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carbon print
noun
An early photographic print made by soaking a carbon tissue in potassium bichromate
Exact(3)
For "An Icy Night" (1898), he made a carbon print that seems made of the sootiness of the moody blue crepuscule.
For "A Wet Day on the Boulevard, Paris" (1893), he made a carbon print on textured watercolor paper that actually looks rippled by the rain.
The energy consumption and Carbon print of the virtual building under the two set of regulations are estimated by computer based models in the two case studies based on a building in the Cold regions.
Similar(54)
Carbon prints could be produced in different shades as well, widening their appeal.
When Braun tried to turn himself into an artist, as he did admirably in eight unusually large carbon prints of hunting trophies, he succeeded artistically but evidently failed commercially.
First, get the cheat code (From NFS Carbon, printed or copied) you got.
Faced with a shortage of animal skins and bladders to hold the "sausage", a chemist innovated a new casing made of gelatine and bichromate of potash (potassium dichromate) – the same chemical process used by photographers to make carbon-prints.
The steaks, of course, are the main attraction, and some leave a mighty big carbon hoof print.
So would switching from beef and pork, which have a high carbon foot print, to chicken or fish.
This will be a cost effective and environmental friendly approach while reducing the carbon foot print in new development projects.
After all, they put massive amounts of miles on their vehicles, and that's got to make for a pretty serious carbon foot print.
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