All joking apart, the plaque was incredibly hard to focus on as the print was also rather worn and faded. |
|
Lord of the Flies is another in a long line of films adapted from various print material. |
|
If they are going to bother to print such an amazing fact, they may as well say why it is amazing. |
|
The transition from print journalism to television can often be a very difficult one. |
|
Most of the journalism on the internet is print journalism recycled through the major newspaper sites. |
|
Since then, he has worked as a science journalist in broadcasting, print and online. |
|
He spoke with a couple of New York publishers about putting it out, he says, but in the end decided to print it himself. |
|
In print we should analyze the charges in detail and keep an accurate, truthful record of the entire episode. |
|
Just type in your zip code, personalize and customize the prewritten message, and email or print and mail it to legislators. |
|
Printing is accomplished via tiny cells or ink reservoirs which are engraved into the surface of the print cylinder. |
|
Students were instructed to print the patient information leaflet and place a copy of it in their portfolio. |
|
Either way it resulted in a print akin to embossed leatherwork in appearance. |
|
A print campaign will appear in Sports Illustrated, buff books and trade mags. |
|
Due to the sheer annoyingness of printing these things, the comic is only available very rarely, and in print runs of only 16 at a time. |
|
Sinclair gives the impression of being malleable, like he bears the print of whoever was last sitting on him. |
|
Cosmo tells us the safe way to wear animal print is to team a leopard print top with black pants and stilettos. |
|
This mood is furthered by the wooden hope chest, the old-fashioned furniture, and the floral print rug on the floor. |
|
The print engine is designed linearly, with paper running from front to back under the four print drums. |
|
Try the paisley floral pink, lime and mocha print in an elegant strappy swimsuit or a stripe bikini with ruched side pants. |
|
Four lines of print at the bottom, stating that survival rates are improving, fail to mitigate the harsh message. |
|
|
Suffice it to say that Waugh might have trouble getting anyone to print his story today. |
|
He has written more than 2,000 news and feature stories for print and broadcast media. |
|
The image created is a reverse of the relief, just like the print from a rubber stamp. |
|
Under the fiat money system the FED has arrogated unlimited powers to itself, namely, the power to print unlimited amounts of money. |
|
When exploited properly it's a license to print money, capable of earning its purchase price within a few years. |
|
A liquor license on Whyte Avenue is generally known to be a license to print money. |
|
How the processes for lodgement and legal deposit will work in practice, the fine print of the legislation, are being worked out at present. |
|
I have had occasion over the years to savage this or that actor or screenwriter or director in print as part of my work as a film critic. |
|
At Curwen Studios, Cambridgeshire, they print a lithographic poster using methods Lautrec himself would have used. |
|
A private company, subsidised by the taxpayer, is given a license to print money at our expense. |
|
Patrons can access large print books, talking books, audio and video recordings and use the internet in addition to journals and media. |
|
The well-known study by Thomas Maguire, a lithographic print taken from life in 1849, was from the outset a commercial project. |
|
In another, he reverentially rubbed loaves of bread across lithographic stones while creating a print depicting the pieta. |
|
He has a special interest in attempting to convey academic ideas to the mainstream, perhaps through print journalism. |
|
At first, the idea of bringing the Internet to print received much criticism from skeptics. |
|
No change of the publication regime is planned, his staff discovers, and the officials involved have no authority to issue any print licenses. |
|
So a print is basically a lithograph, an etching, an engraving, a drawing on stone or metal that can then be printed. |
|
What it's meant is handing over to them a license to print money so that they are awash with profits at the same time as being morally bankrupt. |
|
The appearance of print added a powerful new weapon to the arsenal of debate within the ecumene. |
|
For awhile, starting an Internet company and taking it public was a license to print money. |
|
|
Everyone and his dog now knows that commercial radio is a licence to print money, and they all want quick bucks. |
|
Giving them free license to print will result in their indiscriminate covering of the entire surface with gadget prints. |
|
We're very keen to retain our print dimension, and part of this will be to make it easier to buy back issues of the magazine. |
|
Original, commissioned and other editions of one are not subject to these issues, but any numbered edition giclee, litho print or poster is. |
