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  2. Standee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standee

    A standee is an American term for a large self-standing display promoting a movie, product or event, or point-of-sale advertising, often in the form of a life-size cut-out figure. They are typically made of foam-board , and may range from large self-standing posters to elaborate three-dimensional display devices with moving parts and lights.

  3. Flight Patterns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flight_Patterns

    Flight Patterns, also known informally as Flying People, is a seven-panel photographic sculpture installation of 176 black and white cutouts by David Joyce, designed to be installed in 1989 in Concourse A at the Eugene Airport in the U.S. state of Oregon. During airport construction in 2015–2016, it was moved to Lane Community College.

  4. Wood veneer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood_veneer

    Plywood consists of three or more layers of veneer. Normally, each is glued with its grain at right angles to adjacent layers for strength. Veneer beading is a thin layer of decorative edging placed around objects, such as jewelry boxes. Veneer is also used to replace decorative papers in wood veneer high pressure laminate.

  5. Coping saw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coping_saw

    A coping saw. A coping saw is a type of bow saw used to cut intricate external shapes and interior cut-outs in woodworking or carpentry. It is widely used to cut moldings to create coped rather than mitre joints.

  6. Eames Lounge Chair Wood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eames_Lounge_Chair_Wood

    The Eames Lounge Chair Wood (LCW) (also known as Low Chair Wood or Eames Plywood Lounge Chair) is a low seated easy chair designed by husband and wife team Charles and Ray Eames. The chair was designed using technology for molding plywood that the Eames developed before and during the Second World War .

  7. Field hockey stick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field_hockey_stick

    In 1990 a plywood cutout of a stick with multiple kinks in the shaft was presented to the FIH for comment, the intention was to produce it as a goalkeeper's stick. Having limited the toe upturn only two years previously the FIH saw this as mockery and issued a press release, in April 1990, proposing a ban on all hockey sticks with "non-straight ...