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He sanded them down, dipped them in varnish and taped the handles.
And look out for chunky hand-cut flakes in varnish, for a sweet, distorted glamour.
Who knows what else might be lurking in the galleries and storage rooms, obscured by overzealous touch-ups or smothered in varnish?
The raw, or recent, copal, sometimes called jackass copal, which is obtained directly from trees or found at their roots or near the ground, is used in varnish manufacture in India and China but does not enter into European commerce.
"the irregular onset of bacterial colonization accounts for the puzzling inconsistency in varnish development from stone to stone…" [11].
However, it has been noted that "the irregular onset of bacterial colonization accounts for the puzzling inconsistency in varnish development from stone to stone…" [11].
Similar(45)
Beauvoir and Sartre had no interest in varnishing the facts out of respect for bourgeois notions of decency.
The first synthetic resins used in varnishes, developed by the chemist Leo Baekeland, were phenolic resins similar to Bakelite.
The pitches derived from fats, fatty acids, or fatty oils by distillation are usually soft substances containing polymers and decomposition products; they are used chiefly in varnishes and paints and in floor coverings.
Microstratigraphic patterns on these volcanic fields match patterns found in varnishes from other western US sites with available radiometric age constraints.
It is used in varnishes, for making small castings and in ten-pin bowling balls.
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