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Often, the stencil material covering the interiors of closed letterforms (e.g. a, b, d, e, g, etc.) would fall away during continued printing, causing ink-filled letters in the copies. The stencil would gradually stretch, starting near the top where the mechanical forces were greatest, causing a characteristic "mid-line sag" in the textual ...
A parish magazine or parish bulletin, also called church bulletin, is a periodical produced by and for an ecclesiastical parish. It usually comprises a mixture of religious articles, community contributions, and parish notices, including the previous month‘s christenings, marriages, and funerals. Magazines are sold or are otherwise circulated ...
These books are not commonly used in the pews, but are resources for pastors in the preparation for Sunday worship, as well as for devotional use by church members and seminarians. Portions of these books are frequently found in the church bulletins, functioning as liturgical booklets in many Presbyterian churches.
"Antependium" is the word used for elaborate fixed altar frontals, which, in large churches and especially in the Ottonian art of the Early Medieval period, were sometimes of gold studded with gems, enamels and ivories, and in other periods and churches often carved stone, painted wood panel, stucco, or other materials, such as azulejo tiling in Portugal.
Perforated metal has been utilized across a variety of industries including, but not limited to: Ceiling of Culture Palace (Tel Aviv) concert hall is covered with perforated metal panels Perforated steel Marston Matting airfield. Architectural - infill panels, sunshade, cladding, column covers, metal signage, site amenities, fencing screens ...
These exquisite and expensive embroidery pieces were often made as vestments, such as copes, chasubles and orphreys, or else as antependia, shrine covers or other church furnishings. Secular examples, now known mostly just from contemporary inventories, included various types of garments, horse-trappings, book covers and decorative hangings.
Articles written for church bulletins are often sermonettes in essence. They contain an introduction, frequently a joke, a body or situation that is being addressed, a biblical equivalent and a wrap-up or point tying the illustration and scripture together in a meaningful way.
Completed in 1547 by Beccafumi, the scene contains one large panel of Abraham's sacrifice of Issac, surrounded by smaller rectangular panels of related scenes. [ 14 ] Bordering the main altar is a geometric pattern containing five circular panels which depict Mercy and The Four Cardinal Virtues (Fortitude, Justice, Prudence, and Good Government ...