Not exact matches
As Elizabeth Eisenstein says in her book on the role
of the
printing press, Protestant clergy «viewed
printing as a providential device which ended
forever a priestly monopoly
of learning, overcame ignorance and superstition, pushed back the evil forces commanded by Italian popes, and, in general, brought Western Europe
out of the dark ages.»
You would be amazed at what service projects and groups are
out there doing things that you never knew about — dolls and bears made up to be the the weight
of your baby (Molly Bears), stuffed animals made
out of your baby's clothing and blankets, peer support and parent advocates waiting to help the newly bereaved, personalized jewelry makers (like My
Forever Child), stone painters, heart sewers, pillow - making people (Heaven Born for miscarriage), memory - box makers, authors (there are books for almost every subject on this topic waiting to be discovered), research and education groups, story - sharing sites, support groups, chat groups, blogs, Facebook groups, foot / hand
print kits, music and funeral planning resources... Consider starting here before starting something new.
He wrote HIS OWN book, which will never be
out of print because
of a trust (I don't understand all the details, really) that he created, to ensure it stayed in
print forever, so that people could learn about what TRUE health is.
Since the theme was flowers, I thought there was no better time to pull
out this flower crown I picked up at
Forever 21 a few weeks back and new floral crossbody bag from Hobo, which happened to match the
print of the skirt perfectly!
The spring season brought
out polka dots, floral
prints and touches
of soft blues and pinks, with a signature
Forever New feminine touch.
In honor
of the day
of «wuv» I broke
out a couple
of old favorites to wear: this red peter pan collar dress from Modcloth and some heart
print sweater tights from
Forever 21.
The only archival
print of In the Soup — a star - studded, pioneer indie feature that beat
out Reservoir Dogs, Gas Food Lodging among others in a seminal year at Sundance 25 years ago — was dramatically damaged, and time is now to rescue it before it's gone
forever.
Books are now
forever; they remain fresh; they'll never go
out of print.
Ebooks are great for everybody except authors because there is no control over the real sales figures And this situation goes on
forever since there is no
out of print for a digital book.
E-books are
forever, and never will they go
out of print.
And within a year, it goes «
out of print» and is gone, usually
forever.
Did you know that books that aren't publicized stay in bookstores just six months — and then are remaindered and go
out of print, often
forever?
I do feel for all the paperback writers throughout the last decades whose hard work and effort only got them a six - week shelf life for their masterpiece to hit it and if it didn't it would disappear
forever, going
out of print and into the paper shredder.
One
of the advantages
of ebooks for libraries, says Konrath is that, ``... unlike
print, which wears
out, an eBook is
forever.
With ebooks, there is no need to be a «best - seller»
out of the gate or be consigned to mid-lister hell, no competition for limited shelf space, and no remaindering or going
out of print (which
of course most publishers use mostly as an excuse to hold on to publishing rights
forever).
E-books never go
out of print, so prepare to see your story in that anthology more or less
forever.
Where in
print, books were as likely to be
out of print ten years after publication as they were to be in
print, now, with ebooks and digital publishing, they will remain available and competing
forever.
«The other advantage,» she said, is the «ebooks are
forever» argument, never
out of print.
New channels
of physical preservation must be found for worn, short - lived technology, and many individual game titles often fall
out of print,
forever vanished from popular discourse.
2008 Abstract Painting, Galería Javier López, Madrid Joseph Albers, Donald Judd, Peter Halley, Galerie Thomas, Munich Painting: Now and
Forever, Part II, Matthew Marks Gallery, New York Weight Watchers, Galerie Xippas, Paris The Dorothy and Herbert Vogel Collection: Fifty Works for Fifty States, The National Gallery
of Art, Washington, DC (catalogue) Summer Exhibition, Waddington Galleries, London
Out of Storage I: Chosen Paintings from the Collection, Mudam Musée d'art modern Grand - Duc Jean, Luxembourg Indian Winter, Albert Baronian Gallery, Brussels Totally Rad: New York in the 80s, Paul Kasmin Gallery, New York The Big Bang, Museo Carlo Bilotti, Rome, Italy (catalogue) Abstract Vision, Thomas Ammann Fine Art, Zurich (catalogue) Collecting Collections, The Museum
of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles Modern
Prints: Classic Modern to Pop Art, Galerie Proarta, Zurich