Questions

This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.

identifier question
19740Why should we wear anything which is misleading in regard to ourselves?
14664Have you ever heard of the harmonograph?
21531The question everyone asks is: How was it put together?
42278Can it be done?
45632It still answers the time old question of"What can I make for a Baby?"
43166By what means though, can he judge of the temper of a razor without using it?
43635Would it not seem a part of wisdom, for the sake of safety and economy in time and good nature, for everybody to master these knot problems?
23770Folio 90:"2 drawer ends 7/8 x?
23770[ Illustration: Storage for Apparatus] MISSION STAINS What is mission oak stain?
57562DO YOU WANT TO SAVE MONEY?
57562The question will at once suggest itself:"Is paint applied by dipping and spraying as durable as that applied by the brush?"
41749When a job of graining is finished; if it is deemed necessary to varnish it, the question arises,"What kind of varnish shall be used?"
26120Is it too much to believe that some of these charming faces may have been from her hands?
26120We know that she painted furniture and china, therefore why not the faces of the needlework pictures so nearly akin to her own work?
44585But what kind of an instrument could I use on this tin globe?
44585The question may arise, Is a split- bamboo rod necessary?
44585Why does it do so?
22298But how is it possible to transmit two or more messages over one wire at the same time?
22298But what is the length of a man''s foot?
22298CHAPTER V HOW TO COMMENCE WORK The question is often asked: Where and how shall the novice commence work?
22298What is an Inventor?
22298What is that?
45004Must I learn to make all these tools before beginning?
45004You made it?
45004Are you ready to take us on?
45004Do you know the blacksmith around the corner?
45004Do you think I could learn to do it?"
45004How long would it take me to make a box like this one?"
45004Where did you get it?"
45004[ Illustration: Bowls]"Which do you like best?"
31630How are you getting on?
31630--only they may have something equally beautiful which will take its place in that far- off time-- who knows?
31630Here and there voices were raised that would not be silenced:"You sang your beautiful song; what are you going to_ do_ about it?"
31630If the sheep did not give any wool, what would the weaver do?
31630If the weaver could not weave, what would we do for clothes?
31630If there were no grass, what would the sheep do?
31630Mrs. Wiggin truly says:"If the children are never to speak except when they answer questions, how are we to know aught of their inner life?"
31630What account have you made of them in your elaborate system for educating him?"
31630What contributions are our schools making to the bettering of social and industrial conditions?
31630What could give more pleasure than to be able to say fifty years from now:"I wove that, my dear, when I went to school"?
110788?
11078And do you remember the dramatic ending?
11078Did you ever observe, dear comrade, what an element of caricature lurks in clothes?
11078Have we not Lord Chesterfield''s word for it, that"No woman is ugly when she is dressed"?
11078How many women consider their backs when they dress?
11078How the smart one on the fatal day sought to"press the button"and finding it gone, lost his wits completely and failed ignominiously?
11078Many of us when we have lost a sustaining button, have we not felt as ridiculously helpless and wit- benumbed as the smart speller?
11078The lines of your form, the modelling of your face, are they not worthy of your discerning thought?
11078Who has not seen just such, or a similar sight, and laughed?
11078Why does she play so much with her back to the audience?
28269A beautiful material, if you are to better it( and if not why work upon it at all?
28269And is she persuaded that her artless spray of flowers, or the ironed- off pattern she has bought, is all that art could be?
28269And what, then, about originality?
28269But suppose it is puckered?
28269But why apply the term"satin- stitch"exclusively to parallel lines of stitches all of a length?
28269How else suit the design to the stitch, the stitch to the design?
28269How should she know?
28269Is anyone nowadays modest enough to do work such as the couching in outline in Illustration 90?
28269Is that to be a thing altogether of the past now that we have Art Needlework?
28269ONE STITCH OR MANY?
28269ONE STITCH, OR MANY?
28269Or has she thought?
28269The embroiderer of the 13th century was not afraid of that( aimed at it, perhaps?
28269The question almost occurs: with what can one not embroider?
28269What though she be a painter too?
28269Why not drop titles, and call stitches by the plainest and least mistakable names?
