Editor's note: (1) A plastic bottle with a pointed spout fits directly into the opening of the insert, no slitting necessary. (2) Such “surgery” or the inserts is neither necessary or desireable. When starting the in- serts are flat and quite able to receive the jelly ingredients. If too much air gets in one simply pushes a bobby pin in bend first till it opens the valve flaps and then squeezes the air out.
This surgery was quickly healed with a so-called "Vinyl Plastik Re- pair Kit," purchable at your friendly corner hardware store. There's no great point in explaining what it's for in too much detail when you buy it.
And voila! Insert into your bra cups, and there you are, all of you!
Actually, once you've opened the seams in the insertion pocket and either sewn or pinned the seam back up you will, likely, feel a much more complete woman than you've ever felt before.
I pin them in so I can transfer them from this bra to that bra. Ginny -perfect!
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Now here are some things I've tried out and found rewarding since I burst out with my new figure . . .
You've no doubt got those foam rubber inserts you can buy in any dime store or any clothing store. I insert them along with the other in- serts. They lend an immediate softness, mold in undetectably, and there is some nipple definition . . . although this is lost, almost com- pletely, under the pressure of your bra. But there is a neat solution to this last, final definiton!
Purchase or steal, from a dime store, stationery store or from your office, two rubber finger tips. . . the kind used when handling sheets of paper. Wrap Scotch Tape around the holes, fill with dried little balls of rubber cement, then pour in fresh rubber cement to fill in. Let dry.
When dry, cut out the nipple on your foam rubber insert and insert these filled "finger tips." You can sew them in. Or perhaps some sort of rubber glue would do even better. In any case, your new figure is now complete down to the final authenticity.
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