). Thanks for all your videos!🍀💖
What an incredible story and treasure, Machteld! They must have been remarkable people to be so creative and clever during such an awful time. Thank you very much for sharing that with me. 🥰
What a beautiful memory you have of your grandmother as explained in your Newsletter. Your Newsletter arrives here in Australia in the early hours of Sunday morning and I can't wait to watch it while having my breakfast. I also watch your videos more than once as I enjoy them and learn so much. Thank you for sharing.
When my Dad passed, I was tasked with going through most of his belongings and paperwork. I found my mother's journal from the 50's surrounding the time that they were engaged and married. Those details were a total surprise to me since Dad had never talked about that time -- our Mom passed from cancer when we were quite young. I believe he was so heartbroken that he never wanted to reminisce about those happy times. Thanks for sharing your lovely art journal.
MC - I am convinced my mother had no idea the treasures she had stored away. It took my sister and I days to pack up her place because of all the "hidden gems" we found. 🥰
Hi Jackie! Thank you for the video! I love the techniques you’re showing. I was wondering if you have a video or comment on how you print on the medical exam paper. I’m thinking it’s pretty thin and not sure if it’ll fit through my printer, but just curious how you did that.
Hi Jackie, this totally resonated with me as I have just moved my dad into a care home (he is 94) and have been going through all the items from his house. One of the most amazing finds were my father’s household journals from the 1950’s, 60’s and 70’s where he wrote every item of expenditure down. I have saved these and plan to copy them to use in some future artworks. Thank you for sharing this video about your Grandmother with us. Love from Gloucestershire, UK.
I don't know why the handwriting is so impactful - but it really seems to be for so many people. I am thrilled that you have his journals now. I hope he is settling well into his new home - it's such a big change for both of you. Sending big hugs 🥰
What a great session. So creative. You are so right if it was Saturday in Southern Maine it was baked beans supper, often balanced in the winter with Cole slaw and home made pie for dessert. Every bride was given a brown two toned bean pot to cook the beans in for the entire day. Even in summer some folks ate the beans and then ate them cold the next week in sandwiches!
I loved to hear about your family narrative. I also grew up in New England and visited my Aunt and Uncles BB in Rockport many summers growing up. I had a question, how did you print your grandmother’s handwriting on the medical paper. I have so many of my grandmother’s letters would love to do also. Homemade Baked beans and Boston brown bread every winter….yum
OMGosh - I completely forgot about the brown bread! Did you make it from scratch, or in the can? Ours was always in the can 😂 - I've got to see if I can find it here in Southern California 😍. I am going to do a video coming up on my process for printing on the paper. 🥰
It always been B&M brown bread in a can I have recently found you and have been binge watching! I will be on the look out for that video because i want tp preserve those memories
I haven't really fallen in love with collage yet but after seeing this? My eyes are open to new possibilities! And so enjoyable to hear about your family and that you found that old notebook. What a treasure! Like many here, I am interested to know more about printing on that exam paper. I've printed on tissue paper before but never sprayed it with water (for the transparency) because the inks would run. Are you using a printer with pigment based inks?
It's interesting, the black ink in my printed is pigment-based, but the colored inks are dyes. I usually wait a few days before using the printed papers, but in the coming week's video I go over a couple of tricks you could try to prevent smudging or running. PS- It took me a long time and the right technique for me to fall in love with collage. 🥰
I love that you used your Grandmother's handwriting! How did you copy it onto the thin paper that becomes translucent? Specifically, how can you safely run that paper through a copier? Thank you!❤
Thx Jackie - it's a bit confusing about all the materials you use.... but it's nice to watch you at work. And I would love to see the book you are using.... and what kind of coffee table book it might be. Thx
Hi Jackie - I'm sorry if it was confusing. This video was less of a tutorial like my other videos. However, I do have all the supplies listed in the description and I believe they are mostly listed in the order I used them. As for the book - here's the amazon link for it, so you can see what the cover looks like. 🥰 amzn.to/4gpNJjI
That was lovely, and you shared a bunch of nice techniques. I have a question: when I have used gloss or matte medium in a book as you have here, my pages stick together in places eventually, even if it was quite done drying before I closed it. How do you prevent that? Thank you!
