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How to Safely Double-Wrap a Fragile Load using Logistic Straps to Distribute Pressure

Keeping fragile items safe during transport can feel stressful, especially when you worry about cracks, dents, or breaks along the way. One of the easiest ways to protect your load is by learning how to double-wrap it using logistic straps. This method spreads pressure evenly, keeps items from moving, and adds an extra layer of security.

Many people think one strap is enough, but fragile items often need more care. Double-wrapping gives you better control and helps reduce pressure on delicate surfaces. With the right steps, you can wrap your load safely without causing damage, even if you’re not a pro.

Why Double-Wrapping Matters for Fragile Loads

When it comes to transporting delicate items, knowing why double-wrapping matters for fragile loads can save you a lot of stress and money. Fragile items like glassware, electronics, or ceramics are easily damaged if the pressure isn’t spread evenly. 

A single strap may seem enough, but it often leaves weak spots where items can shift, crack, or break. Double-wrapping is a simple way to prevent these problems and keep your load secure.

Protects Against Uneven Pressure

One of the main reasons double-wrapping is so effective is that it spreads pressure across a larger area. Imagine a single strap squeezing one spot on a glass box. That pressure point can crack or chip the surface. 

Adding a second strap layer helps distribute the force more evenly, lowering the risk of damage. It’s like giving your fragile items a soft, protective hug instead of one tight squeeze.

Reduces Movement During Transit

Even small movements can cause big problems for fragile loads. Double-wrapping keeps items from shifting while in transit. Each layer of the strap locks the load in place, which reduces the chances of tipping, sliding, or rubbing against other objects. This extra stability makes long trips much safer, whether you’re moving across town or shipping items hundreds of miles away.

Adds an Extra Layer of Security

Another key benefit is peace of mind. Knowing that your fragile items are double-wrapped gives you confidence that they are better protected. Even if one strap loosens slightly, the second strap continues to hold the load firmly. This redundancy is especially helpful for fragile or valuable items, making damage far less likely.

Double-wrapping fragile loads isn’t complicated, but it makes a huge difference. By spreading pressure, reducing movement, and adding extra security, you can protect your items and ensure they reach their destination intact.

Tools You Need Before You Start

Before you learn how to double-wrap a fragile load, it’s important to gather the right tools. Using proper equipment makes the process safer, faster, and more reliable. Without the right straps, padding, and accessories, even careful wrapping can fail, putting your fragile items at risk.

Choosing the Right Logistic Straps

Not all straps are created equal. Look for straps that are strong, durable, and slightly flexible. They should be wide enough to spread pressure evenly and prevent cutting into delicate surfaces. Avoid old or worn straps because they can snap or stretch during transport, which defeats the purpose of double-wrapping.

Using Soft Padding

Padding is your fragile item’s best friend. Bubble wrap, foam sheets, or even thick blankets help cushion the load. When placed under and around the straps, padding prevents marks and absorbs shocks. It’s especially important for corners and edges, which are the most vulnerable during transit.

Tightening Tools and Accessories

A good ratchet or buckle tool helps you tighten straps evenly. Uneven tension can crush one side of your load while leaving the other loose. Make sure your tools are easy to handle and in good condition. A simple strap check before moving the load can prevent accidents.

Safety Check Essentials

Before wrapping, inspect all straps and padding for damage. Ensure nothing has frays, tears, or weak spots. Double-check that your straps can handle the weight of the load. Taking a few extra minutes here can save your fragile items from damage and give you peace of mind.

Step-by-Step Guide to Double-Wrap a Fragile Load

Knowing how to double-wrap a fragile load correctly can make all the difference in keeping your items safe. With a few careful steps, you can secure your load, reduce pressure points, and prevent movement during transport.

Step 1: Prepare Your Load

Start by making sure your fragile items are packed properly inside a box or container. Add padding like bubble wrap or foam around each item to absorb shocks. Check that heavier items are at the bottom and lighter ones on top. A well-organized load is easier to secure with straps.

Step 2: Place the First Layer of Straps

Lay the first strap layer across the load, keeping it tight but not too tight. The goal is to hold the items together without crushing them. Make sure the strap sits over padded areas or soft edges to avoid damage. This first layer creates the main support for your load.

