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16 Sentences With "crosshatches"

How to use crosshatches in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "crosshatches" and check conjugation/comparative form for "crosshatches". Mastering all the usages of "crosshatches" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Cut the top off the eggplant, halve lengthwise, and score crosshatches into the flesh.
The resulting installations are both graphic and ethereal, the repeated lines accumulating in layers and crosshatches.
Art Reviews A baroness's watercolors; Jasper Johns's crosshatches; a survey of abstract photography; and Alice Miceli's radiographs of Chernobyl.
Crosshatches of char overpowered the sole's exquisite flavor, and yet the thickest part of the fish clung to the spine, not fully cooked.
There were familiar symbols competing for space on one of the paintings: crosshatches, stick figures holding paintbrushes, a presumably random sheet of newspaper.
These lines and rings showed the landscape to be a palimpsest, the page of a book written and erased and rewritten over and over, a mess of crosshatches and scribbles.
In another painting, also "Untitled," Crockett overlays a ground of large red crosshatches with a charcoal-gray, bone-like shape, which aligns diagonally from the painting's lower left corner to the upper right.
Distinguished by meticulousness and rigor, the blanket of white crosshatches and dots against a brown background in "Ganyu," and the stream of white diamond formations in Marawili's bark paintings, are intimations of infinity.
Each one attempts to give form to the paradox of expression through nondisclosure; even a drawing here of "Dancers on a Plane" (1982), which supplements the crosshatches with a little symmetrical scrotum, gives away almost nothing about sex or self.
Each of the paintings is composed of three abutting vertical canvases, with a subset of smaller crosshatches in the lower right panel suggesting the bed, while the light-colored vertical column in the middle represents Munch, and the darker one on the left assumes the general shape of the grandfather clock.
Cross section of an animal's horn. To make a shofar, the bone (crosshatches) and fleshy sheath (white) are removed, leaving the actual horn.
In heraldry, diapering is a technique in which those who emblazon, draw, paint, or otherwise depict achievements of arms decorate large areas of flat colour by drawing crosshatches or arabesques. There is no standard, and each artist is allowed individual idiosyncrasies.
Retrieved on 2011-01-27. The use of designs such as polka dots, crosshatches, and checkers became increasingly popular. Spray paint use increased dramatically around this time as graffitists began to expand their work. "Top-to-bottoms", works which span the entire height of a subway car, made their first appearance around this time as well.
An accidental exposure from the Hasselblad lunar surface data camera showing the Réseau crosses. A Réseau plate is a transparent sheet of glass or plastic engraved with a grid of crosshatches called fiducial markers. It was commonly used in film cameras (before the advent of digital media) for scientific and technical photography. The plate is placed at the focal plane of the camera just in front of the film.
Petatillo ceramics are noted for their intricate designs, which place tiny crosshatches in the empty spaces among the larger design elements. This work is intricate and time-consuming, which has made it expensive and hard to find. His family began making this pottery in the mid 19th century, and the artisan has continued the tradition, teaching his children as well as others. Bernabe Campechano continues to work in his workshop in Tonalá, along with his children.
Pages of Freud (1971), Henry crosshatches lines onto page after page of Freud’s writings, signaling her persistent doubts about the therapeutic potential of language. She continues mining this vein in both Telephone Book Series (1973) and Male and Female (1982, 2009). In her artist’s book, Who's Who (1977), she frames newspaper photos of beloved and forgotten faces within the confines of a generic human profile. In Who I Saw in New York (1970-2000,) her street photographs, as a book and as an installation, aggregate thousands of portraits in an attempt to tease out patterns in human experience. In “Overheard”, a project started in the 1970s that has been ongoing for more than thirty years, Henry combines photographs she takes on the street with fragments of conversation she overhears in public places. She has created six artist’s books combining her street photography with overheard text.

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