Hi Jackie, l love this. But, how did you do the transfer without damaging the original paper from your grandma's book? I think l missed something. Thanks for these amazing videos! Keep them coming.
Hi Adriana! I took a picture of the page, tweaked it in canva, then printed it out. I could have scanned the page, but I was afraid that I would tear it out of the spiral binder. 🥰
Hi - fun to watch this page get made! Question: at the end (and at some point earlier) you used both air brush medium and glazing medium to go over and dull down the glossiness. Why were both media needed? What different qualities do they have in the finish of the piece?
They all have different qualities, and I'll try to clear this up. I used matte medium to dull down the glossiness. I used glazing medium to create the blueish brown glaze to tone down the brightness of the paints - I mixed in the airbrush medium because I wanted the glaze to be uber-thin. I chose airbrush medium over water to do this because the proportion water needed to get the thinness of the glaze I wanted was too much to have a reliable pigment load left in the glaze. Airbrush medium preserves the pigment to a much higher degree. I hope that clears things up. 🥰
💌 Want to be notified about my upcoming workshops? 💌
Join my email community, and you’ll have the first chance to sign up for my workshops: painted-paper-studio.ck.page/413e731400
Went thru the Same emotional rollercoaster these past few years with mom thru her final years……. And yes! Clear gesso!!!!!
It's so hard to go through this time - I'm sorry you've gone through it too.
Great session Jackie…I felt the love and honour for your grandma and uncle.❤️❤️
Thank you, Dede - it was such a lovely day in the studio. 🥰
I'd know how you printed onto the med exam paper.
Hi Joyce! Keep your eyes out for this week's video 😉
Just the thing I was going to ask! Looking forward to more inspiration
Oh Jackie 💖 I lovelovelove your pages. They turned out so beautifully. You achieved such a harmonious combination between the meaning your memories have for you and the design of the collage. What a precious memory. And it reminded me of having eaten my first clams and calamari during a biology lesson, because our teacher wanted us to expand our food experience. That was in the late 60ties. Later, as a student, I liked them, because I knew them already. And your video brought back so many memories of my two grandmothers. I will have to digest that over this whole Sunday. Oh my dear 💓! You are such a darling, Jackie ❣ Lots of hugs, Britta
Britta! How brave you were to eat clams during biology 😳😍 I'm glad you liked them enough to enjoy them outside of school too. I'm glad to have given you a reason to think about your grandmothers again. 🥰
What a heartwarming story behind all of this. I have an old recipe book from my mom. I had a scrapbook one. But I think we tossed it because it was just crumbling away. 😢❤
Oh no! I understand about the crumbling - there were so many things we had to toss because there just wasn't a way to salvage them. 🥰
Thanks for the tip about copying onto the medical paper! Didn’t know this could be done.
You're welcome, and I'll say this - when you start doing it you'll find a million things you can do with it! 🥰
I’m so excited… my family dr gave me a whole role of medical exam paper! can’t wait to experiment….. can’t wait to see your experimentation! Thank you for sharing your talent.
That was so nice of your doctor! You will have so much fun with it - I promise. 🥰
I’m going to guess you look like your father because you definitely have Uncle Mick’s smile! I also have been lucky enough to be the keeper of my grandmother’s recipes, tho she did not write down most of them unfortunately. I tear up every time I see her handwriting, I’m not sure why because writing is not something I associate with her, but it is so much part of my memory of her❤ Lovely page, Jackie! ❤
Thank you very much, Cindy - the handwriting gets a lot of people 💜 I actually wasn't a blood relative to Uncle Mike. He was my aunt's husband, having said that, I do look like my Dad - especially his long toes 😂 - but really everyone in my family has a big smile. 😀🥰
Hi, lovely clam girl 🤩! A very special and touching episode from your art studio celebrating nostalgia and honouring family members. Nostalgia is often perceived as waste of time and superfluous, but it's nurishing and invigorating when you don't get stuck inside memories. Your grandmother's handwriting is like the cherry on top!
And then ... that XXXXL graphite stick 😲! So funny! I was lost for words like you!, girl! I've never seen that one before! Thank you for introducing it and making me laugh🤣! The marks are wonderful!