Step 3: Add Extra Padding

Before adding the second strap, place extra padding over weak points or corners. This helps spread the pressure and protects delicate surfaces. Think of it as giving your load a second layer of protection where it needs it most.

Step 4: Apply the Second Layer of Straps

Now, add the second strap layer. Position it so it covers areas that need extra support or where the first strap didn’t fully distribute pressure. Tighten this strap evenly to ensure the load is secure but still cushioned.

Step 5: Final Safety Check

Once both layers are in place, give the load a gentle shake to make sure nothing moves. Double-check the straps for even tension and inspect padding placement. A final look ensures your fragile items are protected and ready for transport.

Extra Tips to Keep Fragile Loads Safe During Transport

Even after double-wrapping, taking a few extra steps can make a huge difference in keeping fragile loads safe. Small adjustments and careful checks help prevent damage and give you peace of mind while moving items.

Add Corner Guards for Extra Protection

Corners are the most vulnerable parts of any fragile load. Using corner guards or extra padding around edges prevents straps from pressing too hard and absorbs shocks if the load shifts. Even simple foam pieces or folded blankets can make a big difference.

Avoid Over-Tightening Straps

Tightening straps too much can crush fragile items. Straps should hold the load securely but not squeeze it. A gentle, even tension works best to keep items safe while keeping the load stable during transit.

Keep Straps Dry and Clean

Moisture or dirt on straps can reduce their strength or cause slipping. Wipe them down before wrapping and check for wear or frays. Clean, dry straps ensure your double-wrapping stays effective throughout the trip.

Check for Loose Straps During Transport

Even the best-wrapped loads can shift slightly. Make quick checks during transit to ensure straps remain tight and padding hasn’t moved. Adjusting straps mid-journey can prevent damage before it happens.

Store Wrapped Loads Safely

When pausing or storing items before delivery, keep them on flat surfaces and away from heavy foot traffic. Avoid stacking fragile loads under heavier items, even if they are double-wrapped. Proper storage preserves the protection you worked hard to set up.

By following these extra tips, you add another layer of safety to your fragile load. Attention to corners, strap tension, cleanliness, and storage ensures your items arrive in perfect condition.

Conclusion 

Double-wrapping a fragile load with logistic straps is simple and keeps your items safer on the move. By spreading pressure, adding padding, and securing two strap layers, you protect your load from cracks and slips. Follow these steps and enjoy stress-free transport every time.

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Features

A People and a Pulse: Jewish Voices in Jazz and Modern Music

Author Laurence Seeff/cover of "Jewish Voices in Jazz and Modern Music"

By MARTIN ZEILIG Jazz history is usually told through its most iconic names — Armstrong, Ellington, Parker, Davis — yet running alongside that familiar story is another, often under‑acknowledged one: the deep and enduring contribution of Jewish musicians, bandleaders, composers, and cultural intermediaries.

From the moment jazz emerged at the turn of the 20th century, Jews were not simply observers but active shapers of the music and the industry around it. Their influence — artistic, entrepreneurial, and cultural — has been both significant and, in many respects, disproportionately large. Jews and Jazz (171 pg. $18.75 US) a self‑published work by Laurence Seeff, brings this parallel narrative into sharp, affectionate focus.

Seeff is an ideal guide.

Born in London in 1951, he built a career that moved from statistics to energy policy in Paris, from financial markets at Bloomberg to corporate training in the City of London, all while writing poetry, songs, and humorous verse. Today he lives in Israel, where he continues to write, perform, learn Ivrit, and enjoy life with his large family. Through all these chapters runs a constant passion for jazz — a passion sparked more than fifty‑five years ago when he first heard Terry Lightfoot’s Jazzmen in a Bournemouth pub.

His writing blends clarity, humour, and genuine love for the music and the people who made it.

The musicians he profiles often came from immigrant families who brought with them the musical DNA of Eastern Europe — the cadences of synagogue chant, the urgency of klezmer, the cultural instinct for learning and artistic expression. When these sensibilities met the African American genius of early jazz, the result was a remarkable creative fusion.

Some figures, like Chico Marx, are better known for comedy than musicianship, yet Seeff reminds us that Chico was a serious pianist whose jazz‑inflected playing appeared in every Marx Brothers film and whose orchestra launched young talents like Mel Tormé. Others — Abe Lyman, Lew Stone, and Oscar Rabin — shaped the dance‑band era on both sides of the Atlantic.

