Thin, yet strong, washi is used to make all kinds of Japanese household items, including sliding doors, fans, and lamps. |
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There are also garden lamps, bird baths, decorative columns, mushroom lamps, and ornamental urns that a landscape artist would cherish. |
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Solar panels, now common even in the wilds, are used mainly to power dim tube lamps. |
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The sallowness of his complexion took the luster from his eyes, like lamps kept on in daylight. |
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High intensity discharge xenon headlamps are available as an option, while the rear LEO tail lamps are standard equipment. |
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As I neared the rear of the silver CTS, its rear tail lamps and reverse lights began blinking, to get my attention. |
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The set is wonderful, from the cheesy 70s-inspired table lamps, to the tacky neon lights shining through the blinds. |
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Outlined in the halo of street lamps, the guardsmen resembled pieces on a chessboard, or actors in a tableau vivant of war. |
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There were also fragments of earlier unglazed Corinthian and Attic lamps of the second to fourth centuries. |
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It comes with two lamps, one with 125 lumens output while the other offers 225 lumens. |
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Today's lamps provide more lumens per watt than older ones, and the fixtures have been redesigned to more effectively use this light. |
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He says development of low-profile projector lamps will also help on saving precious space and mass. |
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On the other side of the glass and mahogany door, the room, furnished with art deco lamps, bistro mirrors and very little else, was heaving. |
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The flicker produced by fluorescent lamps is a result of the pulsing of the arc within the lamp. |
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More unusual vessels were produced, for example lamps, chafing dishes, shallow pans and aquamaniles. |
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Meanwhile, the devotees, who assembled well in advance at the appointed places, lit smaller oil lamps using candles and matchboxes. |
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In a move to attract younger drivers, the T3 grade hatchbacks have dedicated 15-inch alloy wheels, side and rear skirts and front fog lamps. |
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This is why we make so many different light boxes and sad lamps, and why we're sure there's a perfect one for you. |
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In the darkening light, street lamps began to light up and windows glowed with indoor illumination. |
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Instead of the usual studio lighting he used the available light sources visible in the shot, such as lamps, Christmas tree lights and so forth. |
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Fluorescent lights or special grow lamps also work if left on about 14 to 16 hours per day. |
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As the van was speeding down the street, lamps overhanging above us flashed by quickly. |
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As night falls, the young boys are led away into the forest, chanting ancient songs as they follow the lamps away from childhood. |
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Add a few drops of ammonia to the rinse water for glass lamps, chimneys, and globes. |
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One of the earliest manufacturers of the lamps was Peter Geley, who was listed in the 1799 Philadelphia directory as a jeweler and lapidary. |
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Over a three-day period, candles, oil lamps, paper lanterns, and electric bulbs are lit to show how angels lit Buddha's return from heaven. |
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A bit before the sun broke upon the horizon, the lamplighter put out the lamps that lined the streets. |
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Out of nowhere Bruce lamps O'Leary with an iron bar and the big Irishman stands there stunned. |
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Haircolor experts will often use moist heat or infra-red lamps to speed up the bleaching process and minimize the potential bleach damage. |
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Jade massage heads apply pressure to acupressure points near the spine, while infrared lamps provide topical heating. |
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Sun lamps produce high levels of Ultraviolet B radiation and the operator should be shielded from the light as much as possible. |
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Light therapy, with ultraviolet A or B, is available at specialist hospital clinics or with lamps that can be used at home. |
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There were no street lights in those days, merely gas lamps which were lit manually sometimes well after darkness had fallen. |
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Without heating or electricity, they cook on butane stoves, warm themselves with paraffin heaters and use candles and lamps for lighting. |
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Several years ago I found a store just three miles away that sold only lamps and lamp shades. |
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A guard came in, lighting the candles and lamps on the table, then the torches on the walls. |
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You should also consider compact fluorescent lamps for areas where lights are on for hours at a time. |
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You may want spotlights, mood lighting from lamps or feature lighting for your dining table and sofa. |