|
We offer the best print quality tattoo flash from extremely talented and award winning artists. |
|
Even as they haggled over the small print with the French, British officials were encouraging Arab nobles to revolt against the Ottomans. |
|
If a print is too large and has to be rolled and sent in a tube, it should be taken out immediately after it arrived at its destination. |
|
Similarly, he considers the necessity of lyric poetry going into print after 1645 instead of remaining in manuscript form. |
|
When the motion was narrowly defeated it led to scathing criticism by the national print media in particular, he noted. |
|
Each 13x15-inch print is double matted in marbled beige and sage green, mounted under glass, and hand framed in gold-toned wood. |
|
It's often best to save the full-page print ads, expensive radio spots and glossy, four-color mailers for the slower months of the year. |
|
And scores of promos through print and television advertisements announce the arrival of new films. |
|
Now they seem to think that out of print and out of copyright are the same thing. |
|
I mean, the two of them were wearing leopard print camisoles with matching panties! |
|
Would those conservatively-dressed women have dared to step out in leopard print shoes had their mentor not worn them? |
|
A German photographer decided to test how a high-quality inkjet print would compare with a high-quality analog print. |
|
To make things worse, commercially available audio books are usually abridged and twice as expensive as the print version. |
|
Some might say that gatekeepers such as editors guarantee a certain level of quality among print publications that is lacking on the web. |
|
Before setting out on a weekend drive or hike, you can print out a map that shows every road and every rise and dip in the terrain. |
|
China has an official art scene with academies, art institutions and regular print exhibitions with awards and prices. |
|
|
Otherwise, this is a very acceptable print that should please all 248 gazillion fans. |
|
The color palette is a bit washed out, faded, but I think this is the print itself, and not a fault of the transfer process. |
|
The print material is sent via first-class mail the same day the video is sent via third-class mail. |
|
When delicately colored, the resulting print resembled the original watercolor. |
|
Most print dealers were so desperate that they would undercut your price by a measly hundred dollars just to ace you out of a deal. |
|
A print server can rip, store and queue hundreds of megabytes of print jobs without slowing down the network. |
|
She pours bile on him in print and he responds acidly when journalists relay her comments. |
|
Although they didn't actually print my letter, they have acknowledged my request and hopefully something will be done. |
|
Have you ever read the ingredients in the teeny, tiny print on a tin of commercial dog food? |
|
And for the newspaper industry, just how many are going to print all those extra racecards? |
|
ThinPrint offers software to sort out print jobs in internet and mobile environments. |
|
Galleries are also available of the posters and print ads used to advertise the movie. |
|
Anyway, we're already excitedly mulling over ideas for possible commercials and print ads. |
|
The English novelist responsible for the most scarifying account of literary humiliation ever put into print died a hundred years ago this month. |
|
They were pretty surprised, partly because they were leopard print but mostly because I'd been wearing them for three days. |
|
There are no negatives to print another photo, no printed first drafts to retype an essay. |
|
Now the average consumer can forget about toying with adhesive labels and just print right to the disc. |
|
The good doctor says that if you print money ad infinitum, the market will go up and the dollar will go down. |
|
Although the computer was used to raise invoices it did not print a sales day book. |
|
The print blocks, with their justified margins, look like squares and are placed in the upper part of their respective pages. |
|
|
As is the case with other institutions, the fine print of implementation is smudged and rankles the staff. |
|
I think that it is irresponsible of your newspaper to print the rantings of a woman who is merely interested in promoting her own biased views. |
|
This means you can dynamically edit any shapes you draw and go to print at any time without rasterizing them. |
|
To print a hardcopy of your map, there is ArcPress for ArcGIS, a print rasterizer for fast and high-quality printing and exporting. |
|
Hurt by a downturn in the print industry, Wyndeham has been rationalising its business units to improve efficiency. |
|
The drummer didn't tell me to turn off the tape recorder, nor did he ask me not to print his remark. |
|
And her choice of leopard print is objectionable on every possible count of taste. |
|
The cast-net has not yet been generally recognized in print as an Africanism, and awaits further research. |
|