I will try your glaze recipe one day ... looks amazing ... and I have to memorize "shoot from the hip-collage" !
Aloha from Berlin & a lovely weekend ❤🧡💛💚💜
Queen - I have thinking about all the ways to use that graphite stick all week long. I'm even considering getting a GIANT canvas to use it on 😳 🥰
WOWSA!!! wonderful! You really gave me many techniques to advance my beginner project and at the same time you showed me how to use art as a way to develop storylines through the preservation of past memories that honor the lives of your ancestors that shaped your own beingness. Thank you so much! I.will watch this video over and over again!
Thank you very much, Sally - I am so happy that this video connected with you. I love it when I find new and unexpected ways to use my creativity and I hope you do too. 🥰
Oh, wow, I’ve been wanting to do something like this, so thank you for this tutorial. By the way this Wisconsin ole girl married a Gloucester Boy back in 1953. His father and three Uncles were Gloucester fishermen. His grandfather was lost at sea. On March 24, 1906 The Gloucester Times wrote an article about Captain James H. Goodwin of the School of Agnes was swept from the deck and drowned. My husband was named after his Grandfather. Last summer my family and I visited Gloucester. I wanted to show them where their Grandfather lived and Great Great Grandfather lived. It was a wonderful time to see Good Harbor Beach and Rockport. Thank you for stirring up the good memories.
The life of a fisherman has always been hard and dangerous. What I didn't share was that Uncle Mike was lost at sea in the late 1950s. My grandmother took care of and raised my aunt, my mother, and my cousin (Uncle Mike's daughter) all under one tiny roof. She did a great job - they all are/were lovely, independent, and strong women. I haven't been to Gloucester in about 8 years - it's time to go back. 🥰
everything about this hit home, so appreciate yr heart. Ty.
Thank you very much, Judy. I appreciate you! 🥰
Omg I am cracking up this is awesome
I'm so glad you got a giggle out of it! 🥰
You may have covered this before, but I’m curious as to how you print on the medical exam paper❣️
Hi Mary - keep your eyes out for this week's video - all questions will be answered 😉
What great memories and so lovely to share them with all of us! Thank you. The collages came out beautifully!
Thank you very much, Trini. I hope you are doing well. 🥰
Beautiful, as always :)
Your description of how much your Grandmother meant to you at the tender age of 11, was also beautifully written. How lucky I feel to be a part of your community 💜
Thank you, Jeannine. I am so happy you are here 🥰
Jackie, I’m at a loss for words with this spread….my Grandmother also had a love of foods, numerous recipe books, and recipes torn from a magazine or newspaper. She was always making something new. Our family had our family reunions every year in Bristol, PA over Labor Day weekend…I think we made it to almost 100 consecutive years! We ALWAYS had bushels and bushels of clams for steamed clams every night of the reunion. Most years there would be at least 65 of us, but usually a lot more. I now live in WA and haven’t been to a reunion in forever. Thanks for the trip down memory lane.
What a wonderful share, Robin! I can picture you all chatting, laughing and digging into those clams 🥰
What a lovely way to incorporate family history into your art Journal.
Thank you, Trisha - it was a lovely way to get lost in my thoughts of family. 🥰
Oh Jackie, this video made me so happy for you. What a wonderful tribute to your loving relationship with your grandmother.
Thank you, Rev - it was such a lovely day "being with her" again. 🥰
Oh Jackie, I am speechless!! And many tears have flooded my face while watching you recreate wonderful memories while sharing another huge chunk of your heart with all of us who've been blessed to find you and your joy! xoxoxo Deanna
Thank you lovely, Deeana. I truly hopes this inspires many to create a beautiful memory for themselves or future generations. 🥰
Thank you for this amazing video, Jackie. Love getting your newsletter. Best wishes. Sondra Borrie
Awwww, thank you, Sondra - I am so happy you are here! 🥰
I always include my handwriting in art journals or scrapbooking and encourage others to do the same just for that reason! Many years from now, other people in my family will be looking at those pages.
