Sentences with phrase «to burn the piece»

It's where a clothing manufacturer will literally burn pieces of the fabric, but not all the way through, either in a specific pattern or at random.
Also, that problem was apparently known by the manufacturer and nearly impossible to fix because it actually burned a piece within the passenger door.
Today most of her time is spent making mini paintings and wood - burned pieces on recycled and free fallen wood.
Burning a piece of cotton inside the cup removed oxygen from the air, causing negative air pressure.
Add water and scrape burnt pieces off bottom of skillet.
Add water and scrape burnt pieces off bottom of skillet.
Keep baking until the bacon gets slightly crisp and darkens a bit (I don't mind a few burnt pieces).
I haven't actually made this recipe but I have tried over and over to caramelize onions ending up with mostly burned pieces.
When that didn't work, he tried burning the pieces of paper, but he could still see numbers hovering among the embers.
And yet, the film hides a creeping sense of dread in every scene, slowly crawling into your brain and burning every piece of disturbing imagery it can think of.
You can look at your burnt piece of toast, and smile.
What I love about using the dehydrator to make kale chips is that there are no burnt pieces and all the kale chips come out evenly baked.
They were more light and perfect than the way I've made them before (in my other post), with no burned pieces.
I microwaved for too long and ended up having to start a new batch because I couldn't get all the burned pieces out, which made my strawberry lumpy.
Discard peels and any burnt pieces of garlic.
The trick to roasting mixed veggies without a mix of burnt pieces and partially raw veggies is to be mindful of size when prepping — larger pieces for fast to cook veggies like peppers and smaller ones for root vegetables that roast slower so that you end up with evenly cooked veggies.
Also remove any burnt onion pieces and peel the tomatoes, then discard any burnt pieces and peels.
They left Nancy Holt's Sun Tunnels, Jackie Winsor's Burned Piece and Exploded Piece, Lynda Benglis with her Night Sherbet of poured polyurethane foam, Michelle Stuart with canvases of graphite and earth, Suzanne Harris's Inhabitant, and Wheatfield by Agnes Denes — long since harvested of its thousand pounds to give way to the luxury rentals of Battery Park City.
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