43604Well, what are they? 43604 What does such a little thing as that swelling and shrinking amount to?
43604Do they look stout, firm, strong, and rugged, or delicate, yielding, and graceful?
43604Have you ever seen the Chinese artisans turning out their wonderful work with only a few of the most primitive tools?
43604Have you read the books by Elijah Kellogg?
43604How can you fill up this open frame to make a door, so as to avoid the trouble about warping, winding, swelling, and shrinking?
43604How did they do so much?
43604How is it usually mended each time it comes off?
43604How much of the latter would be in existence now if it had been made when the ancestral articles were?
43604Now how should you go to work to do this properly?
43604Of course we get things cheaper( even if they do not last so long) because of the factory; but how about the workman?
43604What can you do in such a case?
43604What shall you do then?
43604What you want is to be told how to go to work in the right way-- how to make things successfully and like a workman-- is it not?
43604Which of these two types is the better- developed man?
43604Why do n''t you give us a list to begin with?
43604Why is green wood heavier and softer than dry wood, and the sapwood of green timber softer than the heart?
43604Why?
43604[ 13] Do you think nails or screws or glue will stop a force which will do that?
18901But how about me?
18901How will these women dress? 18901 And why not? 18901 But where is the fair woman who will say that a failure to emerge from a dressmaker''s hands in a successful costume is not a tragedy? 18901 CHAPTER IV THE PSYCHOLOGY OF CLOTHES Has the reader ever observed the effect of clothes upon manners? 18901 Did not the strong red, green, and blue of Napoleon''s time follow the delicate sky- blues, rose and sunset- yellows of the Louis? 18901 Have you been in Russia? 18901 Have you chanced to ask yourself why the outline of the individual members of the chorus was so lacking in charm, and Madame Farrar''s so delightful? 18901 Have you seen with your own eyes any phase of the violent contrasts which at last have caused the worm to turn? 18901 If it is a ball- room, and the occasion a costume- ball, is it done in light or dark colours, and what is the prevailing tone? 18901 If striped, horizontal or perpendicular? 18901 If you ask,Where do fashions come from,--why''periods''?"
18901If your gown is white and your object to create line, can you see how you defeat your purpose by wearing anything but white slippers or shoes?
18901In this, does she outrank her less accomplished sisters?
18901No wonder Poiret, the Paris dressmaker, seized upon Bakst as designer( or was it Bakst who seized upon Poiret?).
18901Our first impression of this type was in Paris, at the Russian Church on Christmas( or was it some other holy day?)
18901The catechism of good dressing might be given in some such form as this: Are you fat?
18901They are very natty, are n''t they?
18901Were materials flowered, striped, or plain?
18901Were velvets, satins or silks worn, or all three?
18901What of those betwixt and between?
18901Will they be given military uniforms short of skirt or even skirtless?
18901_ From an Early Victorian Fashion Paper._"When was that''simple time of our fathers''when people were too sensible to care for fashions?
437203- 0 are beautiful with red berries, and what could be prettier to string with brown seeds or Job''s tears than gold- lined crystal beads?
437206] Where shall we place it now that it is made?
4372084] How would you like to make a game of your very own with which you and your brothers and sisters or some of your friends can play?
4372099]_ Paper Flowers_ Have you ever made paper flowers?
43720Do you know the reason for it?
43720Have you ever seen any Job''s tears-- the interesting tear- shaped seeds of an East Indian grass?
43720How is it to be done?
43720How would you like to make a doll''s raffia hat, as a birthday gift for one of your special friends-- one that will fit her favourite doll?
43720Is n''t it delightful to think that you can make such a dish with your own hands?
43720It is wonderful, is n''t it, to think of being able to plant them when out of doors the earth is covered thick with snow?
43720One of your friends who wears eyeglasses was told by a wise person that the best thing with which to clear her glasses was-- what do you think?
43720Shall we begin with the spring bulbs-- tulips, crocuses and daffodils?
43720What became of them afterward?
43720What do we remember?
43720Why not keep a gift box or drawer, where you can pack away the pretty things you take such pleasure in making on dull days all the year round?