That is a lovely and thoughtful gesture, Joyce! 🥰
Beautiful Jackie! My grandmother wrote a recipe book when she was in hiding during the 2nd ww and she and my grandfather were hungry. They started fantasizing about food and she wrote it all down and we cherish it. I also have a lot of manuscript left from my father and use that in my collage as well. I think he would love that idea (just as your grandmother probably would). Thanks for all your videos!🍀💖
What an incredible story and treasure, Machteld! They must have been remarkable people to be so creative and clever during such an awful time. Thank you very much for sharing that with me. 🥰
Love your video's and your excitement along with your expression. I am new to mixed media arts. Having fun with gelli printing.
I love hearing that, Kim! Gel printing is truly one of my favorite ways to spend a day. 🥰
Jackie, The final project is so beautiful and meaningful. Loved watching you create this!
Thank you very much LucyLee! 🥰
Lovely. So sweet that you found the notebook. A treasure!
Truly a treasure, Geri. I've bought one of those plastic file folders to keep it in because it is falling apart 😞🥰
What a beautiful memory you have of your grandmother as explained in your Newsletter. Your Newsletter arrives here in Australia in the early hours of Sunday morning and I can't wait to watch it while having my breakfast. I also watch your videos more than once as I enjoy them and learn so much. Thank you for sharing.
What a lovely thing to share, Julie - thank you. 🥰
OHH Love this!! Do you happen to have a video showing how to copy onto the medical paper? TIA!! Thank you for all you do!!!
Hi Paula, thank you so much for watching. I don't have a video on this technique yet, but it is on my list, and I hope to have it out soon. 🥰
Jackie how do you print on these papers, medical exam paper and other transluscent papers.
Hi Annadora! Keep your eyes out for this week's video 😉
When my Dad passed, I was tasked with going through most of his belongings and paperwork. I found my mother's journal from the 50's surrounding the time that they were engaged and married. Those details were a total surprise to me since Dad had never talked about that time -- our Mom passed from cancer when we were quite young. I believe he was so heartbroken that he never wanted to reminisce about those happy times. Thanks for sharing your lovely art journal.
MC - I am convinced my mother had no idea the treasures she had stored away. It took my sister and I days to pack up her place because of all the "hidden gems" we found. 🥰
Hi Jackie! Thank you for the video! I love the techniques you’re showing. I was wondering if you have a video or comment on how you print on the medical exam paper. I’m thinking it’s pretty thin and not sure if it’ll fit through my printer, but just curious how you did that.
Your wish is my command, Connie - keep your eyes out for this week's video - all questions will be answered 😉
Hi Jackie, this totally resonated with me as I have just moved my dad into a care home (he is 94) and have been going through all the items from his house. One of the most amazing finds were my father’s household journals from the 1950’s, 60’s and 70’s where he wrote every item of expenditure down. I have saved these and plan to copy them to use in some future artworks. Thank you for sharing this video about your Grandmother with us. Love from Gloucestershire, UK.
I don't know why the handwriting is so impactful - but it really seems to be for so many people. I am thrilled that you have his journals now. I hope he is settling well into his new home - it's such a big change for both of you. Sending big hugs 🥰
Such a beautiful art journal entry. ❤ I'm so happy for you that you found your grandmother's recipe notebook! Thank you for sharing 😊
Thank you Michelle, I'm so happy too! 🥰
What a great session. So creative. You are so right if it was Saturday in Southern Maine it was baked beans supper, often balanced in the winter with Cole slaw and home made pie for dessert. Every bride was given a brown two toned bean pot to cook the beans in for the entire day. Even in summer some folks ate the beans and then ate them cold the next week in sandwiches!
OMGosh - a baked bean sandwich?! I am going to HAVE to make that 😍
Hi Jackie! I really enjoyed this video! How were you able to print (photocopy) on the medical exam paper?
Hi Carla! Keep your eyes out for this week's video 😉
Very sweet. 💖👍
Thank you, Rozani! 🥰
You’re most welcome. 🙂
I love this!!!
Thank you Angelica! 🥰
How did you get your printer to accept the exam paper?
Hi Lynn - keep your eyes out for this week's video - all questions will be answered 😉
I just love your videos I am learning a lot how to work mix media. Thanks for sharing!