As you would expect from a new film, there are no nicks, scars, or other defects that migrated from the source print to the digital realm. |
|
But if I ever came across that catalogue again, and discovered that they were still selling leopard print kaftans, I'd be very happy indeed. |
|
First, a photograph, whether print or slide, is scanned into a digital image file. |
|
This unusually large red-chalk drawing by Rembrandt is closely based on an early print after Leonardo da Vinci's famous mural of the Last Supper. |
|
One can imagine the glow of satisfaction felt by the letters page editor on being able to print those remarks. |
|
In print advertising, you are looking at everybody who reads the magazine or newspaper. |
|
You can also use a photocopier to copy print on to a transparency, but remember that you may need to enlarge it to make the text readable. |
|
However, the collective whoopee was abruptly halted when the small print was made known. |
|
I thought thank goodness there are some of his age group who have the guts to put in print his opinion of Great Britain. |
|
The 3D printer spreads one thin layer of powder over the print bed, then passes over the powder just as an inkjet printer head passes over paper. |
|
He could hardly make a living with his print designs and the story goes that he had to repair and sell straw mats to survive. |
|
If you're not on friendly terms with them, you could print out The Monday Garden article on ailanthus and stick it under their front door. |
|
|
Kuensel, the national newspaper, is published in Dzongkha, English, and Nepali, both in print and on the Internet. |
|
The prolific print publisher aimed his product at a broad public, and understood that Dutch culture was complex. |
|
I tell her to reboot the computer to free up memory, but she doesn't want to because she's running a huge print job. |
|
Copy shops are rebranding themselves as print centres and are moving in one of two directions. |
|
The rebroadcasts on cable were bad quality, and a lot of print and sound damage was apparent. |
|
It has high recall and high precision, but has the disadvantage of being an expensive database with high online print royalties. |
|
A proof print is an example taken when the work is incomplete or not ready for publication. |
|
The two retrospective articles published by the Moulton Advertiser in 1984 and 1998 did not print the Letson family name. |
|
The fine print is fascinating, explaining the criteria used by government panels to reclassify people from one racial group to another. |
|
And yet a lot of jazz musicians and critics and fans, in print and on the web, have been complaining that it's too constrictive. |
|
Every newspaper, as far as I can see without exception, devoted pages and pages of print and photographs to reporting the march. |
|
The floor of the print tends to be drawn upwards as the animal withdrew its foot from wet and sticky sediments. |
|
He emerges from his hole and, stopping only to milk the distended teats of his goats, he returns to examine the print more carefully. |
|
Hopefully, they might allow the sites to print the lyrics if they remove their archives of guitar tabs for the songs. |
|
Some of the contributors here took issue with the meaning of the word print itself. |
|
Isabel's going to make a final print and copies for everyone, once we decide on the final wordings and the like. |
|
I have noted that the print is reduced considerably during this washing process, but usually regains its full tonal range in the fix. |
|
After reduction, the print should be agitated in rapid fixer for 30 seconds before toning. |
|
His poems stopped appearing in major American poetry anthologies, and his books went out of print and remained so. |
|
The small print on one flier noted that a one-year contract was based on a six-day workweek, 12 hours per day. |
|
|
A young football fan is to see her name in print and her soccer poem published in an anthology. |
|
She would then envisage what the desired final print should look like and expose the negative accordingly. |
|
All this and more could be found at various sources on the Web and print form. |
|
Tuleh's ruffled wrap dress has little circle prints, and Emanuel Ungaro's cherry blossom branches print shirt is very fashionable. |
|
I refix after bleaching, then soak the print in hypo clearing agent for 3 minutes. |
|
That word, by the way, refers to etchings made using aquatint, a process that makes a print resemble a water color. |
|
For instance, a student spun his story by relating the writing pad to the print media. |
|
A sensitive Geiger-Muller counter registers no activity on the surface of a uranium print or on the outside of a bottle of toner. |
|
On a light table, place your negative on top of the print and align it until it is registered. |
|
He had no devoted readership and little chance of remaining in print for long, let alone being republished in thirty or forty years' time. |
|
I know where to go when I absolutely need new news, but the old print cycle is still ruling publishing in many news houses. |