43720Why not make a bowl in which he could carry water when he was travelling or hunting in dry places?
43720Why should not a little girl make one of finer materials for the floor of her doll''s house?
43720Would you like to make a tiny high- backed chair to use with the tea table in the doll''s house?
46445And when these queries have been answered so far as may be, do the answers possess immediate value?
46445Has the Boy had a Chance at this kind of Experience?]
46445Has the boy had a chance at this kind of experience?
46445Have these new things been devised to meet a change in public taste?
46445How else is the boy to find himself?
46445How is it possible then to_ know_ if one can not_ do_?
46445How many boys or girls of the present time possess anything like this sum of_ useful knowledge_--useful for the conditions in which they live?
46445How many housewives have intelligent insight concerning home management and administration; of simple domestic chemistry or sanitation?
46445How may one explain the restful atmosphere of certain homes visited?
46445How much does the embryo housekeeper know about textiles, curtains, carpets, hangings, linens, brass, china, furniture?
46445Is it reasonable to suppose that one who has never made a home, or even helped actively to run one made for her, can on demand"make good?"
46445Now, suppose one wishes to use two or more tones in a room, how may harmonious effect be secured?
46445The second question,"Why do children like to make things and what is their choice?"
46445Were these subjects not the very basis of culture, and what would be more logical than direct systematic presentation of the fundamental principles?
46445What is her chance of success?
46445Where do all these charming things come from?
46445Why do children want to earn money?
46445Why do children-- practically all of them-- try to make things, and what is their choice?"
46445Would a business man think for one moment of handing over any department of his affairs to one not trained for the particular duties involved?
46445[ Illustration] CHAPTER III THE REAL GIRL_ What Is the Ideal Home?_[ Illustration: A School Garden in Jordan Harbor, Ontario, Canada.
46445and color?
44766Do you know that many of our English great- grandmothers had very straight backs?
44766Do you see how we are working?
44766Have you ever heard the story of the little dirty boy of the slums who was given a new white tie by his teacher?
44766Have you ever seen a lace spread or centre piece with flowers embroidered on it?
44766Have you noticed how pretty ladies look when sewing?
44766Have you noticed the flat gay decorations above the moulding in some houses?
44766How many of you have not seen on an Indian woman queer shapes cut out of leather and ornamented with beads used for a border on her skirt?
44766Matching the stripes] Have you ever noticed how the slit or placket of a petticoat or side opening of drawers is finished?
44766Mother may not be around to help you when the accident happens, and would you not feel proud to sew it on for yourself?
44766Nearly every little English girl knows how to smock without buying a pattern and why should not you?
44766Shadow work, is not that a funny name for embroidery?
44766Shall we make a cover for Sally Ann''s bed or a dust- cloth for mother?
44766The Right Way to Darn] Have you ever belonged to a sewing club?
44766The first thing to consider is, are you going to have a bedstead or a couch in your room?
44766The first thing to decide is, how are we going to face the hat?
44766The tape finished] Do you know that very few people sew on hooks and eyes properly?
44766Turkish stitch] Have you ever noticed how many pieces of Turkish embroidery are worked on coarse unbleached muslin or tan linen?
44766VI A LESSON IN STENCILLING What is stencilling?
44766What is the selvage?
44766What were they to wear?
44766Would you not feel happier if you made the pattern and then cut the skirt yourself?
44766Would you not like to have a sewing apron that you can use as a bag when you are not wearing it?
44766Yet, what is the use of taking time to embroider one if you do not intend to make it up?
44766You have doubtless seen the dyed whole skin used on a library table, but have you ever seen leather appliqué?
44766You would not hang lithograph posters in your bedroom so why feel that it is all right to buy a lithograph pillow?
34092An infant with a waist"growing fine by degrees and beautifully less"!--was there ever such a deformity?
34092Are their figures better, their health stronger, for the compression of their tender bodies by stays?"
34092Are they less susceptible of cold than boys?
34092Instead of the beautiful, the graceful, and the becoming, what are the attractions offered by the dress makers?
34092Is it any wonder that persons so deformed should have bad health, or that they should produce unhealthy offspring?
