Tiny planes folded
from gum wrappers make the cut, as do graceful bird - inspired crafts, angular jets, and tiny mothlike fliers.
Not exact matches
I am an office manager for a watch repair and retail shop and I had a customer bring in a pile of garbage
from her car, including: a pencil, multiple Kleenexes, a McDonald's toy, scraps of paper,
gum wrappers, and general dirt, and drop it on my desk.
Compared to the Hummer, «other vehicles wind up looking like they're made
from chewing
gum wrappers,» a company official crowed.
No offense but since no one
from the south reads any news thats not printed on a bazooka joe
gum wrapper, we can just humor them if we happen to run into them at a gun shop or courthouse and say «Oh Bama beat LSU by a score of 5 to negative 3 this year in your final?
«Instead of carrying three or four ugly bags to work, I wanted an all - in - one bag solution; a way to keep clean pump equipment and accessories separate
from my keys and
gum wrappers, while being able to hold everything I needed to carry.
Boho jewelry includes adornments that are recycled such as jewelry made out of waste paper and also
from colorful chewing
gum wrappers.
Your RFID pass must be kept separately
from your cell phone, credit cards and any foil wrapped items like
gum wrappers, cold medicine, etc..
International Pop: Origins Lichtenstein was the first of the three artists to employ the dot in 1961, appropriating imagery
from bubble
gum wrappers and children's books, incorporating cartoon characters such as Donald Duck and Mickey Mouse into his paintings.
Taking Freud's idea of the Uncanny as a starting point, artist Mike Kelley plays Sunday curator and presents work by Jasper Johns, Paul McCarthy, Jeff Koons, Tony Oursler, and others (reprinted
from a 1993 catalogue), plus photos of chewing
gum wrappers, postcards, record covers, and toys, all connected to ideas of youth and the Uncanny.
Look Mickey (1961) was the first of a series of works featuring characters
from cartoons and Bazooka Bubble
Gum wrappers, and led to the 1962 solo show at Leo Castelli's New York City gallery that launched his career.
It was part of a fan of junk
from the floor of the car:
gum wrappers, a crushed Tim Horton's cup, two quarters, a white plastic bag, a number of small stones, and pieces of what looked to be a broken floor mat.