We marvel at the internal intricacy of a well-decorated carrier shell and its adornments. |
|
The intricacy, the precision, the creativity, the hand-skills required, are what I love. |
|
Complementing the lyrics, xylophone-like bells add a level of intricacy and mysticism. |
|
The finished product has inspired moments, but is overlong with songs falling over themselves due to their intricacy. |
|
Its most remarkable achievement is the development of the mind that explores and appreciates now the beauty and intricacy of the cosmos. |
|
The learning curve on the complexity and intricacy of each task is sufficiently well judged to be both addictive and achievable. |
|
These networks obstruct accountability as much by their flux as by their intricacy. |
|
There is less intricacy of detail, and the bold lines and strong colours relate them to North Indian folk art. |
|
That is precisely the kind of intricacy that they're trying to hash out now. |
|
He stepped, lunged, parried, riposted, all the movements flowing into the next, a dance of incredible intricacy. |
|
Beth found the skill amazing in its intricacy, like the fine art of carving filigree. |
|
But I had not understood the full complexity and intricacy of the interpretive process. |
|
Yet, each track shows new layers of complexity and intricacy and opens up new grounds. |
|
The Talmud governs nearly everything, yet never abandons its technical models drawn from everyday life, its almost folksy intricacy. |
|
Handling the puck with both intricacy and ease, you race towards the opposing goal. |
|
In essence, the film is performance as acting throwdown, a drawn battle line between the chewing of scenery and the intricacy of craft. |
|
The delicate intricacy of the leaves provided inspiration for motifs in decoration, appearing on tiles and wrought iron, china, glass and linen. |
|
Lyrically, it's is not hugely involving, but I find that the complexity and intricacy of the music itself more than makes up for this. |
|
The two unique grids, his and hers, are separate but equal in their intricacy and power. |
|
The artistry and craftsmanship displayed, particularly in the later pieces, was stunning in its beauty and intricacy. |
|
|
Intuition tells us that complexity and intricacy should almost never evolve the same way more than once. |
|
They are catch-all phrases that perhaps do not speak the intricacy of what they really mean. |
|
Curtis captures the angst of first love, the rhapsody of a first kiss and the intricacy of families. |
|
The brief synopsis above does not do justice to the intricacy of the tale. |
|
And I loved the whole, you know, intricacy of that dysfunctional family. |
|
The intricacy of the art lies as much in its dyeing as in the design. |
|
Essentially these qualities were a roughness and variety of texture, and an intricacy of forms, combined with darks and lights bringing them to life. |
|
A delicate wing, gauzy and transparent, spread in her hands, spanning her fingers, its lacy intricacy provoking a thoughtful quietness, a sad wistfulness. |
|
The abundance and intricacy of gold-leaf decoration found on this illuminated Qur'an is typical of the Mamluks' patronage of religious arts. |
|
The relationship between mother and daughter, in all its thorniness and intricacy, is at the heart of Elizabeth Strout's new novel. |
|
In its harmonic complexity and in the extreme technical intricacy of the violin part the collection royally surpasses the three previous books. |
|
A lack of available national resources, together with the intricacy of some equipment, had already caused difficulty in some projects. |
|
Yet such objectives miss the intricacy at the heart of the risk-management process. |
|
Dyeing operations are used at various stages of production to add colour and intricacy to textiles and increase product value. |
|
Guatemalan and Burmese weavings are similar in their colours, intricacy and beauty. |
|
We well know that institutions have their own intricacy and each their own political motivation. |
|
They work on the wood of the sandarac tree and are deserving of your visit: their work is of a rare intricacy. |
|
The draft for examination is based on an intricacy of instruments related to law, science, and medicine. |
|
The number and intricacy of choices seem to be growing beyond leaders' abilities to analyze and make decisions. |
|
Then comes the shock of the vibrancy and intricacy of the interior. |
|
|
Considering that this is a television series, which usually indicates dumbed-down plots, the intricacy and darkness are both welcome and surprising. |
|
Well, his love of the intricacy of puzzles finally lies at the core of his art. |
|
Be advised that the theoretical intricacy and intellectual depth in this book do not make for an easy read, but readers will find that the journey is worth the effort. |
|
They pack incredible amounts of intricacy within small paint and ink cels. |
|
It is difficult to convey the intricacy and dynamism of even the simplest cellular automaton with a verbal description or even with static diagrams. |
|
The intricacy of this fight cannot be over emphasised as it permeates all levels of society and does not restrict itself to the urban or the metropolitan areas. |
|
To date it has located some 5,000 bodies. Given the high number of victims and the intricacy of the procedures involved, it might take another two or three decades to complete the exhumation work. |
|
Yet, it is evident to this poet that the creation in all its mystery, intricacy and bounty is at the service of humans, providing all they need to sustain life. |
|
From August 5th to the 12th, the cultural landscape of the Italian lifestyle incites the City of Montreal to uncover the splendour and intricacy of la dolce vita. |
|
The file that was the most difficult to pull off, whether its the production scale of a photo or video shoot, the difficulty of the post-processing, the complexity of an illustration or the intricacy of a musical arrangement. |
|
You've got the fine-lace intricacy of the string instruments and then the Ex thrashing about improvising on guitar, throwing everything down in one rough take. |
|
They develop a project timeline, weighing factors such as the intricacy of product designs, the availability of equipment and workers, and the urgency of client requests. |
|
In the final section, Weaving Memory, Delaine Le Bas's installation Gynaikonitides stands out for its intricacy and observations on womanhood. |
|
Fibre optic cabling solutions currently exist to address such use, but fibre can be expensive to implement and deploy depending on the size, scope and intricacy of the installation. |
|
Simply put, is value connected to intricacy? |
|
Furthermore, the complexity of the modern world and the intricacy of international relations allow guerrilla warfare to be drawn out by new methods of deceit and subversion. |
|
The first thing to remember about a filmsetter is that it is a camera and that its function is to present language in all its beauty, variety and intricacy. |
|
Such hedonistically engrossing, overripe colors contrast with Kelly's puritan tidiness and Louis's calculated intricacy, his peculiarly discreet sensuousness. |
|