Sentences with phrase «glass lighting make»

A French - style bed, mirrored bedside tables and crystal - glass lighting make this room a romantic sanctuary.

Not exact matches

Though science has yet to hit upon an affordable artificial light source — a key obstacle to making agricultural skyscrapers commercially viable — Despommier envisions a future populated by greenery - filled glass towers.
Apple's reportedly interested in making smart glasses — and a new report from CNET on Friday sheds more light on what the plan could entail.
Take a look at your computer screen through a magnifying glass and you'll see the individual pixels, each made up of three subpixels — red, green, and blue light sources.
Dear Peter, I beg you put your glasses on your nose, or blow your nose a bit, to make your head lighter and the brain clearer.»
It is made with cosmetic - grade super flint glass which sparkles in bright light.
Turn on music, light candles or adjust the lighting, focus on your breathing, use the time to be quiet and think, make yourself a pretty drink in a pretty glass.
I like to have a glass of red wine, make dinner with my boyfriend and possibly have a candle lit bath with Epsom salts and essential oils.
I think this would make the perfect light lunch or dinner paired with a nice green salad and glass of white wine!
Honey rosewater syrup is easy to make: just heat 1/2 cup of a light local honey with 1/2 cup of rosewater for a minute or so, give it a good stir, then transfer to a glass jar and cap tightly.
These make a fantastic appetiser or you can serve as a light meal for two people — it's perfect for hot days with an ice - cold beer or tall glass of water!
They make a wonderful light snack with a glass of milk.
Today, glass packaging is up to 40 % lighter than it was just 20 years ago, and considerably stronger, that makes it more versatile than ever before
INGREDIENTS Glassware: Libbey Chicago - Style Old Fashioned Glass (or any similar rocks glass) Mixing Tin 1oz Copper Fox Rye 1oz Stone Ginger Wine 1oz House - made Blueberry Puree Soda Water Ice Cubes Blueberries & Mint Leaves Peachwood Chips Butane LiGlass (or any similar rocks glass) Mixing Tin 1oz Copper Fox Rye 1oz Stone Ginger Wine 1oz House - made Blueberry Puree Soda Water Ice Cubes Blueberries & Mint Leaves Peachwood Chips Butane Liglass) Mixing Tin 1oz Copper Fox Rye 1oz Stone Ginger Wine 1oz House - made Blueberry Puree Soda Water Ice Cubes Blueberries & Mint Leaves Peachwood Chips Butane Lighter
The trick: «shooting» light monofilament behind quick - sinking fly lines (some of them made of glass) to get distance and depth, and «dredging the bottom» with wet flies in such local patterns as Brad's Brat and Stillaguamish Belle.
However, when you pour water into the glass or jar in this activity the light is refracted (bends) and doesn't make it to your eyes which is why the coin seems to disappear.
This easy disappearing coin trick uses refraction of light to make it look like a coin under a glass disappears!
If your eyes feel fatigued on a regular basis, you could wear a light pair of reading glasses (+1.00) or have «computer glasses» made up for you.
There's a haunted house made from a milk carton, luminaries made from tin cans, jar lights made from assorted glass jars, a treat box made from a cereal box, candy holders made from Pringle's cans, cute treat holders made from plastic jello cups and cheese boxes and more.
Baby bottles made of silicone are unbreakable, BPA - free, light and soft but usually more expensive than glass and plastic.
Glass doors not only let in the light but also give the appearance of a window, which makes space feel more like a bedroom.
A peek through Verb's glass door (tucked between a no - frills cupcake shop and a bicycle - friendly cafe) reveals a lofty, light - filled space packed with yarn, fabric, sewing notions, books, patterns, tools, clothes to make yourself, and signs of life in every corner — but calling this a store visit would barely scratch the surface of what we learned.
They can rob the oil of its scent and properties, so make sure you protect your DIY project by protecting it from light in a dark glass container.
The HABA Little Lucky Charm BRACELET is made of pretty glass beads (light blue, white, green and red), with wooden lucky shamrock 4 leaf clovers, wooden mushroom beads, and wooden heart beads.
Crafting Connections shares a lovely way to get through the longest night of the year and welcome back the light with these Solstice lanterns made with glass jars and colored Mod Podge.
Founded in 1851 as a glassmaker — famously providing light bulbs for Thomas Edison — Corning Inc. now makes high - tech products like optical fiber, ceramics for catalytic convertors and the extra-strong glass used in smartphones and tablets.
It's made of four millimeter thin acrylic glass and ultra-bright LED lights, shaped into an incredible looking 3D design!
Yang Yang and colleagues note that transistors are traditionally made in a multi-step photolithography process, which uses light to print a pattern onto a glass or wafer.
Let your child discover rainbow glasses, blow rainbow bubbles, bend white light, make rainbow milk, mix colored paddles, and much more!
The dark amber glass bottle comes with a dropper to dispense the small amount of oil needed without making a mess, and the dark glass helps keep the oils from breaking down over time due to light exposure.