Canadian readers will be pleased to find Morris “Moe” Koffman included as well: the Toronto‑born flautist and saxophonist whose “Swinging Shepherd Blues” became an international hit and whose long career at the CBC helped define Canadian jazz.

Seeff also highlights artists whose connection to jazz is more tangential but culturally revealing. Barbra Streisand, for example — a classmate and choir‑mate of Neil Diamond at Erasmus Hall High School — was never a natural jazz singer, yet her versatility allowed her to step into the idiom when she chose.

She opened for Miles Davis at the Village Vanguard in 1961 and, nearly half a century later, returned to the same club to promote Love Is the Answer, her collaboration with jazz pianist Diana Krall. Her contribution to jazz may be limited, but her stature as one of the greatest singers of all time is unquestioned.

Neil Diamond, too, appears in these pages.

Though not a jazz artist, he starred — with gusto, if not great acting finesse — in the 1980 remake of The Jazz Singer, 53 years after Al Jolson’s original. The film was not a success, nor was it truly a jazz picture, but its title and its star’s Jewish identity make it part of the cultural tapestry Seeff explores.

Diamond and Streisand recorded together only once, in 1978, on “You Don’t Bring Me Flowers,” a reminder of the long‑standing artistic ties between them.

Mel Tormé, by contrast, was deeply rooted in jazz. Nicknamed “The Velvet Fog,” he was a prodigy who sang professionally at age four, wrote his first hit at sixteen, drummed for Chico Marx, and recorded with Benny Goodman and Artie Shaw. Ethel Waters once said he was “the only white man who sings with the soul of a black man.” His story exemplifies the porous, collaborative nature of jazz.

Seeff also includes non‑Jewish figures whose lives intersected meaningfully with Jewish culture. Frank Sinatra — perhaps the greatest crooner of them all — was a steadfast supporter of Jewish causes, from protesting during the Holocaust to raising funds for Israel Bonds and the Hebrew University. His multiple visits to Israel, including a major concert in Jerusalem in 1975, underscore the depth of his connection.

Danny Kaye earns his place through his close work with Louis Armstrong, his pitch‑perfect scat singing, and his starring role in The Five Pennies, the biopic of jazz cornetist Red Nichols. Though not a jazz musician per se, his performances radiated a genuine feel for the music.

A later generation is represented by Harry Connick Jr., whose Jewish mother and New Orleans upbringing placed him at the crossroads of cultures. A prodigy who played publicly at age five, he went on to become one of the most successful jazz‑influenced vocalists of his era, with ten number‑one jazz albums.

Even Bob Dylan appears in Seeff’s mosaic — another reminder that Jewish creativity has touched every corner of modern music, sometimes directly through jazz, sometimes through the broader cultural currents that surround it.

Taken together, the concise portraits in Jews and Jazz form a lively, engaging mosaic — a celebration of creativity, resilience, and cross‑cultural exchange. They show how Jewish musicians helped carry jazz from vaudeville and dance halls into swing, bebop, cool jazz, pop, rock, and film music.

They remind us that jazz, at its heart, is a meeting place: a space where people of different backgrounds listen to one another, learn from one another, and create something larger than themselves.

For further information, contact the author at the following email address: laurenceseeff@yahoo.co.uk

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Features

Jews in Strange Places

Abel Meeropol - who wrote the poem "Strange Fruit"/Billie Holiday - who made the song by the same name famous

By DAVID TOPPER The Jewish contribution to 20th century popular music is well known. From Jerome Kern through to Stephen Sondheim, Jews played major roles as both composers and lyricists in the so-called Great American Songbook. (An exception is Cole Porter.) It continued in Musical Theatre throughout the rest of the century.

One very small piece of this story involves what Time magazine in the December 1999 issue called “the tune of the century.” First recorded sixty years before that, it is the powerful and haunting tune called “Strange Fruit,” which is about the lynching of black people in the southern USA. First sung by Billie Holiday in 1939, it became her signature tune.

So, why do I bring this up? Because there is a multi-layered Jewish connection to this song that is worth recalling, which may not be known to many readers.