34092Is it any wonder that so many young mothers should have to lament the loss of their first born?
34092Is it to display a beautiful neck and shoulders?
34092Is it to obtain the admiration of the other sex?
34092Is their circulation less languid, that their clothes are so much thinner?
34092Is there less skill and talent, less taste required to clothe the form which we are told is made after God''s own image, than to furnish an apartment?
34092What are the terms used to invite the notice of customers?
34092What reason can be assigned why a woman''s work, if equally well done, should not be as well paid as that of a man?
34092When will our people be able to show designs of such elegance?
34092Who could imagine that there would be an attempt to revive the hoop petticoat in the nineteenth century?
34092Why should not shoemakers be taught the shape and movements of the foot?
34092Yet is not dress an art- manufacture as well as a cup and saucer, or a teaboard?
34092_ Julia._ The blue one, sir?
15831A what?
15831Bill,I exclaimed,"what''s got into you?
15831But say, suppose we send a delegation to see him about it?
15831Did you ever hear of a_ klepalo_? 15831 Do you think you can get it?"
15831Have you ever been out camping?
15831Here, Dutchy, you crazy fellow, where are you going to? 15831 How much money have you with you?"
15831I have fifty- nine,said Bill,"and that makes eighty- six altogether, does n''t it?
15831Mr. President,said Reddy,"your plan sounds first- rate, but how are you going to fasten runners onto the canoe?"
15831Red mud? 15831 Say, Dutchy, are you killed?"
15831Say, Jim,said he to me,"have you got any canvas up at the house?"
15831What are you going to do with them?
15831What do you want it for?
15831What''s that got to do with it?
15831What?
15831Why in thunder did n''t you think of this before we started?
15831Why not mount the sailing canoe on runners, instead of the scow? 15831 Why not?"
15831You did n''t, eh? 15831 A can of oil to build yer fire with? 15831 And what if they did not insist on our leaving the island? 15831 But who ever heard of a boy complaining because there was snow on the ground? 15831 Can you and your friends afford to be without this up- to- date periodical, which is read by every class and profession? 15831 Do n''t any of you know of one around here?
15831Do you think you can make one?"
15831How do you expect to get us back to shore again?"
15831How much have you?"
15831How were we to carry all our building materials up to this great height?
15831How were we to reach the camp?
15831Is n''t there a railroad depot near here?"
15831Is there a spring on the island?"
15831No?
15831What in thunder have you got there?"
15831What next?
15831What was to be done?
15831What were four boys to do against six grown men?
15831What''ll ye sell me the hull plant fer, boys?"
15831Where do you get your drinking water?
15831Why, yes, why had n''t we thought of that?
30676As, for example, in connection with the corn crop: How many seeds were planted?
30676For example, how many inches or feet of wire will be needed to make a three- wire fence of given length?
30676How far apart shall the posts be set, how tall should they be, and how many will be needed?
30676How large a piece of cardboard will be needed to cut boards one fourth or one half inch wide for a four- board fence fifteen inches long?
30676How long?
30676How many boards?
30676How many came up?
30676How many cows?
30676How many failed to germinate?
30676How many more came up than failed?
30676How many seeds in a row?
30676How many wires?
30676How much butter would it make?
30676How much milk will they give?
30676How much pasture land shall we need?
30676How wide?
30676If each good seed should produce two ears of corn, how many would we have?
30676In how many rows?
30676Shall the teacher cut out the object and bid the class follow her example?
30676Shall they be given a pattern and be allowed to draw around it?
30676Shall we raise stock, fruit, corn, wheat, vegetables, or a little of everything?
30676Shall we use small rugs or a carpet?
30676The first question arising is, To what extent shall a pattern be used?
30676What buildings?
30676What colors must we have on the floor to harmonize with the colors on the wall?
30676What designs are possible and desirable for the materials we have to use?
30676What is the farmer''s profit?
30676What machinery?
30676What shall we need to plant in each case, and in what proportion?
30676What sort of farm shall we have?
30676What sort of fence is needed, wire, boards, pickets, rails, or hedge?
30676What sort of house can be built from the materials at hand?
