It's one of those deals where everyone is standing
with Styrofoam plates, paper cups, and plastic utensils.
The children then made boats
with Styrofoam plates, plastic straws, wooden sticks, and other supplies before testing how the boats would fare when placed in a plastic tub of water.
1) Question: Yes, I hit my good - for - nothing brother in the face
with a styrofoam plate.
Answer: To arrest you for assault
with a styrofoam plate.
(NWF Daily News, Man accused of attacking brother
with Styrofoam plate)
Not exact matches
It's just a juke joint
with a kitchen in the back, serving chicken on
Styrofoam plates and sweet tea in plastic cups.
We would grab our
Styrofoam plates (when we didn't realize how horrible
Styrofoam was for the environment) and fill our
plates with hamburgers and hot dogs and cut up veggies
with dip.
The International Mall in Westmont, Illinois, 22 miles from downtown Chicago, is more or less your typical suburban food court — fluorescent lighting, drop ceilings, and all —
with stands selling inexpensive dumplings on
Styrofoam plates.
Let snow fall onto the
plate or scrape some onto it and quickly plunge it into a
Styrofoam tray filled
with liquid nitrogen.
Created from a variety of source materials — including carved wooden doors, acid - etched metal
plates,
styrofoam dioramas, hand - carved billboards, and newly developed concrete sculptures -, the work presented in Annihilation engages
with the urban context.
«Tara Donovan: Drawings (Pins)» at the Pace Gallery, 510 West 25th Street, opening February 11, 6 - 8 p.m., through March 19, thepacegallery.com Since being featured in the Whitney Biennial in 2000, Tara Donovan has become a bona fide international sensation by using everyday materials —
styrofoam cups, pencils, straws, paper
plates, Scotch tape, and more — to create sculptures that invade larger spaces that one would think possible
with biomorphic shapes, mini cities, and quotidian - made - fantastic vistas.
«Tara Donovan: Drawings (Pins)» at the Pace Gallery, 510 West 25th Street, opening February 11, 6 - 8 p.m., through March 19, thepacegallery.com Since being featured in the Whitney Biennial in 2000, Tara Donovan has become a bona fide international sensation by using everyday materials —
styrofoam cups, pencils, straws, paper
plates, Scotch tape, and more — to create sculptures that invade larger spaces that one would think possible
with biomorphic shapes, mini cities, and quotidian - made - fantastic
Birthday parties are a lot of work for parents, so I understand the desire to simplify, but I can't help feeling horribly guilty whenever I slide a dirty
Styrofoam plate — piled
with food scraps, a crumpled paper napkin, plastic cutlery, cup balancing on top — into a garbage bag that's been set out for this purpose.
Then there's the added energy cost of production, packaging, and transporting to stores and homes and away to landfill, where disposable
plates and cups — which can be made of plastic,
Styrofoam, virgin wood fibers, plastic - coated paper, post-consumer recycled fibers, or agricultural waste products such as bagasse, and are usually non-recyclable because they are contaminated
with food residue — will sit for hundreds of years, slowly decomposing and releasing methane gas.