Thank you. I'm so happy you are here and enjoy the videos. 🥰
I loved to hear about your family narrative. I also grew up in New England and visited my Aunt and Uncles BB in Rockport many summers growing up. I had a question, how did you print your grandmother’s handwriting on the medical paper. I have so many of my grandmother’s letters would love to do also.
Homemade Baked beans and Boston brown bread every winter….yum
OMGosh - I completely forgot about the brown bread! Did you make it from scratch, or in the can? Ours was always in the can 😂 - I've got to see if I can find it here in Southern California 😍. I am going to do a video coming up on my process for printing on the paper. 🥰
It always been B&M brown bread in a can
I have recently found you and have been binge watching!
I will be on the look out for that video because i want tp preserve those memories
I haven't really fallen in love with collage yet but after seeing this? My eyes are open to new possibilities! And so enjoyable to hear about your family and that you found that old notebook. What a treasure! Like many here, I am interested to know more about printing on that exam paper. I've printed on tissue paper before but never sprayed it with water (for the transparency) because the inks would run. Are you using a printer with pigment based inks?
It's interesting, the black ink in my printed is pigment-based, but the colored inks are dyes. I usually wait a few days before using the printed papers, but in the coming week's video I go over a couple of tricks you could try to prevent smudging or running. PS- It took me a long time and the right technique for me to fall in love with collage. 🥰
I love that you used your Grandmother's handwriting! How did you copy it onto the thin paper that becomes translucent? Specifically, how can you safely run that paper through a copier? Thank you!❤
Thank you, Judy! I'm going to show you exactly how I do it in this week's video. Stay tuned 🥰
Thx Jackie - it's a bit confusing about all the materials you use.... but it's nice to watch you at work. And I would love to see the book you are using.... and what kind of coffee table book it might be. Thx
Hi Jackie - I'm sorry if it was confusing. This video was less of a tutorial like my other videos. However, I do have all the supplies listed in the description and I believe they are mostly listed in the order I used them. As for the book - here's the amazon link for it, so you can see what the cover looks like. 🥰 amzn.to/4gpNJjI
That was lovely, and you shared a bunch of nice techniques. I have a question: when I have used gloss or matte medium in a book as you have here, my pages stick together in places eventually, even if it was quite done drying before I closed it. How do you prevent that? Thank you!
Hi Jackie, l love
this. But, how did you do the transfer without damaging the original paper from your grandma's book? I think l missed something. Thanks for these amazing videos! Keep them coming.
Hi Adriana! I took a picture of the page, tweaked it in canva, then printed it out. I could have scanned the page, but I was afraid that I would tear it out of the spiral binder. 🥰
Hi - fun to watch this page get made!
Question: at the end (and at some point earlier) you used both air brush medium and glazing medium to go over and dull down the glossiness. Why were both media needed? What different qualities do they have in the finish of the piece?
They all have different qualities, and I'll try to clear this up. I used matte medium to dull down the glossiness. I used glazing medium to create the blueish brown glaze to tone down the brightness of the paints - I mixed in the airbrush medium because I wanted the glaze to be uber-thin. I chose airbrush medium over water to do this because the proportion water needed to get the thinness of the glaze I wanted was too much to have a reliable pigment load left in the glaze. Airbrush medium preserves the pigment to a much higher degree. I hope that clears things up. 🥰
Hi Jackie, loved this video about your grandmother. I couldn’t find the link to the badger brush, please repost. Thanks
Hi Luba! Thank you for letting me know that the link was not in there. It's at the top of the supply list now. 🥰
Yes my mom had backed beans from the shop down the Rd. Ready at 4:30 saturday
Can't you just taste them, Mary?🥰
Could you put in the link to the badger brush you used. It is fascinating to see you use it.
Hi Rose, thank you for pointing that out - the link is there now. 🥰
I just bought some woody stabillos. How do you sharpen them? Where can I find a sharpener that fits them? Thanks
I've got you, Valerie - Stabilo makes a special sharpener for the woody pencils- here's a link: amzn.to/3Zr7xNR Have fun with them! 🥰
🙋♀️👍❤️
Any tips on printing on the medical exam paper? 😁😁😁
Hi Sue, keep an eye out for my next video, all questions will be answered! 😉