Sentences with phrase «creating lumpy»

During the»50s, Peter Voulkos and a group of male artists started creating lumpy - looking, cracked ceramic objects that were decidedly imperfect.
Also, by removing the front - seat head restraints, they fold flat creating a lumpy but comparatively comfortable place to sleep.
If, for instance, the charge on the particles in a hand lotion is small, the particles will clump together, creating a lumpy lotion.
Cold eggs and milk can solidify the butter, creating lumpy pancakes!
Mixing pigment into wax — an encaustic technique traced to ancient Egypt, though rarely employed in contemporary art — creates a lumpy, optically veiled surface.

Not exact matches

Putting the fruit into the bottom of the pan first creates little pockets and holes where the fruit has steamed through; the edge still domes impressively, and the bottom is all lumpy with fruit.
Using fresh roasted sweet potatoes and leaving the potatoes and butter slightly lumpy creates rustic biscuits that are unique and don't need to look perfect.
Trust me, that lumpy Nutella may still be delicious, but you want it to be soft enough to create a beautiful swirl on these muffins!
This is an economy fitted with great low price and no confusing adjustments which create additional bumps and lumpy places.
Cellulite is a type of fatty deposit under the skin that pushes up against the tissues, creating a dimpled, lumpy appearance.
But in cellulite part of those fat cells under skin become detached from weakened connective tissue (collagen) stick together and create small lumpy fatty deposits that look just like cottage cheese.
First - time feature director Rupert Sanders creates a couple of visually inventive scenes, such as Snow White's surrealistic trip into the Dark Forest, but the pacing is lumpy and much of the movie is flat and uninspired.
However the additional weight creates its own problems — and it pairs with large diameter alloy wheels to create a ride best described as lumpy.
All the fabric works, which are hand - stitched from small pieces of cloth, are quilted together and fitted with darts to create tautly - stuffed, assertive forms proud of their lumpy and quirky nature.
Bob and Roberta Smith creates brightly coloured text - based paintings with powerful social messages; Yinka Shonibare clads figures in colourful batik to create politically loaded sculptural or photographic tableaux; Thomas Heatherwick is one of the world's leading designers, whose Olympic Cauldron fired the imagination of viewers in the opening ceremony in 2012; Rebecca Warren fuses everything from the ideas of conceptual artist Joseph Beuys to the cartoons of Robert Crumb, creating vitrines and lumpy sculptural figures; Conrad Shawcross brings engineering and sculpture into collisions of mechanics, sound, light and space; and Louisa Hutton, of architects Sauerbruch Hutton, designs buildings with a flair for colour and material richness.
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