Sentences with phrase «bubble letters»

If you want to switch things up and pull in an early literacy lesson, make bubble letters instead of shapes.
The artist «fends off» fear with bubble letters and an impressive level of accuracy of detail in her depictions of, for example, control stations.
I drew bubble letters to write «Frankie» on it.
Her recent exhibition, The Tidy Kitchen, has been greeting Hammer visitors since February with pastel pink, green and yellow playful bubble letters spelling out phrases like «tea - stains on the table cloth» and «pulling out hairs from the drain.»
It comes to mind a Pop cartoon character, or bubble letters synonymous to ones seen on NYC graffiti streets — elements later found in the Neo-Expressionist work of Jean - Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring.
Street artist Diego's bright canvases give the booth's interior the impression of graffitied walls; gritty bubble letters read «rice baller,» «Karaoke,» and «Fuji / Yama.»
You are not required to scratch the back of your head thinking where to find these amazing Alphabet Bubble Letter templates.
Included: (See Preview) Teacher instruction sheet with pictures Student Directions / Idea sheet with how to make bubble letters & examples of common items to use as reference Thought Bubble template with instructions for use with student photo Thought Bubble template blank for use with student photo Option to use as Thought Bubble only with instructions and blank
Then, I cut out a bigger version of the bubble letters in that fabric around the white letters already glued on, and attached each of these to the stockings.
Additionally, there are some bubble letters to use should they want to put their initials on the front cover.
The aesthetic of the late 1960s counterculture, with its bubble lettering, op art graphics, unjustified margins and collage effects, drew on the work of art nouveau artists Aubrey Beardsley and Alphonse Mucha, as well as abstract painters Bridget Riley and Josef Albers.
As the roots of hip hop culture took hold in the 1970s, the bubble letters and simple tags of anonymous artists like TAKI 183 and Phase2 were seen around New York.
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