Let’s start with the lyrics to “Strange Fruit,” which are the essence of this powerful piece:

Southern trees bear strange fruit,Blood on the leaves and blood at the root,Black bodies swinging in the southern breeze,Strange fruit hanging from the poplar trees.Pastoral scene of the gallant south,The bulging eyes and the twisted mouth,Scent of magnolias, sweet and fresh,Then the sudden smell of burning flesh.Here is fruit for the crows to pluck,For the rain to gather, for the wind to suck,For the sun to rot, for the trees to drop,Here is a strange and bitter crop.

Before becoming lyrics in a song, this poem stood alone as a potent statement about the lynchings still taking place throughout the American South at the time. The strong metaphorical imagery never explicitly mentions the lynching, which adds to the poetic power of this poem. Standing alone, I believe it’s an important protest verse from the 20th century.

Searching it on the internet, you may find the author listed as Lewis Allan. But that’s not his real name. “Lewis Allen” is the often-used pen name of Abel Meeropol, a Jewish High School teacher from the Bronx in New York. He and his wife, Anne (nee Shaffer), had two stillborn children with those names – a fact that adds a poignant element to this story.

The origin of the poem for Abel was a photograph he had seen of a lynching of black men in the South. I have seen such images, possibly even the one Abel saw: for example, a sepia photograph of two black men hanging from a long tree limb, and a large crowd of white people below (men, women and even children!), most seeming dressed in their Sunday best (some men with straw hats) looking up and gawking at the sight, some with smiles on their faces – as if attending a festive spectacle. Like Abel, I felt repelled by the picture: it turned my stomach. This communal display of horrific cruelty gave me a glimpse into Abel’s mind, and I understood how it compelled him to write about it. He thus wrote the poem, and it was published in a teacher’s magazine in 1937.

Being a songwriter too, in 1938 Abel added a melody and played it in a New York club he often attended. But here’s where this story’s documentation gets contradictory, depending upon who is recalling the events. The club owner knew Billie Holiday, and he showed the song to her. What her initial response was, we cannot know for sure. But we do know that in a relatively short time, she added it to her repertoire. It eventually became her signature tune. She initially sang it in public, but because of its popularity among her fans, there was pressure to record it too.

There were initial rejections from recording companies because of the controversial content. But Commodore Records took a chance and pressed the first recording in April 1939. This was the same year the movie “Gone with the Wind” came out; it was steeped in racial stereotyping. It was also sixteen years before Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a bus in Montgomery, Alabama.

As a record, the song obviously reached a large audience. Since the content was about racism, the song was seen as politically radical; not surprisingly, many radio stations banned it from the airwaves.

Furthermore, it’s also not surprising that Abel, a schoolteacher, was called to appear before a committee of New York lawmakers who were looking for communists in the schools. Possibly they were surprised to find that the poem and the song were written by a white man – and a Jew to boot. In particular, they wanted to know if he was paid by the Communist Party to write this song. He was not. And, in the end, they let him go. But shortly thereafter he quit his teaching job.

This took place in 1941 and was a precursor to the continued American obsession with communism into the 1950s, under Senator Joe McCarthy.

Indeed, that episode had an impact on Abel and Anne too. In 1953 Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were convicted of giving information about nuclear science to the Soviet Union, and they were the first married couple to be executed in the electric chair. They left two sons, Michael (age 10) and Robert (age 6). Apparently, immediate family members were reticent to get involved with the boys, possibly afraid of being accused of sympathizing with communism.

Enter Abel and Anne. Without a moment’s hesitation they stepped in, taking and raising the boys. As Michael and Robert Meeropol they eventually went on to become college professors – and naturally were active in social issues. Anne died in 1973. Abel died in 1986 in a Jewish nursing home in Massachusetts, after a slow decline into dementia. Long before that, Billie Holiday died in 1959, ravaged by the drug addition that took her life at forty-four years of age.

See why I called this a multi-layered Jewish story that’s worth telling?

To hear Billie Holiday singing “Strange Fruit” click here: Strange Fruit

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Features

Is This the End of Jewish Life in Western Countries?