30676What sort of house can be built in the space at our disposal?
30676What sort of house is desired?
30676What will be suitable to the purpose of each room?
30676What will it be worth?
30676What will it cost to keep the cows?
30676What would they be worth at a given price?
30676Which are most important?
30676Why do we use linoleum in the kitchen and warm rugs in the bedroom?
30676Why?
30676high will be needed, and how far out into the room will they come?
21534( a) How are cotton and flax bleached?
21534( a) What are the requisites for good dressmaking?
21534( a) What is the chief constituent of the vegetable fibers?
21534( b) Has the subject any educational value?
21534( b) How does dressmaking differ from white sewing in make, finish, and ornamentation?
21534( b) How does their affinity for dyestuffs compare with wool and silk?
21534( b) What can you say in regard to children''s clothing?
21534( b) What experience have you had in cleaning( a) cotton,( b) wool,( c) linen,( d) silk,( e) velvet?
21534( b) What is a mordant?
21534( b) What is your idea of ornament applied to garments?
21534( c) How do the alkalies affect wool?
21534( c) How should material be prepared for dyeing?
215345. Who invented the cotton gin and how did this invention affect the cotton industry?
21534Can you add any suggestions that would be helpful to others in this work?
21534Can you make the running stitch properly?
21534Can you suggest better methods than those given in the text?
21534Do you consider it economy to repair garments?
21534For what purpose may the cat stitch be used?
21534From your point of view what do you consider a successful garment?
21534Have you found the ready made garments satisfactory in underwear and dresses?
21534How are gathers made, and how sewed into a band?
21534How are print goods made?
21534How do the textile fibers compare in the raw state in condition and price?
21534How does wool differ from hair?
21534How is it done?
21534How may pressing be done to give the best results?
21534Name some other bast fibers and their products?
21534Of what value is the study of textiles?
21534What are the common basting stitches, and for what are they used?
21534What can you say of fastenings?
21534What colors do you find satisfactory for your own wear, and why?
21534What factors determine the use of fabrics?
21534What garments require little or no pressing, and why?
21534What have you gained by the study of this lesson?
21534What instruction have you ever had in sewing?
21534What is noil; shoddy; felt; flocks?
21534What is the name of the manufactured product of flax?
21534What is your opinion of the care of clothing?
21534What kinds are there?
21534What materials are best suited for infants''garments?
21534What methods, new to you, have you tried in connection with this lesson?
21534What questions have you to ask?
21534What stitches or methods described in this lesson are new to you?
21534Where should ornament be placed, and why?
21534Wherein have the lessons been of practical value to you?
21534With what dress goods have you had experience, and with what results?
21534With what sewing machine are you most familiar, and what are its peculiarities?
43574All right,said Harry, brightening up,"which one shall I make?"
43574By the way, do you know why my mill does n''t work?
43574By the way,said Harry,"ca n''t I make a paper knife now?
43574Ca n''t you give me something to do while you are designing that ocean?
43574Ca n''t you teach me?
43574Do you know there is as much fun in getting up new designs as there is in making them in wood?
43574Does it kill every tree?
43574Happy jack?
43574How are you going to get into that box?
43574How can you make such fine things? 43574 How do you like manual labour?"
43574How do you spell it?
43574How long does it take?
43574How many of these have you tried?
43574How much is a million acres?
43574How much?
43574How?
43574In what way?
43574Is that all?
43574The bracket? 43574 Then why do n''t you let them into the wall studs too?"
43574Well, have n''t I made everything we have carved so far?
43574Well, what are we going to do about it?
43574Well, why ca n''t I box in one side?
43574Well, you wanted to make a paper knife, did n''t you? 43574 What are they?"
43574What are they?
43574What are we going to do?
43574What do you mean?
43574What else could it be used for?
43574What happens then?
43574What happens when the forest that is burned is all evergreens, and they are all killed?
43574What have you curved those ends out for?
43574What is it used for?
43574What tool is that?
43574What was that scheme of yours for a horizontal windmill?
43574What''s countersunk?
43574What''s the answer?
43574What''s the radius?
43574Why do n''t you put the paper in the centre?
43574Why?
