I remember one photo in particular of a model dancing across the page in a chiffon confection covered with roses. |
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They tend also to entail independent research and the confection of term papers of varying lengths. |
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This allowed greater use of that process on the confection of prostheses compared to the brazing process. |
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There's a place called the Donut Pub on West 23rd that makes confection and cake donuts. |
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Designed to withstand heavy snowloads, the roof is held in place by a Heath Robinsonian confection of steel props, springs and tensile wires. |
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The room itself is fine and I am pleased to note the lack of any sticky chocolatey confection on the pillow. |
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Whether the incident happened at all, or as relayed in the anecdote, it is a slender confection to link this to the party's victory. |
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A kindredly vast chunk of chocolate truffle flavoured with orange, Armagnac and, perhaps, mint was a delicious confection. |
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By the late 14th century references to penides, a barley-sugar type confection, show that some knowledge of sugar boiling existed in England. |
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Their contribution is the icing on an exceptionally fine piece of quality confection. |
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Far from being quotidian these glamorous fancies push fashion to the limit in their testing fusion of ego-soothing props and dreamy confection. |
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Woolfe is an assured performer, and both the music and direction make for a brisk if light confection. |
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Inside it is a confection of dark polished wood, shining brass and comfortable banquettes. |
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The site stars members of the Nabisco confection lineup, such as LifeSavers and Now and Later chews. |
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Indeed, the experience of all this confection, a surfeit of assorted fruit flavors and candy colors, is mouthwatering in an almost Pavlovian way. |
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As part of her enterprise she shipped nostalgic English confection like humbugs and aniseed balls, to Navy men, tossing on the high seas. |
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Where critics of the older school would bring forth laborious lay sermons, he would trot out a diverting confection of a causerie. |
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Her anti-feminist manifesto is the final crazy coating on this already cuckoo confection. |
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They spoke of a rich, honeyed confection, folded in crispy layers and served under a silver dome. |
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This is a traditional home-made English confection made from grated coconut mixed with sugar syrup cooked to the thread stage. |
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It will be interesting now to see, when the oven pings, if the whole confection really is a recipe for success. |
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The event pits local chocolatiers against one another to create the tastiest confection. |
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Equally important is helwa, a sweet confection based on clarified butter, honey, and spices. |
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Daily specials keep things lively, from a haunting goat-cheese flan to a melting confection of strawberries and coconut ice cream. |
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He picked up the bonbon dish that lay on the table beside him and ate the pink confection. |
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Too bad the final dish is an over-baked confection that falls well below its primary chef's abilities. |
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She had multiple servings of each sweet pie, cake, confection, tort, ice cream, bun and pastry they had. |
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She was an exotic delicacy he wanted to try, a sweet confection from a far-off land. |
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Academics will call the book a childish confection and analyze it as media myth and pop psychology. |
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The film serves up a sugarcoated confection that will make anyone with a taste for Nabokov gag. |
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This has it all, a peculiar confection of tall tales and reality blended together in a strange and moving way. |
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Almost a liquid confection, this huge, fleshy wine, drinkable now, will still have appeal in five years. |
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For Beijing sweet tooths, the chocolate of choice is Dove, a simple British confection that comes in bar form. |
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This is a charming confection of excerpts from old favourites mixed with modern pieces. |
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She is a fur-laden confection of fashion, from her enormous hat to her dainty boots. |
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A lovely pop confection, that whistling riff has been stuck in my head for the last 20 years. |
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The entire confection would be crowned with elaborate wigs, tall feathers, and huge hats. |
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The costume was a confection of palest pink mesh with sparkly sprays of rhinestones. |
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One mouthful of the smooth, dense confection set off an explosion of bakeapple flavour in my mouth. |
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The pink confection of a dress complemented her short frame and gentle curves perfectly. |
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A final work, Unravel, was a mainly white confection of foam-core strips, slivered paper plates and disassembled Chinese lanterns that descended from the ceiling in a vortex. |
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His doublet was an ornate confection of red and gold, his hose black. |
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Nudity, on the other hand, is a species of confection that is subject to the rules of art and artfulness. |
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It is certainly conserving some kind of chimeric confection that resembles a wildcat but it certainly isn't the Scottish wildcat. |
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Finally, a dance song dominates the summer but manages to forgo sugary pop confection. |
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A lily-white body decorated with chocolate appears at first glance to be a confection. |
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Visit Casa Pueblo, his home and workshop, and admire its bizarre confection of minarets. |
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The entire crisis of homelessness is a confection, a creation, unnecessary. |
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Not much later, the company growed out to be a global player in the confection of liturgical garments, altar linen and banners. |
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In these honeycombs he made the confection sweeter than before. |
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The creation of such a universal confection for the eye, by means of printed poetry or fiction or history or essays or memoirs and so on, isn't possible. |
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The fairy-tale confection of John's architecture lit up purple and white. |
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Eva looks down at the confection of satin and lace, and blinks. |
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In comparison, The Quest is an over the top confection, with about as much genuine genre integrity as Your highness. |
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A supple and accessible wine, the wash is a heady confection of clean lemon, floral honey and warm toasty tones, while the finish is complex and evolving. |
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In the confection of senna it will be seen that the liquorice root has been discarded, while some little alteration has been admitted with respect to the other ingredients. |
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The Hotel Sacher Cafe is the place to go for authentic sachertorte, a rich chocolate apricot confection that was invented in this stuffily splendid establishment. |
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Prefiguring the house, this pavilion on a raised deck is a confection of gables and bays with intersecting corrugated metal canopies oversailing the wooden structure. |
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Had we the time and the sweet tooth we could have ordered a confection from the counter, anything from a Chester cake to an eclair to a scone with jam and butter. |
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His drinks column for the Observer's food magazine was an engaging confection of wit, doom and fantasy, as it would be from a such a seasoned toper. |
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The whole confection is lit with a 50W 38 degree low voltage halogen lamp on a dimmer. |
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When she was 13, the future Queen Victoria scrambled up into this petite Tudorbethan confection to get a better view of a fox hunt. |
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She found a sexy, lacy confection in a lingerie drawer and quickly slipped into it. |
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We analyzed 35 containers of dulce de leche, a caramelized milk paste confection, from Argentina, Angola, and Uruguay. |
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One is a confection of naive optimism that the rise of a continent-sized, authoritarian power could be accommodated in the global system without serious strains. |
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The defense attorney maintained that the charges were a confection of the local police. |
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Pierre Salvadori's charming confection plays cupid with a lowly waiter and a label-obsessed gold digger. |
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The business they were running was a confection of several sources. |
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Tahitian Noni's gourmet line of jams, teas, cremes and the confection sampler can make an everyday meal seem extraordinary or an afternoon snack feel like a brief escape. |
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The ceiling is a lavish confection of modillion cornice and a centre rose. |
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The outrageous assortment of hungry, pesty beasties devour every possible confection she creates, so in despair, Ma MacDonald sells the farm and flees with her lifemate, Old. |
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Marmalade, originally a Portuguese confection, was a popular British spread to consume in the evening, before the Scots moved it to the breakfast table in the 18th century. |
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