|
It was another Johannes, also a German, who in 1472 became the first person to print an astronomical almanac. |
|
But moving right along, here is a little bag that I have made out of one of my screen print projects. |
|
Use small pieces of tape on the back to hold cards together, then laminate the mat at a print shop or office supplies store. |
|
I'm still using film, which I scan, retouch in Photo Shop, and print on an inkjet. |
|
She's wearing a print dress, low-cut of course, frilly sleeves, a quarter-inch of makeup, and her hair is dyed midnight black. |
|
Each week in my print culture course we have little assignments related to the topic of the week. |
|
In accordance with guidelines for advertising labeling in print newspapers, a thin black rule was placed just after the sponsorship. |
|
The campaign covers TV, radio, print and ambient media, with the message that the newspaper is worth re-appraising. |
|
If you were Polish in 1986, for example, you made a laser printer print out the Polish alphabet. |
|
|
Furthermore you can expect an original work to appreciate in value whereas a print is far less likely to. |
|
Ammonium chloride is an effective restrainer, but gives off a strong ammoniacal smell and may shift print color toward the red. |
|
The print seems a little light, sometimes blurring the delicate, almost perforated line work. |
|
While print may provide context, a photo leaves relatively little to our imagination and elicits emotions otherwise buffered by words. |
|
Thus to reply to his caveats in cold print rather than over warm food would seem to provoke argument where I sense none is intended. |
|
Teachers can enter progress reports for each student and print a summary progress report when desired. |
|
The book's cover reproduces a 1789 print of the famous fight between the Anglo-Jewish Daniel Mendoza and the Gentile Humphrey. |
|
As the tree grows, or reproduces, so the individual's genetic print is transferred. |
|
The video is very good, with a small amount of dirt on the print and good reproduction of color and black levels. |
|
To mark the occasion, Harley released a limited number of licensed print and sculpture reproductions while keeping the originals. |
|
It can include cards and posters, even t-shirts, as well as books, zines, and other print media. |
|
And I don't really have a favourite website, I prefer books, print magazines and zines. |
|
Scum was a print zine until issue 14 but at the same time was also on the internet. |
|
Thousands of kids who had been exchanging print zines jumped at the chance to spread their messages over the Internet. |
|
I turned off the safelights and developed this print for 10 minutes. |
|
The 36,000-plus images in the historic photograph and print collection are divided between the reference library in Trowbridge and the library in Salisbury. |
|
Famous in his lifetime as a journalist, literary editor, autobiographer and short story writer, he is now out of print and increasingly forgotten. |
|
The printers feature an intuitive, full-colour touch screen that gives users the ability to manage job queues, track print costs and view true print previews. |
|
A typical example of this would be the print company that for years has printed your brochures and letterheads and suddenly here they are now offering to design your Web site. |
|
The print shows a bearded man looking leftward into a mirror. |
|
|
As far as Rosentiel's ability to print on a broad range of substrates, the company has stated that the image can be applied to acetate, silk, leather and even steel. |
|
Comics crashed in 1993, with a glut of titles and excessive print runs. |
|
It is therefore regrettable that you chose to print the article in its current form and under a misleading heading on the front page of your paper. |
|
It was the only si story Shrake ever wrote that the magazine would not print and Laguerre was embarrassed. |
|
One common technique used to print vector-based GIS drawings is to first convert the vector data into a raster image via a technique called rasterization. |
|
You can view and print the actual scanned images of audited company accounts, changes in directors, allotments of shares, mortgages or charges and all recent documents filed. |
|
Thank you for allowing me to print this second chapter in your life. |
|
Navigating this brave new world is the inventively-named Anana, an employee at a soon to be obsolete print dictionary. |
|
Much coastal and Dales accommodation is already booked up in advance, and Scarborough had to print 10,000 extra holiday brochures to satisfy demand. |
|
They took cover inside a print works to the north east of Paris, where they held a member of staff as a hostage. |
|
Scrooge is still with us, not just in print but embodied in the cold hearts and selfish calculations of misanthropes everywhere. |
|
My sister is wearing a floral print frock, white socks and t-bar sandals. |
|
Then, the essay explains that the public sphere of early print is founded on alterity, on Otherness, on the non-English and even the anti-English. |