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There were beads hanging in all the doorways and coloured light bulbs in all the lamps and sockets. |
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For visible-light applications using halogen or xenon lamps, an aluminum-silicon-oxide coating is also available. |
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If the sitting room we were in was alight with all the lamps I'm sure my face would have looked a color similar to that of a beetroot. |
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It has now been cleared up, a touristic shrine with arty wrought-iron lamps, brick walls carefully pointed, everywhere evidence of restoration. |
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The lamps range in wattage from 13-watt to 32-watt and provide a very directed light using a reflector and lens system. |
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The avid hoarder is packing up her entire collection of 1,250 lamps and taking them with her. |
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The same year Lodygin's electric lamps were illuminating a St Petersburg shop and he went on to patent the wolfram filament lamp. |
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Our gift baskets, witch balls and salt lamps are not readily available in other local stores. |
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There are also ritual lamps, and a charming gilded swing with push-rods to lull the deity into a kindly tolerance of human failings. |
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Striking too are Leon Victor Solon's 1896 porcelain plaque Resting and the metal and alabaster three tulips lamps by Albert Cheuret. |
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It didn't take long before the light drew the bugs, a half-dozen butting against the ceiling and lamps and more bouncing off windowpanes. |
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Another twist on this theme is his striking wall lamps, which are essentially steel rods with willow woven around them. |
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Early types of gasoline were produced as a byproduct of the process used to make kerosene fuel for oil lamps. |
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The women well remember the regular job of filling lamps and trimming the wicks. |
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Shielded lamps and indirect luminaires prevent the lighting installation from aggravating the problems of stress. |
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The ceiling is hung with lamps of every shape and size, from glass floats tied with rope to whimsical creations made of seashells. |
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Black furnishings, and tens of temple-candle shaped wall lamps adorn the dining area. |
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During induction and the preparatory phase, radiant heat lamps are used to maintain the neonate's temperature and prevent chilling. |
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At 0300 hours the mist had lifted and the yellow light from the gas lamps cast a ghostly radiance that was reflected from the wet road cobbles. |
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Last week we had our first serious tornado watch with afternoon skies gone dark enough to activate the street lamps. |
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I laugh at my own jitteriness, but as I get dressed, it is at least ten minutes before I realise that both the lamps have been turned off. |
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Battery powered lanterns and lamps stood on most available surfaces to provide additional lighting. |
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The stones and jewels used in these paintings would have an added impact with the light from pooja lamps falling on them. |
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These were lit only by weak lamps attached infrequently to cold stone walls, and after dark rats roamed freely within the gutters and the waste. |
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Along the streets lamps were covered in flowers, icons and hand-written messages, stuck up with coloured candle wax. |
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It was just a shame that the high price of candle wax forced her to rely mainly on oil lamps. |
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Hence, this relationship was used to determine the number and wattage of lamps to use for disinfection of room air. |
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Oil lamps burned in sconces along the walls, lighting the companions' way. |
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The white blooms dotted the asphalt and swirled in the breeze under the orange glow of the street lamps. |
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He kept a series of lamps, some with medieval design, on the floor and axes and swords around the room. |
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In the master bedroom suite the curtains, bedclothes, and lamps were all white. |
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The Menorah light is a free-standing translucent pylon light and the Star of David is translated into two hanging lamps constructed like Japanese lanterns of white parchment. |
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Two lamps had been knocked over and broken glass covered the floor. |
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The poor condition of many roads, lack of warning signs at blind corners and sharp curves, and the fact that street lamps don't work at all times, contribute to accidents. |
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These blankets then are covered with sheets that are warmed by radiant heat lamps until the neonate is brought into the room to prevent heat loss through conduction. |
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Dumyahn and First measured the three-dimensional emission profile of various types of single lamps by taking radiometric measurements at various points in space. |
