As if you could throw your arms around the sea, and weave
water out of wool, words, and magic... this was essentially the task presented to Edinburgh's Dovecot Tapestry Studio.
Not exact matches
«His head and hair were white like
wool, as white as snow, and His eyes like a flame
of fire; His feet were like fine brass, as if refined in a furnace, and His voice as the sound
of many
waters; He had in His right hand seven stars,
out of His mouth went a sharp two - edged sword, and His countenance was like the sun shining in its strength.»
Once washed, the
wool will need to be air dried, so you'll want to get
out some
of the excess
water or it will take forever!
~ ~ When taking the
wool out I now turn right side
out and submerge the
wool holding open the waist and pull it up through the
water a couple
of times so the lanolin and
water flow through the wet zone.
J.P.S. Badyal and colleagues point
out that oil - spill cleanup crews often use absorbents, like clays, straw and
wool to sop up oil, but these materials aren't very efficient because they also sop up a lot
of water.
The more complete combustion produces fewer airborne emissions, and any solid residue is captured by the copper
wool and kept
out of the
water column.
Everywhere you look, something is made from
Wool, and even the
water that oozes
out of pipes is depicted as a line
of yarn rolling along.