Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A combination between a whiteboard and a cork bulletin board Original early 1960s ad for "Plasti-slate", the first whiteboard/dry erase board invented by Martin Heit. It has been widely reported that Korean War veteran and photographer Martin Heit and Albert Stallion, an employee at Alliance, a leading flat rolled steel sheet supplier should be credited with the invention of the whiteboard in ...
Buy: VIZ-PRO Cork Notice Boards . 5. MasterVision Bulletin Board. This modern and minimal board is ideal for those seeking a bulletin board that doesn’t quite look like one.
Demounting is the process of removing a print from the mounting material. This is often done because older mounts were usually made from acidic paper materials that can deteriorate the paper or fade colorants. Mounts are usually adhered to prints through adhesive agents that can cause yellow distortions on the paper. [7]
Harvesting of cork from the forests of Algeria, 1930. Cork is a natural material used by humans for over 5,000 years. It is a material whose applications have been known since antiquity, especially in floating devices and as stopper for beverages, mainly wine, whose market, from the early twentieth century, had a massive expansion, particularly due to the development of several cork-based ...
Masonite board Back side of a masonite board Isorel, c. 1920 Quartrboard, [1] Masonite Corporation, c. 1930. Masonite, also called Quartboard or pressboard, [2] is a type of engineered wood made of steam-cooked and pressure-molded wood or paper fibers.
An active-duty Marine has been charged with murdering a contestant from a racy reality TV show whose body was found in a pond a week after she vanished 50 miles away while working as an escort.
Whitehouse then gifted Sen. Shelley Capito, R-W.V., chair of the committee overseeing Zeldin’s confirmation hearing, a gavel made in 1956 using wood from the old West Virginia statehouse.
From January 2008 to December 2012, if you bought shares in companies when D. Scott Davis joined the board, and sold them when he left, you would have a 8.3 percent return on your investment, compared to a -2.8 percent return from the S&P 500.