JASON PAINTER: Hi, I'm Jason and today, we're painting on glass. So far, we've put one fill color of white, we've touched up our outline, we've outlined--and we've put in the fill of the black. Now, what we're going to need to do is we're going to do the touch up with all the white all the way around, and give it all of the definition it needs, let it dry, so that we can put on the second coat. We're going to want to use the angled brush again and unlike the first--what we just did with the black in the last step, we're going to want to put a little more paint on, and we're going to work it through the brush so that we can see that it's all through the ends of the brush, we're going to go right up to where the black and the white meet, and we're just going to dab it on a little at a time and being very mindful that we can make that black line disappear. So, all of the places that we kind of messed up in the middle and got a black line, we just dab a little white over it and clean up all of the lines. And we're going to want to make sure that the lines, or this that we do, this that the white paint is not see through at this point. We don't want to have to go back and do this again. This is the really touchy part. We want to get this line right. This one we want to take a lot of time with, keep applying, make sure you got plenty of paint. Paint's not going to hurt. Make sure it's just in the corner, and be very deliberate of where--about where the paint goes this time. And you can see how much better that's starting to look already. Already, we've cleaned up all that big, thick line. We're starting to really come together now. After this step is complete, it will almost look good. We'll have to finish all the light--finish in all the white and everything, but take some time on that step, and we'll go from there.