enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Mona Lisa replicas and reinterpretations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mona_Lisa_replicas_and...

    Aside from countless print-reproductions of Leonardo's original Mona Lisa on postcards, coffee mugs and T-shirts, her likeness has also been re-imagined using coffee, toast, seaweed, Rubik's Cubes, and computer chips, to name only a few.

  3. Mimeograph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mimeograph

    The process was called mimeography, and a copy made by the process was a mimeograph. Mimeographs, along with spirit duplicators and hectographs , were common technologies for printing small quantities of a document, as in office work, classroom materials, and church bulletins.

  4. Release print - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Release_print

    In the traditional photochemical post-production workflow, release prints are usually copies, made using a high-speed continuous contact optical printer, [5] of an internegative (sometimes referred to as a 'dupe negative'), which in turn is a copy of an interpositive (these were sometimes referred to as 'lavender prints' in the past, due to the slightly colored base of the otherwise black-and ...

  5. 'Werewolf' Confessed to Eating His Son and Other Murders. Was ...

    www.aol.com/werewolf-confessed-eating-son-other...

    In the centuries to come, his story has inspired artwork — such as the woodcut print of "The Werewolf or The Cannibal" in possession of the Museum of Metropolitan Art, and George Bores' 1590 ...

  6. Photostat machine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photostat_machine

    The verbs "photostat", "photostatted", and "photostatting" refer to making copies on such a machine in the same way that the trademarked name "Xerox" was later used to refer to any copy made by means of electrostatic photocopying. People who operated these machines were known as photostat operators.

  7. Subsidy Scorecards: California State University-Long Beach

    projects.huffingtonpost.com/projects/ncaa/...

    SOURCE: Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System, California State University-Long Beach (2014, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013).Read our methodology here.. HuffPost and The Chronicle examined 201 public D-I schools from 2010-2014.

  8. Stade Charles Tondreau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stade_Charles_Tondreau

    The Stade Charles Tondreau is a multi-purpose stadium in Mons, Belgium. It is currently used mostly for football matches and is the home ground of R.A.E.C. Mons. The stadium also hosts home matches for the Belgium national rugby union team in the Rugby Europe International Championship. [1] The stadium holds 8,000.

  9. Xerox art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xerox_art

    Xerox art (sometimes, more generically, called copy art, electrostatic art, scanography or xerography) is an art form that began in the 1960s. Prints are created by putting objects on the glass , or platen , of a photocopier and by pressing "start" to produce an image.