|
Almost the entire print run vanished immediately, dooming the novel to decades of obscurity. |
|
In a way, the print emphasizes the pelt-like nature of all images, as they flatten out the world and hand it over to us. |
|
A growing sense that Romney is stiffing the print press may be fueling the flaps that came to define his trip. |
|
Then he must recarve the second image into the remainder of the same block, apply the second color and print over the impressions of the first step. |
|
He produced a huge body of work in woodcut, etching, and lithography, but each print usually exists in only a few impressions, as he liked to print his work himself. |
|
Nobody has ever read the small print of a mobile-phone insurance contract. |
|
Of course there is fine print somewhere buried in the website stating that everything is fictional but that is difficult to find. |
|
|
But I explain the cost of remounting a new print if the old one fades. |
|
It was generally replaced in classrooms in the 1980s by the whole language method of immersing children in print and allowing them to absorb words. |
|
You can print up a simple rate card just to have something established so an agency or anyone else cannot jack you around by going to a rock bottom rate request. |
|
The print had been torn, folded and creased until a large void was left in the lower left portion. |
|
Although this reader is offered under the rubric of book history, in fact it encompasses the many forms of American print culture, including newspapers and magazines. |
|
Painting Moominvalley in sepia to save print costs in The Great Flood, Jansson somehow makes it a riot of imagined color. |
|
You can also tell that portions of the print are missing, as the title cards are held still for several seconds, as if to compensate for a lack of linking footage. |
|
For instance, this morning I wanted to print some details for Mike and Joan's travel insurance and the printer started to act up, Grrrrrrrrrrrrrr. |
|
Alfonso Signorini, editor of chi magazine, has defended his decision to print the images. |
|
Yet each new book has a print run of 25,000 and, cumulatively, the books have sold more than 200 million copies. |
|
Sizing paper with gelatin, arrowroot, casein or cornstarch is recommended to keep the solutions from sinking beneath the surface, which causes the print to lose contrast. |
|
The artist capitalizes on the corrosive etching process in each successive state until the finished print embodies the scatological essence of its message. |
|
Each layer is molded in one substrate, the two are joined using an optically transparent bonding layer and the replicators print the discs in the conventional way. |
|
I then used a wet tea bag to antique the white edges and after allowing the print to dry I repeated the process in different areas to vary the color. |
|
Directly across the car from me, next to an old woman with a gaudy cabbage rose print babushka over thinning white hair, is a young man I cannot take my eyes off of for long. |
|
In 2003 there was no ebook market, so the print edition was responsible for all book sales at that time. |
|
The book is done and heading to print but my fascination for 19th century America continues to burn brightly. |
|
Customers then place their order, print off a receipt and return home. |
|
Assane Dione has painted a portrait of Amadou Bamba that has been reproduced and sold as a snapshot-sized print all over Senegal for several years now. |
|
Because the footprint is only partial, there is no definitive way to positively identify just whose print it is. |
|
|
France and the UK are currently engaged in a tussle to see who controls such an agency which promises to become a license to print money for the eventual winner. |
|
For more straightforward cash rewards, consumers will have to read the small print of product literature to ensure they have the card that best suits their spending needs. |
|
All I gotta do is print them out, but my rents are sleeping already! |
|
Although referred to by the witness Police Constable Fagin during the course of her testimony the print out was not produced in evidence before me. |
|
Knopf has sold more than 400,000 copies, and the book has never been out of print in hardcover or paperback. |
|
Equally as beautiful as his womenswear, this featured plain white singlets studded with gold sequins, low-slung cream trousers and kimono print shirts. |
|
Velvet brocade, print and lace added extra zest to some jean styles. |
|
It's a four-color litho print gable top carton with a pour spout. |
|
Remember, refusal to give a thumb print is tantamount to a confession. |
|
The rota was a print out of the weekly schedule fastened to a clipboard. |
|
It also required that ADS print a disclaimer if they digitally altered the models. |
|
If you can get these three cherries in a line, you have hit the jackpot, whether you measure success in money, in print acreage, in airtime, in pixels or in love. |
|