43574Will you show me how to do that kind of work?
43574Will you show me how to make a paper- cutter now?
43574A perch of masonry is 16- 1/2 Ã � 1- 1/2 Ã � 1= 24.75 cubic feet Is n''t it about time we used the metric system?
43574Again, how much wood in a timber 8 inches à � 4 inches, 18 feet long?
43574As simple examples: How many board feet in a piece of lumber containing 2,880 cubic inches?
43574By permission of_ Carpentry and Building_]"Would n''t you like to make a bench in hard wood right away?"
43574Designs for wall brackets]"What size?"
43574He may even wrestle with the problem"What is a tree?"
43574How much wood in a beam 9 inches x 6 inches, 14 feet long?
43574How much wood in a joist 16 feet long, 12 inches wide and 6 inches thick?
43574How?
43574If the distance across the flat sides of the octagon is sixteen feet, leaving out the item of waste, how many square feet will be required?
43574Immediately the question arises, how are the timbers fastened at these places?
43574In other words, what kind of joint is used?
43574Is it a dagger?"
43574Is the box to be flat on the sides and ends or is the top to project?
43574Never design nor make a piece of furniture without asking,"What is this to be used for?
43574The auger bit]"What''s the Yankee invention you were going to tell me about?"
43574The back: is it necessary, and if so shall it be solid?
43574They decided on a footstool, and this is the catechism Ralph put Harry through as they worked out their drawing:"What is a footstool for?"
43574Those curves catch the wind quicker than flat surfaces; have you never noticed that on the weather bureau vanes they are always curved out like that?"
43574To take a theoretical case: How much wood in a solid circular log of uniform diameter, 16 inches in diameter, 13 feet and 9 inches long?
43574What shall we do first?"
43574What will be required of it?"
43574Where and when will it stop?
43574Why ca n''t I do that kind of work?"
43574Why, what is this I have drawn?"
43574or,"Where does the shrub leave off and the tree begin?"
31714In what state is your conscience?
31714Where are the proud and lofty dames, Their jewell''d crowns, their gay attire, Their odours sweet? 31714 ''How knowest thou that?'' 31714 ''Is it not a work which the most cunning artists would wonder at?'' 31714 ''What be they, tell me?'' 31714 ''What promise was that?'' 31714 ''What way be they ryden?'' 31714 ''What{ Frenchmen} be they; canst thou tell me?'' 31714 And as''twas then an exercise of praise, So what deserves more honour in these dayes, Than this? 31714 And if it be necessary to woman with her charms, is it not tenfold necessary to those who-- Heaven help them!--have few charms whereof to boast? 31714 And that building seen on the opposite side of the river? 31714 And there were somme that said, How is hit? 31714 And what was it? 31714 And, after all, who is this all- powerful genius? 31714 Are those light transgressions, my son?
31714Besides, why should any brag of what''s but borrowed?
31714But what is passing in that detached portion of the camp?
31714Come on, come on thy lagging way; Ye have made a fair daies worke, have you not?
31714Could sympathy be more poetically expressed?
31714Did not the Sun, through heaven''s wide azure roll''d, For three long years the royal fraud behold?
31714Did she alight from the skies, while rejoicing stars sang Pæans at her birth?
31714Didst carry out dust in thy lap?
31714Do not our readers recollect Cowper''s thanksgiving"on finding the heel of a shoe?"
31714Indeed, what would the"Field of the Cloth of Gold"have been without the skill of the needlewoman?
31714So small an instrument?
31714Surely her lot was hard; and well might she weepingly exclaim,"Where is now my hope?"
31714Tell me, how shall my breches be sewid?
31714The Esquire said him, nay,''For a silken string why should you fling, perchance, your life away?''
31714Was she born of the Sunbeams while a glittering Rainbow cast a halo of glory around her?
31714What devil had you els to do?
31714What is her appearance?
31714When do we hear, in the present times, of Church and State interfering to regulate the patterns of their bonnets?
31714Whence does she arise?
31714Where are the love- enkindled flames, The bursts of passionate desire Laid at their feet?
31714Where ha you ben fidging abroad, since you your neele lost?"