, 1968 Zick Rubin, «The Social Psychology of Romantic Love», 1969 Elliot Aronson, «Some Antecedents of Interpersonal Attraction», 1970 David C. Glass and Jerome E. Singer, «The Urban Condition: Its Stresses and Adaptations — Experimental Studies of Behavioral Consequences of Exposure to Aversive Events», 1971 Norman H. Anderson, «Information Integration Theory: A Brief Survey», 1972 Lenora Greenbaum, «Socio - Cultural Influences on Decision Making: An Illustrative Investigation of Possession - Trance in Sub-Saharan Africa», 1973 William E. McAuliffe and Robert A. Gordon, «A Test of Lindesmith's Theory of Addiction: The Frequency of Euphoria Among Long - Term Addicts», 1974 R. B. Zajonc and Gregory B. Markus, «Intellectual Environment and Intelligence», 1975 Johnathan Kelley and Herbert S. Klein, «Revolution and the Rebirth of Inequality: The Bolivian National Revolution», 1977 Murray Melbin, «Night as Frontier», 1978 Ronald S. Wilson, «Synchronies in Mental Development: An Epigenetic Perspective», 1979 Bibb Latane, Stephen G. Harkins, and Kipling D. Williams, «Many Hands Make Light the Work: The Causes and Consequences of Social Loafing», 1980 Gary Wayne Strong, «Information, Pattern, and Behavior: The Cognitive Biases of Four Japanese Groups», 1981 Richard A. Shweder and Edmund J. Bourne, «Does the Concept of the Person Vary Cross Culturally?»
ANOTHER LOOKING GLASS In science fiction movies like Stargate and Contact, wormholes connect distant points in the universe, allowing people to travel from one spot to another in far less time than the hundreds or millions of years required to make the trip at the speed of light, the greatest conventional velocity.
By measuring how far the laser light was deflected by the glass bead, the team made multiple measurements of the particle's position.
IBM developed a technique for making carbon nanotubes emit light, paving the way for new fiber optics; Harvard scientists figured out how to deposit tiny wires on glass or plastic, opening the door for the development of supercheap computers; and at the University of Central Florida, neuroscientist Beverly Rzigalinski discovered a nanomolecular fountain of youth effect: When Rzigalinski applied cerium oxide nanoparticles to rat neurons in a petri dish, the particles seemed to strip out the free radicals that make tissues age and kept the neurons alive and functioning up to six times their normal life span.
Suddenly it seemed possible to Zhang that you could stretch the law of refraction to its limits because you could make light bend in any direction you liked — including the exact opposite of the way glass and every other natural material bends it.
The coatings made by both groups are antireflective as well as antifogging: They reduce glare and allow more than 99 percent of light to pass through the glass.
The thousands of tiny water droplets that form on the glass scatter light, making oncoming traffic hard to see.
Picture a glimmering arc of light, the artefact of a lens made of warped space - time instead of glass.
This discovery was made possible by a micro-gravitational lens effect that occurs by chance and selectively amplifies the light from different regions close to the black hole like a magnifying glass.
The box is basically a set of prisms made from high - quality optical glass that bend light around any object in the enclosure around which the prisms are arrayed, the researchers describe in a paper posted on the online repository arXiv.
A major leap forward from a prototype device demonstrated in 2012, it is an ultra-thin, completely flat optical component made of a glass substrate and tiny, light - concentrating silicon antennas.
The film, made from transparent plastic embedded with tiny glass spheres, absorbs almost no visible light, yet pulls in heat from any surface it touches.
This unique characteristic of the liquid fiber cores reduces fluctuations in the spectral bandwidth of the supercontinuum light source and makes liquid core fibers a more stable alternative to the known broadband light sources based on optical fibers made from special glasses.
Their advantages make them interesting as an alternative to glass and carbon fiber reinforced plastics (GRP or CFRP): they are renewable, biodegradable and robust, use less energy in being produced, are lighter and have better acoustic properties.
As gravitational event horizons are tough to make, not to mention potentially dangerous, their «horizon» was a pulse of laser light moving through a piece of glass.
Optical fibers are made of glass and the speed of light slows down in fibers.
In order to generate the broad spectrum, the researchers shone laser light into a structure that guides light, called a waveguide, made of a glass - like material, silicon nitride, embedded in regular glass (silicon oxide).
The Stanford group has also made an «atomic trampoline» in which atoms bounce off a sheet of light extending out from a glass surface.
With a curved glass surface, an atom trap based on gravity and light can be made.
With the technology that has historically been used to produce glasses - free 3 - D images — known as a parallax barrier — simultaneously projecting eight different viewing angles would mean allotting each angle one - eighth of the light emitted by the projector, which would make for a dim movie.
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