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A few small oil lamps were hung from rafters in strategic spots, casting lonesome pools of illumination to steal the gloom from the darkest corners. |
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Make sure you choose a dimmer manufacturer who provides readily-accessible information on compatible lamps and dimmers. |
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Glass fragments from windows, street lamps, car windshields, and theater marquees littered the streets like confetti. |
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I also pick up two kangris, clay lamps that Kashmiris fill with glowing charcoals and hold against their bodies, inside their feyrans, in the cold of winter. |
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Primitive lamps, which relied on capillary action to deliver oil or melted fat up a wick to the flame, were improved only marginally in form and material over many centuries. |
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Though it has no porthole and is cramped and airless, it is comfortable, with clean white bedlinen, table reading lamps and the inevitable Chinese thermos flasks. |
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With a chassis marked by smooth lines and streamlined contours, the vehicle presented an appealing sight with its cladding, grille and wrap-around lamps. |
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Chromium in floppy disks, lead in batteries and computer monitors, and mercury in alkaline batteries and fluorescent lamps also pose severe health risks. |
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The presence of xenon in such lamps results in a very bright, sun-like light used in photographic flash units, strobe lights, and airport runway lights. |
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The girl closed the door, lit lamps and a fire that was already laid, then shuttered the only window of the one room cottage, as if wanting privacy. |
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There is also a variety of gas lights and lamps, which are especially good to have at home during the storm season when blackouts can occur anytime. |
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Neon lights decorated official buildings and literally hundreds of oil-lit earthen lamps covered balconies and ramparts, stairs and yards of homes. |
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Now they were in a small corridor, dimly lit by burning lamps. |
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Attendants scurried about the room lighting lamps and candles. |
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Those who had used tanning lamps were also 1.5 times more likely to develop basal cell carcinoma than those who had not used sun lamps, the research found. |
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The poignant opening is a description of him as a child, fascinated by moving light, watching the lamplighter come up the street lighting the lamps. |
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While a lamp with a dimmer is always great, the trend in lamps today is silk or Japanese style lampshades, where the light subtly shines through the screen. |
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The relative sequences for fine wares, lamps, amphoras, cooking pots, and plain wares can be clearly established, and general trends have become apparent. |
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Designers of Montgomery County's lighting retrofits found an even more efficient alternative to incandescent lamps for use in illuminated exit signs. |
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For those who came of age with Habitat, he offered alternatives to the dreaded three-piece suites, armchairs with antimacassars and standard lamps with tasselled shades. |
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There were electric lamps in the ceiling, but the light was feeble and the power intermittent. |
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The street lamps and signs lit up suddenly as it got a little bit darker. |
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And, as you'd expect, all things Elvis clutter the shelves, from figurines to drinking glasses to wallets to tins to plates to clocks to jukeboxes to lamps to cookie jars. |
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Lighting of lamps has the meaning of eliminating the darkness in the literal sense, and metaphorically it means to overcome and gain the knowledge of Enlightenment. |
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It was a dramatic scene as the arc lamps lit up the evening sky providing the illumination to allow the sugar to be pumped from the stricken tanker into a replacement one. |
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The Argand lamps in the dining room and parlor are especially interesting. |
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Handcrafted items such as bowls, trays, lamps and tableware, exquisite mats and carpets all bring to fore the excellent craftsmanship of the region. |
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To light their homes, early Americans relied on tallow candles, floating tapers that burned assorted greases, and lamps that burned fuels such as lard and turpentine. |
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While she was gone a menial came by to light the ceiling lamps, a touch with a burning taper on the end of a pole and the gas wicks glowed to life. |
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Small homes often have only kerosene lamps to provide light, which spew toxins equivalent to two packs of cigarettes a day. |
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Yekaterina Samutsevich tried not to squint in the bright light of the studio lamps. |
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Ropes, canvas, tent poles, rugs, and oil for lamps were all there. |
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These lamps have higher efficiency than filament lamps, but the carbon rods are short lived and require constant adjustment in use. |
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Solihull Council is replacing 5,374 of its old mercury-vapour lamps with new, energy efficient LED lamps. |