31714Where is the dance that shook the floors, And all the gay and laughing train, And all they wore?
31714Would his sister, would Dinah execute the work?
31714_ Boswell._--"Pray, Sir, did you ever play on any musical instrument?"
31714_ Hodge._"And is not then my breches sewed up, to- morrow that I shuld wear?"
31714_ Hodge._"Her neele?"
31714_ Hodge._"How a murrain came this chaunce( say Tib) unto her dame?"
31714_ Hodge._"I say, Tib, if thou be Tib, as I trow sure thou be, What devil make ado is this between our dame and thee?"
31714_ Hodge._"Knowest not what Tom tailor''s man sits broching thro''a clout?
31714_ Hodge._"Might ha kept it when ye had it; but fools will be fools still: Lose that is fast in your hands?
31714_ Hodge._"My conscience, Tib, my Gammer has never lost her neele?"
31714_ Hodge._"What is the matter, say on, Tib, whereat she taketh so on?"
31714_ Hodge._"Whereto served your hands and eyes, but your neele keep?
31714_ Hodge._"Your neele lost?
31714how is it possible for me to furnish such a number?
31714shall I go thus to- morrow?"
31714shall not this lady this day be pynned ne wel besene in a Myrroure?
31714she replied,''can I feel a regret of any kind while I share your misfortunes?''"
31714to whom should he intrust the task?
31714what is that in your hand?''
31714who sojourn in yonder tents which attract more general attention than all the others, and in which all ages and degrees seem interested?
4350010?
4350011?
4350012?
435006?
435007?
435008 and 9 represent?
43500Describe how Italian pink and Italian scarlet marbles are imitated?
43500Describe how black and gold marble is imitated?
43500Describe the character of serpentine marble?
43500Describe what is meant by"wiping out"?
43500Give a description of the marbling of agate?
43500How are graining crayons made?
43500How are oak ground tints to be made?
43500How are onyxes imitated?
43500How are the bird''s eyes put on?
43500How are the colors to be applied?
43500How are the edges to be softened?
43500How are the fan overgrainers used?
43500How are the finishing touches put on?
43500How are the flakes and champs put in?
43500How are the grounds for European and American black walnut prepared?
43500How are the grounds for rosewood to be prepared?
43500How are the grounds of light and dark mahogany prepared?
43500How are the grounds to be prepared?
43500How are the veins pencilled in?
43500How are white- veined black marble and black- veined white marble imitated?
43500How is Brocatello marble imitated?
43500How is Egyptian green marble imitated?
43500How is Florentine marble reproduced?
43500How is Hungarian ash grained?
43500How is ash grained in oil?
43500How is ash grained in water colors?
43500How is burled walnut grained?
43500How is burled walnut overgrained?
43500How is cherry grained?
43500How is combing done in distemper work?
43500How is crotched and fancy feathered mahogany to be grained?
43500How is dark flake graining done?
43500How is distemper graining to be finished?
43500How is graining done with sponges?
43500How is mahogany overgrained?
43500How is new wood to be grounded?
43500How is old painted work to be grounded?
43500How is old varnished work to be treated for grounding?
43500How is rosewood grained?
43500How is satinwood grained?
43500How is sienna marble imitated?
43500How is sycamore grained?
43500How is the combing done in oil graining?
43500How is the graining color applied?
43500How is the graining overgrained?
43500How is the overgraining done?
43500How is the stippling done?
43500How is the varnishing to be done?
43500How is the veining and blending done in marbling?
43500How is the veining made to appear as if coming up to the surface from the interior?
43500How is the wiping out done?
43500How is the work finished?
43500How is the"blending"done?
43500How is transfer graining done?
43500How is verd antique marble imitated?
43500How is walnut grained in oil and distemper?
43500How is walnut overgrained?
43500How is wax polish finish applied?
43500How may all the various woods be classed?
43500How may stock megilp be prepared for future use?
43500How may the check roller be used?
43500How should ash be overgrained?
43500How should chestnut be grained?
43500How should distemper graining be overgrained?
43500How should graining colors be mixed for distemper work?
43500How should gray maple ground be prepared?