By HENRY SREBRNIK “Globalize the Intifada” has been the chant echoing through streets since October 7th, 2023. It was never a metaphor, and we now see the gruesome results across the western world, from Australia to Canada: the rise of groups of large, active networks of Islamist and anti-Zionist organizations.
Jews in the West are discovering that the nations they defended, enriched, and profoundly shaped have become increasingly inhospitable. After the Holocaust, explicit Jew-hatred became unfashionable in polite society, but the impulse never disappeared. The workaround was simple: separate Zionism from Judaism in name, then recycle every old anti-Jewish trope and pin it on “the Zionists.”
We have seen the full legitimization of genocidal anti-Zionism and its enthusiastic adoption by large segments of the public. The protests themselves, as they began immediately on October 7th, were celebrations of the Hamas massacres. The encampments, the building occupations, the harassment campaigns against Jewish students, the open calls for intifada, the attacks on Jews and Jewish places have become our new norm. History shows us that antisemitism does not respond to reason, incentive or the honest appeals of the Jewish community. 
Outside the United States, there is no Western political establishment with either the will or the capability to address this problem, let alone reverse its growth. I’m sorry to say this, but the future of Western Europe, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand is likely to be increasingly Jew-free.
Today, police stand and watch mobs chant for Israel’s destruction, call for the genocide of its people, harass visibly Jewish citizens, and drive antisemitic intimidation deep into urban life. They now believe their job is to enforce the law only if it does not risk upsetting violent constituencies. This makes Jews expendable, because defending them risks confrontation. This was very clear in the Bondi Beach massacre.
Jews are again donning caps instead of kippot, dressing generically with no cultural markers, and avoiding even a tote bag with Hebrew on it.  A corrosive creep toward informal segregation in retail and service sectors is occurring, as Jewish customers report being refused service.  A mezuzah hanging from a rideshare mirror leads to cancellations. When Jews express frustration, they are accused of exaggeration or attempting to suppress criticism of Israel.  Jewish fear is not treated as a real problem.
“Jews Are Being Sent Back into Hiding,” the title of a Dec. 15 article in the New York Free Press by David Wolpe and Deborah Lipstadt, asserts that the attacks on Jews, including physical assaults, social media campaigns and, most tragically, the recent murders in Australia, are part of a purposive campaign designed to make Jews think twice about gathering with other Jews, entering a synagogue, going to kosher restaurants, putting a mezuzah on the doorpost of their apartments or dorm rooms, or wearing a Jewish star around their necks.
“We know of no one who would consider giving a niece, nephew, grandchild, or young friend a Jewish star without first asking permission of their parents,” they write. The unspoken, and sometimes spoken, question is: “Might wearing a star endanger your child’s well-being?”
Recently, a prominent American rabbi was entering a Target store in Chicago with her grandson, whom she had picked up from his Jewish day school. As they walked into the store the 10-year-old reached up and automatically took off his kippah and put it in his pocket. Seeing his grandmother’s quizzical look, he explained: “Mommy wants me to do that.”
Borrowing a phrase from another form of bigotry, they contend that Jews are going “back into the closet.” No public celebration of Hanukkah took place in 2025 without a significant police presence. Some people chose to stay home.
Lipstadt and Wolpe know whereof they speak. They are respectively a professor of history and Holocaust studies who served as the Biden administration’s ambassador tasked with combating antisemitism, the other a rabbi who travels to Jewish communities throughout the world, and who served on Harvard’s antisemitism task force in the aftermath of the October 7, 2023 pogrom.
What the world has seen over the past two years is a continual, often systematic attempt to terrorize Jews. When political leaders fail to condemn rather than merely “discourage” chants of “globalize the intifada,” we are seeding the ground for massacres like the Hannukah one in Sydney.
If each Jewish holiday will now be seen by antisemites as an opportunity for terror, then the prognosis for diaspora Jewry is bleak. There will be fewer public events, more alarms, more bag checks at doors; there will have to be more security and more police. Unless things change, Jewish life in the diaspora will become more sealed off from the larger society.
Why has this failure come about? Confronting antisemitism, stopping the mobs, challenging the activists, and disciplining antisemitic bureaucrats all carry electoral risk for politicians; Jews are demographically irrelevant, especially compared with Muslim voters, with the U.S. being the only partial exception.
There are those who suggest Jews stop donating funds to educational and other institutions that have turned against us. At this point, I doubt very much that withdrawing dollars will have an impact. For every dollar withdrawn, there will be 100 from Qatar and other sources in its place.
Throughout history, the way a society treats its Jews predicts its future with unerring accuracy. If Jews leave, it will be because a civilization that will not defend its Jews will also defend next to nothing and may itself not survive. 
Henry Srebrnik is a professor of political science at the University of Prince Edward Island

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