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It took development by others over the next 20 years or so before effective electric lamps were in common use. |
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The Royal Navy also introduced them to their ships soon after with HMS Inflexible having the new lamps installed in the same year. |
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Together with that, he added, transition to LED lighting systems would displace environmentally dangerous mercury-vapour lamps. |
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In those sites, carbon arc lamps were used to simulate the flash of tram cables. |
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A grand arati with multiple artistic lamps is offered to the Lord after the abhisheka. |
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In flood lamps used for photographic lighting, the tradeoff is made in the other direction. |
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However, the lamps proved a false dawn because they became unsafe very quickly and provided a weak light. |
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The tables will vary from mirrored tabletops accented with deep red china and florals to gold-draped tables topped with Kartell lamps. |
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Miniature lamps used for some automotive lamps or decorative lamps have wedge bases that have a partial plastic or even completely glass base. |
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Bayonet base lamps are frequently used in automotive lamps to resist loosening due to vibration. |
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Most lamps have metal bases that fit in a socket to support the lamp and conduct current to the filament wires. |
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Furniture stores, especially those with design staff who do the purchasing, have a tendency to not reorder the same lamps. |
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Developed around 1915, these lamps were displaced by mercury and xenon arc lamps. |
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These arc lamps ran on relatively low voltages and incorporated tungsten filaments to start ionization within the envelope. |
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Such lamps were used for projection or illumination for scientific instruments such as microscopes. |
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Mrs Gonzalez Durantez took part in a series of activities in the guides' hut, including making lava lamps and also edible pigs. |
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They enjoyed making lava lamps, potions, exploding volcanoes and lots of noisy sounds. |
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He said 600 companies have now signed up, making everything from sports clothing, life vests, LED lighting and lava lamps to spades and spa soap. |
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It was full of lava lamps and water lamps and since then it's always been a way to help me wind down. |
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The equivalent of a drop of water distributed over 500,000 lamps will significantly increase darkening. |
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Xenon gas improves efficiency because of its high molecular weight, but is also more expensive, so its use is limited to smaller lamps. |
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There are several different shapes of filament used in lamps, with differing characteristics. |
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It could not be made for 110 V or 220 V so several lamps were wired in series for use on standard voltage circuits. |
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The addition of 253 new products includes a variety of back-up alarms and cameras, beacons, minibars and work lamps. |
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It is traditionally harvested from the candlenut tree in the sun-kissed islands to use in lamps. |
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These lamps were more efficient than even graphitized carbon filaments and could operate at higher temperatures. |
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Early lamps, and some small modern lamps used only a vacuum to protect the filament from oxygen. |
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Just over 100 staff will remain at the factory, producing low pressure sodium lamps for the global market. |
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Some research has been carried out to improve the efficacy of commercial incandescent lamps. |
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In 1885, an estimated 300,000 general lighting service lamps were sold, all with carbon filaments. |
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I read every evening, sometimes late into the night, with the help of kerosene lamps, often secretly, past my bedtime. |
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Twice as efficient as carbon filament lamps, Nernst lamps were briefly popular until overtaken by lamps using metal filaments. |
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These lamps used a carbon rod from an arc lamp rather than a slender filament. |
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It looked as if they had picked up bedroom tips from the brothel with a ghastly selection of bedside lamps, pillows and bedcovers. |
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Poachers would use strong torches or carbide lamps as they walked the river with a gaff in hand ready for hooking a salmon. |
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On the flight the flame was carried inside 4 miners lamps supplied by Protector Lamp of Eccles, Greater Manchester. |
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We have hundreds of safety lamps, you walk through as you go through the drift mine. |
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There is also a 'traditional' mining exhibition with flame safety lamps, tools of the trade and displays on coal society and community. |
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He became interested in the possibility of creating artificial diamonds while working with carbon arc lamps. |
