Sentences with phrase «create junkyard»

Not exact matches

I mean, its like if a whirlwind went through a junkyard and created a 747...)
About as silly as Hoyle's storm blowing through a junkyard and creating a Boeing - 747?
A coalition of local government officials and green groups have criticized the plan as one that creates a «junkyard» in the Adirondack Park, and have expressed concerns over the environmental impacts.
Who would have predicated the necessity to create a «junkyard» in the midst of our great Adirondack Park?
Adam Minter's Junkyard Planet explores how China copes with more and more plastic waste, along with the pollution problems it creates
And clearly, we're not the only ones excited about this diary date, as neon - lighting guru and owner of God's Own Junkyard, Chris Bracey, tweeted a picture of the lightening bolt he created and installed for the exhibition.
From a dreary rowboat to a millionaire's haunt or junkyard dream, the production design belies the film's budget, apearing absolutely in keeping with the world that the narrative seeks to create
As a child, Winston «Spree» Simon, a pioneer of the steel drum, created his Calypso beat by banging on recycled junkyard scraps.
MIT has developed Junkyard Jumbotron, an app enabling multiple devices, smartphones, notebooks, tablets in fact anything else with a browser to create a multi-screendisplay.
Along your adventure you will visit all kind of places inside the town: houses, stores, arcade, library... In the outskirts: the junkyard, the woods, caves... You will also even have to infiltrate in the Major Oh Rus» maximum security facilities created to carry out his evil plan.
To his sculpture, Mr. Adkins sought to bring the fleeting impermanence of music, creating haunting assemblages of found objects — wood, cloth, coat hangers, spare parts from junkyards — that evoked vanished histories.
He created his first welded steel sculpture in 1952, with scrap metal he bought from junkyards along the Seine, and he had his first major exhibitions of them two years later.
Peter Buggenhout, a Belgian artist showing at Gladstone Gallery, covered a junkyard's worth of scrap metal, wood and other found objects with vacuum cleaner dust to create what I described in the review as «massive stacks of debris [that] hang off the wall or sprawl across the floor in a state of dereliction and collapse, monumental castoffs from a world spinning out of control.»
Created by Canadian designer Adrian Johnson, these customized ultra-retro seaters are made from vintage refrigerators and salvaged car seats that he rescues from local junkyards.
Now she'll do yours, too, as her recently opened Junkyard Goddess Eco-Boutique at 1051 E. 54th St. houses home décor pieces, crafted by herself and fellow artisans, that have been repurposed from their original state, created new or given new life from antique origins.
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