Then he patched the hole with wax and carved it to fit the shape of her head, Edmondson said, and he used the wax section to give the titanium its form.
They had to be planed, rubbed with fine sandpaper, polished with paste wax, to a soft and glowing evenness.
Manufacturers will be pleased to hear that kick wax remains essential to cross-country skiing.
In Medieval days, noblemen used wax seals to protect sensitive information.
Skiers can thus, it seems, forget about long hours spent ironing wax on to their skis and devote more of their time to the slopes.
That Times story goes on to wax eloquent about the damage that Amazon is doing to small retailers.
While it's certainly tempting to wax philosophically about how Commodore has finally made the transition from 64KB of memory to 64-bit operating systems, the truth is that the company which just announced a line of boutique gaming PC's at CeBIT is far removed from the one that ruled the 80's and enhanced our droll elementary school days with some therapeutic Rampage.
To wax eloquent about someone's embossed silver, sumptuous carpets or marble statuary was to indict him.
De Weldon canceled a weekend leave to model a wax sculpture of the photo to present to the chiefs of staff.
The red stains, resembling lipstick, are remnants of sealing wax, used to paste in long corrections.
Just understand how sectors tend to wax and wane over a full economic cycle.
The symptoms of IBD tend to wax and wane, but can seriously debilitate some patients.
Like the British Empire, however, the seafaring group is bound to wax and wane over time.
"I forsee a time when we will record to wax cylinder, or perhaps release only on sheet music, " he says.
The fast-track victory prompted pundits to wax lyrical about the job insecurity that stalks the land, fuelling sympathy for unions.
It is much easier to wax populist about refugees or public health than, say, about capital goods or public procurement.
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Kick wax is applied to the parts of the blades of cross-country skis that are directly under the skier's feet.
It is common to wax nostalgic for a time when a man's word was his bond, business was done on a handshake, etc.
Its common to wax poetic about the infinite benefits of using social media, and I get the real, society-changing potential of P2P tech.
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Pirates in need of a pampering can invade the on-site Hollis Cosmetics and Day Spa for facials and massages, or to wax their Blackbeards.
As Mr D'Alema's popularity wanes, so Mr Prodi's seems to wax.
Instead, she used the press conference as an opportunity to wax poetic about both the Today gang and her recent on-air lip lock with a monkey.
Without skipping a beat, Zalaznick, whose official title is President of NBC Universal Women and Lifestyle Entertainment Networks, uses the opportunity to wax on about the future of basic cable.
No, not in the sense of whether Google is now going to have to do some serious surgery to Android, or whether Microsoft and Apple are going to wax fat off royalties.
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Indeed, he looked on the verge of getting himself a contract before being forced to cut short his chat to allow Fu - waiting patiently on the sidelines - his own chance to wax lyrical.
Madame Tussaud was born Marie Grosholtz in France in 1761, and learned to sculpt wax as a teenager -- her early subjects included Voltaire and Benjamin Franklin -- and went on to become a favorite of King Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette.
Hair removal goes back to ancient Egypt, where women applied hot wax and strips of gauze to their legs.
On flat terrain, such wax allows the skier to push off and on uphill climbs it prevents him from slipping backwards.
This was not true for President George W. Bush, who described his annual UN remarks as a "visit to the wax museum" because of the audience's unenthusiastic response.
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