This is the only print zine I know of around today, which is a stark difference to the dozens of underground zines that were around back in the day. |
|
Scum Magazine was started in 1995 as a small underground print zine. |
|
There was no way that I was going to write out some 347 words of waffle in block capitals, so I decided to print out what I'd written and stick it onto the form instead. |
|
It's worth bearing in mind, however, that regular savings accounts tend to have a raft of terms and conditions attached, so read the small print carefully before signing up. |
|
Manning's antics have earned him inches in print and occasional spots on television. |
|
In the context of elegy and of lyric, however, this marks a distinct departure, and one that acquires weight as print becomes a commodity consumed by unknown readers. |
|
However most of these positive correlations were explained away by the fact that people of higher socioeconomic status are in general more likely users of print media. |
|
Today, we look at print from the refreshed point of view of an expatriate who sees the old country with new eyes. |
|
|
One 30x40cm print finds an unidentified man in a Bedouin thobe, kaffiyeh and igal, with a dagger fastened around his waist. |
|
A single print of the film survived, however, and it has become well known. |
|
Companies try to sell their products using advertisements in form of placards, television spots and print publications. |
|
In this section, you'll learn how to create multiple artboards, edit them, and print files that contain multiple artboards. |
|
On the beach he always wore a straw hat with a red band and a brief pair of leopard print trunks. |
|
They got him into trouble at school, into print at university and into minor celebdom in the world of miniature wargaming. |
|
The events were so fantastic that only the tabloids were willing to print them. |
|
Before signing up for such an offer, be sure to read the fine print carefully. |
|
Chateau 66 is a handscreened print on a handpainted background from Nama Rococo, a wallpaper design studio in the Berkshires. |
|
When the print version of the second edition was published in 1989, the response was enthusiastic. |
|
This software can print compact disc inserts if you have the right size of paper. |
|
In Yorkshire, printer John White started to print the same document for a more widespread distribution. |
|
Music publishers begin to print music that amateurs could understand and play. |
|
These late fees are larcenous. I should have read the fine print before signing. |
|
Owning a machine tool plant, it was said, was almost as good as a license to print money. |
|
Graphic posters first appeared in the 1890s, and it became possible to print colour images economically in the early 20th century. |
|
At one point it had a print run of 11,000 and featured advertisers including the Financial Times. |
|
It was a success, with three print runs being commissioned to cope with the demand. |
|
However, the English language was changing rapidly in Caxton's time and the works he was given to print were in a variety of styles and dialects. |
|
The first version of The Canterbury Tales to be published in print was William Caxton's 1478 edition. |
|
|
It is probable that it was kept out of print during the author's lifetime because of its inflammatory content. |
|
Sylvie and Bruno came out in two volumes and is considered a lesser work, although it has remained in print for over a century. |
|
Until 1930, Woolf often helped her husband print the Hogarth books as the money for employees was not there. |
|
Several of the authors would be very pleased to have their own novels in print in 100 years. |
|
In June 1997, Bloomsbury published Philosopher's Stone with an initial print run of 1,000 copies, 500 of which were distributed to libraries. |
|
Folk music has been preserved and transmitted orally, through print and later through recordings. |
|
Despite knowing the numbers attending, the print run of programmes was sold out. |
|
The publisher refused to print both halves of the book, and original prints were by two companies. |
|
When I look at a digitally acquired and projected image, it looks inferior against an original negative anamorphic print or an IMAX one. |
|
The first print run of 2,000 was held back because Tenniel objected to the print quality. |
|
In 1848, Fred Lillywhite used a portable printing press at grounds to print updated scorecards. |
|
The official print version is available from the National Technical Information Service and the Government Printing Office. |
|
From there, it became clear that print could be used for propaganda in the Reformation for particular agendas. |
|
The former print works and offices of the local newspaper, The Shetland Times, has been converted into a chapel. |
|
These boats have names and have sponsors that print their logo on their sails. |
|
British English spellings and conventions are used in print media and formal written communications. |
|
It experienced early success, selling out its first print run in its first two months. |
|