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In 1817, bare flame gaslight had replaced the former candles and oil lamps that lighted the Covent Garden stage. |
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Texturally speaking, Dobson contrasted rough raw-wood elements with more refined linen and smooth marble urn lamps on the mirrored night-stands. |
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Carbon arc lamps operate at high powers and produce high intensity white light. |
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The model features new doors, a short boot, a new mag wheel design and new tail lamps. |
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Because they contain mercury, many fluorescent lamps are classified as hazardous waste. |
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To maximise on conservation energy saver lamps, solarisation of water heating and irrigation pumping are some examples. |
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Fluorescent lamps consist of a glass tube that contains mercury vapour or argon under low pressure. |
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Before electric lighting became common in the early 20th century, people used candles, gas lights, oil lamps, and fires. |
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Nonincandescent lamps are generally less susceptible to voltage fluctuations. |
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Aristotle's lantern is actually referring to the whole shape of sea urchins, which look like the ancient lamps of Aristotle's time. |
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Later they appeared on reliefs, gems, lamps, coins, mosaics and gravestones. |
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As kerosene lamps gained popularity, the refining industry grew in the area. |
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The use of such lamps suggests some household activity in the huts after dark. |
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Large red flags are flown and flashing warning lamps on Bindon Hill and St Alban's Head are lit when the ranges are in use. |
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Decoration was also made on functional tools, such as spear throwers, perforated batons and lamps. |
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The use of oil lamps began thousands of years ago and continues to this day, although not commonly anymore. |
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Oil lamps are a form of lighting, and were used as an alternative to candles before the use of electric lights. |
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Starting in 1780, the Argand lamp quickly replaced other oil lamps still in their basic ancient form. |
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Therefore, oil lamps of today are primarily used for the particular ambience they produce. |
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These lamps have handles and short plain nozzles, and less artistic finishing. |
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African Red Slip lamps were made in North Africa, but widely exported, and decorated in a red slip. |
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The foolish bridesmaids took their lamps with them, but they did not take extra oil for the lamps. |
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Generally the lamps used in temples are circular with places for five wicks. |
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On special occasions, various other lamps may be used for puja, the most elaborate having several tiers of wicks. |
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Such lamps are kept burning in shrines, whether private or public, and incense sticks or joss sticks are lit from the lamp. |
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The first lamps were made of naturally occurring objects, coconuts, sea shells, egg shells and hollow stones. |
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These lamps vary in the shape of the rim, the general shape of the bowl and the shape of the base. |
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In addition, other forms evolve, such as small lamps with a flat base and larger lamps with a round base. |
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These large lamps have thin sides and a deep pinch, which flattens the mouth and makes it protrude outward. |
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The ancient Chinese created oil lamps with a refillable reservoir and a fibrous wick, giving the lamp a controlled flame. |
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It is also used in cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, and soaps, and as a fuel for traditional oil lamps, and has additional uses in some religions. |
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Makeshift oil lamps can easily be made by soaking a ball of cotton in olive oil and forming it into a peak. |
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In 1881, street lamps in the city of Niagara Falls were powered by hydropower. |
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This sewage gave off methane gas which was ignited by the miner's oil lamps. |
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This was in part because towns became much safer places to travel around after gas lamps were installed in the streets, reducing crime rates. |
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This supplied gas lamps equal to 75,000 Argand lamps each yielding the light of six candles. |
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Manhattan Beach, California, has a gas lamp section in which all the sidewalks are lit by public gas lamps. |
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However, the high cost of natural gas lighting at least partly explains why a large number of older gas lamps have been converted to electricity. |
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Small portable gas lamps, connected to a portable gas cylinder, are a common item on camping trips. |
