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  2. Christmas Bullet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas_Bullet

    The single-seat "Christmas Bullet" featured an all-wood construction with a veneer-clad fuselage. Despite his claims to the contrary, neither design feature reduced aerodynamic drag nor was he among the first to use this method of construction; the majority of German World War I -era two-seater aircraft used for bombing and reconnaissance were ...

  3. Bulletism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulletism

    The artist can then develop images based on what is seen. Salvador Dalí named this technique. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Leonardo da Vinci , suggested that "just as one can hear any desired syllable in the sound of a bell, so one can see any desired figure in the shape formed by throwing a sponge with ink against the wall."

  4. Bullet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bullet

    A ballistic tip bullet is a hollow-point rifle bullet that has a plastic tip on the end of the bullet. This improves external ballistics by streamlining the bullet, allowing it to cut through the air more easily, and improves terminal ballistics by allowing the bullet to act as a jacketed hollow point.

  5. What Bullets Do to Bodies - Highline

    highline.huffingtonpost.com/articles/en/gun-violence

    Goldberg wheeled the monitor over to show me the X-ray image: paper clip and bullet. “Very small,” she said, pointing to the slug, “like a .22.” As so many other patients do, the patient asked the trauma surgeons if they were going to take the bullet out, and the surgeons explained that they fix what the bullet injures, they don’t fix ...

  6. Mat Collishaw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mat_Collishaw

    His best known work is Bullet Hole (1988), which is a closeup photo of what appears to be a bullet hole wound in the scalp of a person's head, mounted on 15 light boxes. Collishaw took the original image from a pathology textbook that actually showed a wound caused by an ice pick . [ 2 ]

  7. Celebratory gunfire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celebratory_gunfire

    A bullet traveling at only 61 m/s (200 feet per second or 135 miles per hour) to 100 m/s (330 feet per second or 225 miles per hour) can penetrate human skin. [ 16 ] Any gunfire can damage hearing of those nearby without ear protection, and blank rounds fired in an unsafe direction can cause injuries or death from muzzle blast at close range ...

  8. Bullet Hole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bullet_Hole

    Bullet Hole is the title of a 1988 artwork by British artist Mat Collishaw. Despite the title, the work is a reproduction of an ice pick wound to the head, appropriated from a pathology manual and blown up over an interlocking grid of fifteen separate framed images that make up one single work.

  9. Bullet catch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bullet_catch

    The bullet catch is a stage magic illusion in which a magician appears to catch a bullet fired directly at them ⁠— often in the mouth, sometimes in the hand or sometimes caught with other items such as a dinner plate. [1]: 73–77 The bullet catch may also be referred to as the bullet trick, defying the bullets or occasionally the gun trick.