Sentences with phrase «small piece of wire»

Bury, just below the surface of a hole, a small piece of wire mesh.
Finally, I used a small piece of wire to wrap around the wreath in order to create a hanger.
You can use toothpicks or skewers wrapped with a small piece of wire.
Next, take a smaller piece of wire and wrap it around the rose's stem to secure it to the headband.

Not exact matches

The hacking team at Fail0verflow tweeted a picture of a small plug - in device that can apparently provide this short - out easily, and the team joked that a simple piece of wire from the hardware store can do so today.
Three hundred colleagues were persuaded to sit on a toilet — in private — and to mark the positions of their anuses by fixing a small piece of a paper to a wire strung across the seat.
But Oxford University zoologists writing in the current issue of the journal Science report that Betty, a captive crow, spontaneously performed an unexpected variation on this theme, coaxing a piece of straight wire into a hook to retrieve a small bucket of food.
In the team's experimental setup, electricity was supplied to a tiny piece of tungsten selenide (small rectangle at center) through two gold wires (from top left and right), causing it to emit light (bright area at center), demonstrating its potential as an LED material.
STEP 1: Clip small pieces of holly and attach them to your wreath using floral wire or a glue gun.
Sometimes small chain is a little tough to measure the same, so an easy tip for making sure the lengths are the same is to cut one piece, then feed the top length onto a piece of wire.
Once you've measured the diameter of your base make your piece of chicken wire just a little bit smaller to fit inside the base, then crimp the edges of the wire over to hold the shape (acrylic nails are a great tool for this step).
Understood in their broadest definition, the drawings and photographs assembled here include a wide range of material, among which are an 1864 photograph of the forest of Fontainebleau by the little - known French photographer Constant Alexandre Famin; a pastel completed earlier this year by Jasper Johns; a 3 x 5 inch Cezanne figure drawing; a new 6 1/2 x 10 foot landscape drawing by Ugo Rondinone; a digitally - manipulated photograph of the musician Björk by Inez van Lamsweerde; a small piece by an outsider artist known as the «Philadelphia Wireman,» who carefully bound his drawings up with bits of wire so they are barely visible; a recent charcoal on canvas by Gary Hume; and a 1949 sketchbook by Tony Smith.
Among them, two rooms are dedicated to site - specific works: Shachi Jokyo (1972), an array of small, flat stones supported by a single piece of wire that criss - crosses the room, and Tabunritsu (1975), a set of over thirty stones mounted on top of a transparent plastic sheet draped over concrete blocks.
Since then, Tuttle has presented prominent and influential series in the history of contemporary art such as the cloth pieces, which he installed dyed and cut canvas on the wall, and were both pictorial and three - dimensional, and the wire pieces, which consisted of wire and its shadow and pencil lines, and small - scale collage pieces among others.
Best known are perhaps the little shoes (scarpette), which she was sometimes photographed wearing, but there are all sorts of other pieces, including snail - like coils, arrangements of knitting needles partially encased in tight rings of coloured mesh (square or triangular or even spelling out her daughter's nickname, Bea), a musical stave made of pinned - up wires that takes up half a wall, with small note - like squares of knitted copper scattered across it.
Back in New York, Bontecou created a group of small box es whose welded frames are filled in by pieces of muslin and attached to the frame with crude wire «staples.»
Ms. Herrera, who has shoulder - length white hair and wire - rim glasses and was wearing a black cardigan sweater, held up a small, rectangular piece of painted vellum and compared it to the larger version of the same work, one done on paper, which was hanging on the wall of her large, floor - through home and studio on East 19th Street.
In Untitled (Small Gray Corner Piece)(1968) Fred Sandback stretched lengths of metal wire to outline the corner, revealing both the framed and surrounding space.
Her smaller pieces, pins and bracelets, are made out of buttons and old telephone wire and woven paper cord.
NOTE: While I used multiple pieces of small wire for this, if you end up using store - bought, flexible gauge wire, you could use one long piece to loop all the balls together.
I then cut off a small piece of floral wire (about 1.5 - 2 ″), bent it in half, and slid it around a divider bar on the outer loop of the wreath form.
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