43500How should maple be overgrained?
43500How should plain mahogany be grained?
43500How should plain maple be grained?
43500How should the check roller be used?
43500How should the distemper colors be put on?
43500How should the grounds be prepared for it?
43500How should the grounds be put on in marbling?
43500How should walnut be stippled?
43500How would you proceed to put on the mottling lay out?
43500In how many divisions can marbles be placed in?
43500In what medium is bird''s eye maple usually grained?
43500Relate what are the main characteristics of sycamore?
43500To what parts of interior decoration are they best adapted to?
43500What additional material is useful for marbling?
43500What advice is given about preparing practice boards for graining study?
43500What appliances are needed in wall work in order to reach their surfaces?
43500What are fan overgrainers?
43500What are mottlers?
43500What are rubber graining rollers used for in graining?
43500What are the badger hair blenders used for?
43500What are the colors that are needed in graining in water colors?
43500What are the principal characteristics of rosewood?
43500What are the principal characteristics of walnut?
43500What are the requisites necessary to make a good graining color in oil?
43500What are the thinners used in graining in oil or distemper?
43500What are the tools needed in marbling?
43500What are the tools needed in"combing"?
43500What brushes are used for"rubbing in"graining colors in oil?
43500What colors ground in oil are required for preparing of tints for grounds?
43500What else is said regarding tinting the ground colors?
43500What else is useful in retarding the drying of the distemper graining color?
43500What is a proper ground for the graining of ash?
43500What is a stippler or flogger?
43500What is an artificial rubber thumb?
43500What is further said of marbles and how are granites imitated?
43500What is it that the"rubber in"should not attempt to do?
43500What is meant by the operation of rubbing in?
43500What is needed for this operation and how done?
43500What is said about graining crayons?
43500What is said about obtaining fuller descriptions of material?
43500What is said about the graining of ash?
43500What is said about the material used in graining and of the base?
43500What is said about the transparency of the colors used in preparing graining colors?
43500What is said about the use of rags?
43500What is said concerning the imitation of Tennessee marble?
43500What is said concerning the special use to be made of the various operations in graining described in the previous lessons?
43500What is said in a general way about preparing graining colors, or megilp?
43500What is said in a general way on the graining of quarter sawed oak?
43500What is said in general of chestnut graining?
43500What is said of a new"wiping out"paper?
43500What is said of burled and root walnut graining?
43500What is said of cherry graining?
43500What is said of combination oil and distemper work?
43500What is said of maple graining in general?
43500What is said of oak graining in general?
43500What is said of other varieties of marbles?
43500What is said of quartered oak graining in distemper?
43500What is said of the fan overgrainers?
43500What is said of the general operations by which graining is done?
43500What is said of the irregularity of form in marbles?
43500What is said of the rubbing in coat and combing?
43500What is said of the thinners used in distemper work?
43500What is said of the use of corrugated rubber graining tools?
43500What is said of the use of sponges in burled graining?
43500What is said of the wiping out?
43500What is said of the"pencilling in"of veins, etc., in distemper graining?
43500What is said of woods of gnarled growths?
43500What is said of"transfer graining paper"?
43500What is said regarding marble formation?
43500What is said regarding the graining of bird''s eye maple?
43500What is said regarding the graining of mahogany?
43500What is said regarding the imitation of granites, porphyries and jaspers?
43500What is said regarding the preparation of various samples of veneers for study?
43500What is said relative to the imitation of marbles by ancient civilizations?
43500What is the general rule to be followed in preparing the ground work for any given wood?
43500What kind of brushes are required for the laying on of ground colors?
43500What material is used in marbling?
43500What may be added to the thinner to prevent the color drying too quick?
43500What of the general operation used in imitating marbles?
43500What other brushes are useful in graining and marbling?
43500What other colors ground in oil are required for preparing"graining colors in oil?"
43500What other material is useful in grainings?
43500What preparations are necessary for the painting of grounds?
43500What substances may be added to colors to produce more transparency?
43500What uses of marble imitations are made of today?
43500When do the wood imitations need stippling?
43500Why are some grainers afraid to undertake graining it in distemper?