Not exact matches
Panasonic has trademarked a unique nanoe ™ technology that takes the moisture from your
hair and in the air, and uses it to
create tiny, moisture - rich particles that penetrate the shafts of
hair.
This solid milk
creates a plug - a
tiny string cheese, the thickness of angel
hair pasta - which causes a back up of milk inside your breast.
It then combines with pollutants from combustion — mainly nitrogen oxides and sulfates from vehicles, power plants and industrial processes — to
create tiny solid particles, or aerosols, no more than 2.5 micrometers across, about 1/30 the width of a human
hair.
Instead, Menda's method
creates a very
tiny hole that seals, like a self - sealing tire, around a
hair - sized tungsten microelectrode.
To
create a believable tree, you need both true - to - life textures — Prusinkiewicz and his colleagues have recently
created a tool for simulating the
tiny hairs on the surface of a leaf — and you need a realistic branch structure.
To
create this look I gathered
hair on the top of my head into a tight ponytail using these
tiny hair ties.
Ah, the art of splitting
tiny ponytails and rubber - banding them to other
tiny ponytails,
creating a woven
hair web that was actual hell to take out.
Loop - De-Loop — I wish my
hair was just a
tiny bit longer so I could
create this look but here is a great tutorial to show you just how easy it is to pull off.
It then combines with pollutants from combustion — mainly nitrogen oxides and sulfates from vehicles, power plants and industrial processes — to
create tiny solid particles, or aerosols, no more than 2.5 micrometers across, about 1/30 the width of a human
hair.
Why, because that boundary layer of air
created by those little
tiny hairs, get disturbed, gets mixed and heat exchange happens.