She organized the first American exhibition of kaleidoscopes at Strathmore Hall Art Center in Rockville, Md., the year her book came out. |
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A list of galleries where the kaleidoscopes can be found is also available. |
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She has a passion for kaleidoscopes, and here she's seen with several of her creations. |
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But lovers of kaleidoscopes, Rubik's cubes, and jigsaw and other puzzles should have a field day. |
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Perhaps his best-known legacy is his work on the mathematics of kaleidoscopes, including those operating in higher dimensions. |
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Our unique kaleidoscopes are bursting with bright colors and intricate patterns. |
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Magnificent nocturnal kaleidoscopes magnified and reflected by the snow-who knew February was the perfect fireworks setting? |
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Spinthariscopes sat on parlor shelves next to stereoscopic postcard viewers and kaleidoscopes, items in a cabinet of curiosities. |
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The dripping, painterly strokes of color from Shubham Jain were typical kaleidoscopes of color. |
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From the reflection of grains of sand and crystals in tubes through to the advances of computers, kaleidoscopes have always been truly beautiful and even puzzling. |
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Our projects will include building kaleidoscopes and telescopes, experimenting with UV and IR light, and arranging mirrors so that a laser shines on a predetermined spot. |
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They should be allowed to choose to construct either of the kaleidoscopes described below, based upon whatever materials are most readily available to them. |
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Ms. Pulvermacher, who has likened herself to a scientist in the studio, is something of a Dr. Coppélius in the way that she creates choreographic kaleidoscopes that shift from raucous to meditative. |
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By turns infinitesimal or suddenly accelerated and condensed, it is as if it has been chopped up by the kaleidoscopes and the superimpositions of memories and images. |
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Kaleid is a thinking game based on kaleidoscopes. |
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Companies and people are kaleidoscopes of values, experiences and skills-kaleidoscopes that mirror the shifting complexity of our globalized world. |
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Students should explore various optical devices, such as magnifying glasses, binoculars, reading glasses, telescopes, microscopes, fibre optics, mirrors, projection units, kaleidoscopes, and periscopes. |
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In other words, one must not confuse the educational urgency of children using their mother tongue with a fashionable cultural trend aiming at transforming schools into kaleidoscopes of languages and cultures. |
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The only Hirst pieces that are showing signs of recovery are butterfly paintings, particularly the wing-only works that evoke kaleidoscopes and stained-glass windows. |
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He was an artist in the Sixties and Seventies who made boxes with dangling convex or concave glass, which are like endlessly fascinating moving kaleidoscopes. |
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In reaction, Bonnaroo has become less special-interest-y and more like the other huge and moderately hip American kaleidoscopes of popular music, like Coachella, Outside Lands and Governors Ball, than ever before. |
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