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Mantle lamps powered by vaporized petrol, such as the Coleman lantern, are also available. |
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It was achieved by restricting the ingress of air with either metal gauze or fine tubes, but the illumination from such lamps was very poor. |
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After the widespread introduction of the safety lamp, explosions continued because the early lamps were fragile and easily damaged. |
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It was not until the 1890s that safe and reliable electric lamps became available in collieries. |
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Until the development of effective electric lamps in the early 1900s miners used flame lamps to provide illumination. |
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Before the invention of safety lamps, miners used candles with open flames. |
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The lower levels of light associated with safety lamps caused an increase in the incidence of nystagmus. |
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All except the very earliest Davy lamps have a double layer at the top of the cage. |
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Subsequently, Clanny incorporated aspects of both lamps and produced the ancestor of all modern oil safety lamps. |
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The latter mechanism can be seen in the Mueseler, Landau and Yates lamps below. |
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A number of additional lamps were supposed to accompany each gang of men, but restricting the number was an obvious economy for the pit owners. |
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The mines inspector recommended that only Stephenson lamps were used for illumination and Davys for testing. |
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Some Mueseler lamps were fitted with a mechanism which locked the base of the lamp. |
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The upper portion of the lamp uses a chimney like Mueseler and Morgan lamps. |
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As a new light source, LED has many advantages for safety lamps, including longer illumination times and reduced energy requirements. |
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After his return to England in 1815, Davy began experimenting with lamps that could be used safely in coal mines. |
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Carbon arc lamps were started by making contact between two carbon electrodes, which were then separated to within a narrow gap. |
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The system lit up arc lamps on the main streets and incandescent lamps on a few side streets with hydroelectric power. |
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It was located in a business and commercial district and supplied 110 volt direct current to 85 customers with 400 lamps. |
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As of October 2008, the scheme had resulted in 70 green products being brought to market, ranging from halogen lamps to biogas engines. |
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In 1881 six powerful electric lamps were set up to light the town, together with gas oil lamps in the back streets. |
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Each fluorescent troffer in the room contained three lamps and two ballasts. |
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Cast in dark bronze and resembling Roman antiquities, Riccio's small-scale statuettes, reliefs and oil lamps seem unremarkably modest at first. |
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A massively expensive, outdated patchwork of inefficient mix-and-match sodium lamps. |
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He made reference to an incident at Oaks Colliery in Barnsley where both lamps were in use. |
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I have mapped my journey through the forest of words in anglepoise lamps and chairs, also with objects to hand. |
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The use of metal decoration in vegetal forms soon also appeared in silverware, lamps, and other decorative items. |
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In the epics Ramayana and Mahabharata, there are references to gold and silver lamps as well. |
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Roman fascination with gladiators is indicated by how widely they are depicted on mosaics, wall paintings, lamps, and even graffiti drawings. |
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Aalto is also famous for his work in furniture, lamps, textiles and glassware, which were usually incorporated into his buildings. |
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These are ornate gilt lamps with birds that I found in an antique shop in Glasgow. |
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The Common Room and the Library were lit by anbaric light, but the Scholars preferred the older, softer naphtha lamps in the Retiring Room. |
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In fact, UV LEDs have already started to replace mercury-vapor lamps in many applications as UV curing and counterfeit detection. |
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In central London around 1500 gas lamps still operate, lighting the Royal Parks, the exterior of Buckingham Palace and almost the entire Covent Garden area. |
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The objective is to minimize the cost of light, not the cost of lamps. |
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Since the value of the electric power they consume is much more than the value of the lamp, general service lamps emphasize efficiency over long operating life. |
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Incandescent lamps are very sensitive to changes in the supply voltage. |
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The energy efficiency of electric lighting has increased radically since the first demonstration of arc lamps and the incandescent light bulb of the 19th century. |
