Unwrapping furiously, Alex arranged her new sticks of charcoal, sketching pencils and chalks in the box she'd bought to store them in. |
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For the more artistically inclined, sidewalk chalks in a multitude of hues will keep pavement Picassos occupied. |
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Examples of some of the tools he used, such as brushes, pens, chalks, inks, needles, burins and handmade papers, will be on view. |
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Pore-filling cementation is also common during the diagenesis of chalks, resulting in rapid porosity loss. |
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The coccolithophorids range in age from Triassic to Recent, and form a major constituent of Mesozoic and Tertiary chalks. |
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The flora extracted from the underlying Maastrichtian chalks is sparse, but indicative of open marine conditions. |
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I can only assume this is what happens when Hugh Dallas chalks off 0.2 of a Celtic goal or adds 0.1 to a Rangers strike. |
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Former world champion Steve Davis chalks his cue as the UK Snooker Championships got under way today at York's Barbican Centre. |
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The formation a football manager chalks out on a blackboard can also sum up his outlook on life. |
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Dash around the campus with a box of sidewalk chalks, leaving gigantic messages on the roads, and then disappear before anyone sees you. |
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He chalks the tip of his cue with methodical twists of the wrist. |
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The diminution of marl seam thicknesses over positive structural elements and the development of phosphatic chalks in localized troughs are two such features. |
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The cited examples are all interpreted as large-scale erosional scour-channels, variously associated with cemented hardgrounds, conglomeratic and nodular chalks, and debris. |
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The match finished four-apiece on games, but Rhos topped the aggregates by 14 chalks. |
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He adopted Clouet's method of drawing with coloured chalks on a plain ground, as well as his care over preliminary portraits for their own sake. |
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Craves for sour things, chalks and eggs, fatty people with light brown spots on the face or liver spots, moth patches on forehead and cheek. |
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In the first, between 1526 and 1528, he used the technique of Jean Clouet for his preliminary studies, combining black and coloured chalks on unprimed paper. |
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Although large deposits of Cretaceous rocks would have been laid down over Scotland, these have not survived erosion, as have the chalks of England. |
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