Sentences with phrase «jumping into paintings»

Each of the game's world's and stages are accessed by jumping into paintings in a central hub.
She really loved the idea of Mario jumping into the paintings.
When you jump into a painting, the level will begin immediately.
Like Alice in Wonderland following the March hare down the rabbit hole, Pan jumps into her painting feet first without looking in the hole or thinking about it.
There's room for error and remedies still, which eases my mind when jumping into a painting without a preliminary drawing.
Find pictures on the internet of painted floors to see if you like the look of floors that might show wear and tear before you jump into painting your floors.

Not exact matches

But Bogut shifts back into the paint anticipating Parker to drive to the rim, and Parker pulls up for the jumper.
... work the referees better so that your team's 38 - 18 points in the paint edge somehow doesn't turn into a 15 attempt deficit in free throw attempts because the team that takes more jump shots always has a nearly 3 - 1 edge in free throws attempted.
He tumbled into the paint, fought off two pairs of interminable arms, regained his footing and somehow managed to unfurl a fading eight - foot jumper.
When paint is first spread on with a brush, the carbon atoms jump into action by bonding with oxygen in the atmosphere.
What better way to jump back into my obsession with painting terra cotta pots than with a super fun, insanely easy Valentine's Day DIY project?
Great color, and you're right, how could not jump right into painting for that cute little bubble blower?!
Granted, the final act does make some incredibly large jumps of logic and does unwind into an utter paint by numbers action flick, don't let that detract from the fun of the rest of the ride.
Get up some speed and you can leap vast distances before jumping back into your own colour of paint.
I have a couple of hangups with it (like making the horde mode a timed event), but any qualms I have can be immediately settled by jumping into a match with one of the new weapons and watching the paint fly.
It's all extremely easy to get a handle on and jump straight into the heat of battle in Turf War, a.k.a. the one where you squelch paint about for three minutes straight.
Players can transform into squids to travel quickly through their own territories, perform long jumps, swim up walls to reach new areas and ambush opponents by hiding in the paint.
It's somewhere your Miis stroll and cavort, dressing up as Mario or Samus or Captain Olimar before jumping into playpens where Nintendo's colourful game worlds are recreated out of stitched cloth, painted metal and shiny plastic capsule toys.
Characters move like normal humans, running and jumping, but they can also instantly dive into painted parts of an area.
See, in Denim Dress, how the tranquil American iconography of girl - sprawled - out - in - field jumps the frame when you realise the girl is a boy; and in Junction 2015, how the mythic forms and long shadows of the American west are worked into surreal compositions that speak as poignantly of human longing as has any sculpture or painting.
When you acknowledge this scale while painting, it can make the work suddenly jump into the room and pick up on the stuff around it.
The first thing that seers itself into your line of vision are the 12 panel paintings by Rochelle Feinstein which began in 2008 to mark American - led invasions of the Middle East and the halftone dots forming the outline of globes that seem to be turning on a wobbly axis embody the various definitions of the word «hotspots» as a Wi - Fi signal location, a jumping night spot, central hotbed of activity, etc..
In this substantial volume, the works of the infamous mid-century French visionary artist, Yves Klein — famed for having been photographed jumping off a wall, «into the void,» with his arms outstretched as he moved rapidly towards the pavement, as well as for having claimed and patented his very own shade of the color blue — are presented alongside paintings by the artist whose work influenced him most profoundly: his mother, the bold abstract painter Marie Raymond (1908 - 1972).
In North America this fall: Richard Serra: ABOVE BELOW BETWIXT BETWEEN, EVERY WHICH WAY, SILENCE (FOR JOHN CAGE), (555 West 24th St., on view until October 22, 2016); Helen Frankenthaler: Line into Color, Color into Line, Paintings, 1962 - 1987 (Beverly Hills, September 16 — October 29); Georg Baselitz: Jumping over my Shadow (522 West 21st St., September 20 — October 29, 2016); Sally Mann: Remembered Light (976 Madison Ave., September 22 — October 29, 2016).
The other section is a normal exhibition space, where it presented several video artworks and paintings, including his famous video where he jumped into the metro rail and lied on it, Act of God, during Shanghai Expo in 2010.
What better way to jump back into my obsession with painting terra cotta pots than with a super fun, insanely easy Valentine's Day DIY project?
Great color, and you're right, how could not jump right into painting for that cute little bubble blower?!
Now that we are building a home and DIYing another kitchen, I have jumped back into painting cabinets.
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