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Rockweed, a specialist in fit-outs for restaurants and shops launched from its stall its Darna brand of products including LED lamps, sensor trash bins and fancy clocks. |
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Both principles were combined in later versions of safety lamps. |
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Then swap out incandescent bulbs for low-pressure sodium lamps. |
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Today most incandescent lamps for general lighting service use an Edison screw in candelabra, intermediate, or standard or mogul sizes, or double contact bayonet base. |
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Rockweed, a specialist in fit-outs for restaurants and shops, launched from its stall its Darna brand of products including LED lamps, sensor trash bins and fancy clocks. |
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Very small lamps may have the filament support wires extended through the base of the lamp, and can be directly soldered to a printed circuit board for connections. |
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Even after the introduction of safety lamps this was still essential information, see Trimdon Grange for details of an accident where pressure was involved. |
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Rockweed, a specialist in fitouts for restaurants and shops launched from its stall its Darna brand of products including LED lamps, sensor trash bins and fancy clocks. |
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It was not a practical success and Clanny subsequently changed the basis of operation of later lamps in the light of the Davy and Stephenson lamps. |
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Early Geordie lamps had a simple pierced copper cap over the chimney to further restrict the flow and to ensure that the vital spent gas did not escape too quickly. |
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Perhaps coming from the fact one would be seen as foolish going down a mine with a Scotch Divvy when there are safer lamps available, like the Geordie, or the Davy. |
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The outer casings of lamps have been made of brass or tinned steel. |
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Originally headlights were oil or acetylene lamps, but when electric arc lamps became available in the late 1880s, they quickly replaced the older types. |
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Although eggcrate louvers can effectively cut off the view of bright lamps, the grid itself can become rather bright, especially when it is white. |
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Featuring 600 watt sodium lamps, the unit replicates the effect of natural daylight on areas of the pitch to maintain the health of the grass during the winter months. |
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In the earlier Geordie lamps an oil lamp is surrounded by glass. |
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These lamps are made from large bowls with four shallow pinches for wicks. |
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They can be caught with drift nets and suitable trawls, but are most usually caught with surround nets at night by attracting them with lampara lamps. |
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Fairy lights and safety lamps were also taken down and set fire to. |
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Awards were made to 8 other lamps that met the judges' criteria. |
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The connected dynamo was used either to charge a bank of batteries or to operate up to 100 incandescent light bulbs, three arc lamps, and various motors in Brush's laboratory. |
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Oil lamps are lit at traditional Chinese shrines before either an image of a deity or a plaque with Classical Chinese characters giving the name of the deity. |
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Theatrical, photographic, and projection lamps may have a useful life of only a few hours, trading life expectancy for high output in a compact form. |
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The narrow bylane leading to the temple in Bur Dubai was packed with people buying flowers, incense sticks, lamps, coconuts and other items required for Diwali rituals. |
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The watt second is used, for example, to rate the energy storage of flash lamps used in photography, although the term joule is generally employed. |
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This system was powered from a water wheel on the River Wey, which drove a Siemens alternator that supplied a number of arc lamps within the town. |
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Of this were confected the famous everlasting lamps and tapers. |
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Wanting to get out of the house, he descended toward the large living room with its chintzy curtains and stuffy lamps and pictures. His least favorite room. |
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In 1883, near the Prechistinskiye Gates, arc lamps were installed. |
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Where downhill skiers have slopes illuminated by flood lamps to boost their vertical mileage, snowshoers and cross-country skiers rely on moonshine. |
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Hayes had watched him toss a room before. He had tapped walls, gotten down on his hands and knees and studied the floor, inspected books and lamps and bric-abrac. |
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We went down a flight of fifteen steps below the ground level, and stood in a small chapel tricked out with tapestry hangings, silver lamps, and oil paintings. |
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Home to the mosaic of coloured-lit windows in the black and white houses, the fake gas lamps ambering the cobbles, sometimes the scent of applewood smoke. |
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Eight chairs, two tents, tables, food and lamps were among the articles whose unpackable shapes were to provide us with many problems during the tour. |