Traditional mass media, both print and broadcast, are forms of one-to-many communications. |
|
In 1733, Richardson was granted a contract with the House of Commons, with help from Onslow, to print the Journals of the House. |
|
These popular treatments have maintained the public's appetite for Waugh's novels, all of which remain in print and continue to sell. |
|
|
It sold out its initial print run of 200,000 copies within a day, and was eventually translated into more than 20 languages. |
|
Another piece, a print titled Celebrity 1 by artist Charlotte Suckling, was shown in the same exhibition. |
|
The permanent exhibition features 20 examples of Blake's album sleeve art, including the only public showing of a signed print of his Sgt. |
|
People who downloaded the files could then print and assemble the piece, and thus own an original Gilbert and George picture for free. |
|
She also produced a poster and limited edition print for the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games, one of only 12 British artists selected. |
|
In 1996, the film underwent a major restoration to create a new 70mm print and DTS soundtrack. |
|
The new print featured restored color and newly created audio, using modern sound effects mixed in DTS digital surround sound. |
|
The acquisition followed an intense 21 days of negotiations with the print unions conducted by John Collier and Bill O'Neill. |
|
In this period newspapers all over Europe began to print their issues on broadsheets. |
|
Thus the newsprint rolls used are defined by the width necessary to print four front pages. |
|
This allowed print room staff at The Times and The Sunday Times to be reduced by half. |
|
A print edition was launched in June 2017, replacing the international edition previously distributed in Ireland. |
|
It was the largest such publication in Scotland, with a print run of 14,000 copies and was produced by students from across the city. |
|
In the 1860s, Edgar Degas began to collect Japanese prints from La Porte Chinoise and other small print shops in Paris. |
|
The Royal Bank was the first British bank to print commemorative banknotes in 1992, and followed with several subsequent special issues. |
|
It is however often rather complex in construction comprising fluorescent, magnetic, metallic and micro print elements. |
|
Over the years, a number of materials other than paper have been used to print banknotes. |
|
Academic publishing is undergoing major changes, as it makes the transition from the print to the electronic format. |
|
She wrote the verse with Stephen Raw, a textual artist, and a signed print of the work was sent to the couple as a wedding gift. |
|
The Daily Record's print sales are dropping at a rate of over 20,000 a year. |
|
|
The word curling first appears in print in 1620 in Perth, Scotland, in the preface and the verses of a poem by Henry Adamson. |
|
Rarely do American or English papers print photographs of nonrioting fans responding negatively to rioting fans. |
|
Marketing often comes from a variety of print media, such as newspaper articles and magazines, as well as some guerilla marketing strategies. |
|
The Charlotte Guest Mabinogion became the first translation of the material to be published in modern print format. |
|
The full logo is still occasionally used, but primarily for print advertising. |
|
The Honno's Classics series republishes books which have been out of print for many years. |
|
Like in most industrialised nations, the print media have been affected by a severe crisis in the past decade. |
|
These include overpowdering a latent print and applying too much pressure when dusting the print. |
|
Work as paperlessly as possible. Do you really need to print out a copy of every single document that you create on your computer? |
|
It is first known in print in the title of The Squire of Alsatia, a 1688 play written by Thomas Shadwell. |
|
Then, in 1863, use of the Ukrainian language in print was effectively prohibited by the Russian Empire. |
|
It wasn't until 1533 that the last five books of Ammianus' history were put into print by Silvanus Otmar and edited by Mariangelus Accursius. |
|
The code itself is a blue print for Frankish society and how the social demographics were assembled. |
|
The government exerts greater control over broadcast media than print media, especially due to finance and licensing. |
|
The first completed DWB lists over 330,000 headwords in 67,000 print columns spanning 32 volumes. |
|
Using tiny print to state the origin of blended oil is used as a legal loophole by manufacturers of adulterated and mixed olive oil. |
|
They went on to perfect the early model so that it could print on both sides of a sheet at once. |
|
They are increasingly being used in print and film, and in many cases, their community prestige has improved dramatically. |
|
Typography includes the arrangement of letterforms designed for metal print or computer. |
|
The English language was changing rapidly in Caxton's time and the works that he was given to print were in a variety of styles and dialects. |
|