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I lifted my lamps and saw BILLY. We did a good chi-ike, you bet! |
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The Medieval Morocco exhibition displays very symbolic items as minbars and bell lamps of the Al Qarawiyyin mosque which were lent by the Kingdom. |
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The programme has converted 88 sodium lamps into energy saving LED units. |
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Their work ranges from the traditional to the experimental and includes other wall hangings and panels, fashion, lamps, cushions and three-dimensional creations. |
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Schmid's typology is based on the stratigraphy of ez Zantur set against datable objects such as lamps, coins, and Eastern terra sigillata A wares. |
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That was after you'd done an hour of preparation, which included cleaning lamps, water gauge, detonators and spanners, pick and shovel and fire irons. |
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First Light, a year-old company, unveils wrought-iron lamps with florallike shades made from a treated silk material over a wire frame, available in seven colors. |
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He will find that the mercury lamps, which are at eye level down the long hill towards Selly Oak create a series of dazzling glares alliterating with black shadows. |
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From 1898 to around 1905, osmium was also used as a lamp filament in Europe, and the metal was so expensive that used broken lamps could be returned for partial credit. |
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This made lamps in use for several hundred hours quite fragile. |
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We headed back to the hotel to see the turn-down team had already arranged our room, closing the curtains, putting lamps on and setting Dog and Cat on their pillows. |
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The light was much brighter than oil or gas lamps, and there was no soot. |
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By 1884 Pearl Street was supplying 508 customers with 10,164 lamps. |
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Compact fluorescent lamps are particularly sensitive to switching cycles. |
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With some discharge lamps, very high voltage is used to strike the arc. |
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The first primary product was kerosene for lamps and heaters. |
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After automatic machinery was developed the cost of lamps fell. |
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The primary purpose of his inventions was the industrial scale production of filaments for incandescent lamps by compacting tungsten or molybdenum particles. |
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Miniature lamps may have a wedge base and wire contacts, and some automotive and special purpose lamps have screw terminals for connection to wires. |
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Some tubular lamps have an electrical contact at either end. |
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Family holidays usually were spent with the Waugh aunts, at Midsomer Norton, in a house lit with oil lamps, a time that Waugh recalled with delight, many years later. |
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Slipper lamps are oval shaped and found mainly in the Levant. |
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At the City Gas Works, in Dorset Street, Blackfriars, three chaldrons of coal were carbonized each day, providing the gas equivalent of 9,000 Argand lamps. |
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The incandescent lamps consume no oxygen, and cause no perceptible heat. |
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Some people have concerns about the health effects of fluorescent lamps. |
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There were lots of lampshaded lamps of different sizes all around him, maroon mainly, or red and fringed, and they were all full on, making him look pink. |
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Debuting under the MetalWorks name, the collection features a variety of cast aluminum styles including candlesticks, floating candleholders and hurricane lamps. |
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Red lamps were used to simulate blast furnaces and locomotive fireboxes. |
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Objections to banning the use of incandescent light bulbs include the higher initial cost of alternatives and lower quality of light of fluorescent lamps. |
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Lower voltage lamps have a thicker filament, for the same power rating. |
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Very long filaments for high voltages are fragile, and lamp bases become more difficult to insulate, so lamps for illumination are not made with rated voltages over 300 volts. |
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Some believe that the first proper lamps were carved from stones. |
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The oil burned in all of these lamps is traditionally olive oil. |
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The first lighting service company to recycle lamps at the end of life, SLS includes lamp recycling in every contract they issue for service and maintenance. |
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Oil lamps are commonly used in Hindu temples as well as in home shrines. |
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Not quite as ascetically functional as the 78, these models are now 'pimped' with colour-coded and chromed exterior trim, front fog lamps and colour-matched over fenders. |
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Don't ask for a new globe just because the old one needs dusting. The old-style carbon lamps wasted electricity when they began to fade and it was economy to replace them. |
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