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"imprints" Synonyms
actions effect impact influence implication reactions work workings aftermaths consequences outcomes product ramifications repercussions responses results aftereffects bearings fallout footprints tracks marks trail impressions prints traces evidence remains trace signs remainders remnants fragments mementos relics vestiges residue legacies trails spoor issues editions copies installments(US) publications instalments(UK) releases versions volumes chapters episodes back issues back numbers numbers productions appearances publishings production print indentation stamps impresses dents depression dint hollows fingerprints outlines dings stampings moulds(UK) concavity footmarks footsteps steps scents hoofprints footpaths paths grooves emblems symbols labels badges seals insignias trademarks hallmarks crests brands tags design motifs tokens watermarks colophons inscriptions facsimiles mimeographs Xeroxes photocopies mimeos reprints photostats offprints stats transcripts dittos images microfiches telefaxes transcription telecopies repros autotype xeroxes blemishes spots stains streaks blots blotches scars smudges dots lines nicks scratches flecks pocks pockmarks smirch specks printing publication version imprinting print runs revision volume programmes(UK) redaction reprintings programs(US) recensions reissues etchings engraving blocks plate carvings cuts drawing linocuts mezzotints photoengraving photogravure reproduction rotogravures vignettes woodcuts dry points lettering types faces fonts typefaces founts typescripts composition typesettings writing signatures autographs crosses initials scribbles squiggles Xes John Hancocks John Henrys mastheads banners headers spread strip titles nameplates touch character characteristics hands direction management traits weight handling methods significance technique attribution criteria diagnostics differentiae legend wording epitaphs epigraphs sayings captions headings memory recollection remembrances reminiscences reminders flashbacks evocations souvenirs vision pictures representation concepts cues thought echoes hints minds engraves etches embosses inscribes punches debosses carves chases infixes chisels ingrains engrains graves sets fixes implants establishes embeds lodges places plants positions sticks instals(UK) installs(US) dins in drums in drives home smears dirties discolors(US) discolours(UK) disfigures smirches defaces splotches besmears bruises notches More

384 Sentences With "imprints"

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Some companies are trying to streamline their operations by combining imprints and publishing lines, or sometimes eliminating imprints all together.
Nowadays it is perfectly acceptable to approach numerous publishers at once and even several imprints within the same group (imprints tend to be compartmentalised).
If imprints were given veto power—or any editorial control—over the work done by other imprints, it could have a chilling effect for publishers.
He or she would have to keep track of which imprints Simon & Schuster owns, and any imprints they might acquire or establish in the near future.
Avalon books are now published under imprints of Amazon Publishing.
Some publishers have even created imprints dedicated to digital stars.
It started a publishing company, and now has 14 imprints.
As these imprints were made of dust, they quickly disappeared.
Such imprints in the desert do not go away easily.
Think of A Tribe Called Quest, or early Ninja Tune imprints.
Publishing imprints at comic book companies typically have a unifying trait.
They love first children, first imprints — and now, first special sauces.
Whatever was originally depicted has left only the ghostliest of imprints.
He imprints upon her, as if he were a baby duck.
We might only find dead microbes, or fossil imprints of them.
Penguin Random House, which houses around 275 imprints worldwide and generates some $4 billion annually, has begun to look for ways to streamline its publishing lines, a move that could help to curb duplication across imprints.
Having a diverse group of imprints is also good for company stability.
It appeared to bear the seared-in imprints from a human hand.
For Hachette, which publishes about 1,200 books a year through imprints like Grand Central and Little, Brown, the addition of nine imprints from Perseus will help fill out and balance its publishing program in areas like nonfiction and travel.
These aren't fossilized imprints of the microbes, but the stuff they left behind.
A foaming fluid that imprints the Shroud of Turin on your sheets overnight?
The imprints of nocturnal adaptations continue to persist in most living mammals today.
How important is the existence of more left-field electronic music imprints today?
The empires that came later all left their imprints: Byzantines, Romans, Seljuks, Ottomans.
Some DCOM were totally silly but left important imprints on '90s-kid culture.
William even got a chance to put his hands in the soccer star's imprints!
Imprints led by male rappers themselves also have a history of ignoring female talent.
There are a lot of benefits for publishers in keeping these imprints editorially distinct.
She comes back to life, psychically imprints on Morton, and wreaks havoc on London.
The chipmaker imprints patterns of transistors on the wafer using a process called photolithography.
The pills had imprints on both sides, which is a telltale sign of ecstasy.
Can you tell about the convergence between Factitious Imprints and your practice at large?
Several indie imprints and at least one major country label passed on her music.
When compared with these feats and provocations, the penis imprints feel tame, even tasteful.
With its 13 imprints, Random House publishes such best-selling authors as Ta-Nehisi Coates, George R.R. Martin and Trevor Noah, while Crown has 20 imprints, and a deep roster of blockbuster writers, including Gillian Flynn, Erik Larson, Ina Garten and Andy Weir.
Carved in limestone, the trackways consist of two rows of imprints arranged in repeated groups.
And none of the celebrity imprints PW looked at have revived in the past year.
Dynamic Indian-based imprints began to exploit the newly discovered hunger for indigenous page-turners.
However, the Big Two imprints, Marvel and DC, were conspicuously absent from the initial rollout.
Two years later, the company launched its own suite of professional imprints called Amazon Publishing.
Maria's voice and aesthetic has the imprints of rock 'n' roll greats all over it.
At the salad bar MIXT, cashiers took credit card payments using old-fashioned paper imprints.
To learn more about Factitious Imprints, The Creators Project asked the artist a few questions.
And several publishing houses have recently announced "diversity" imprints they insist will fill the void.
Carrying scythes, they sometimes stand among imprints of actual plants, beneath lurid suns and skies.
The company operates around 275 imprints worldwide, and its sales total around 4 billion annually.
Whoever's in charge of controlling those imprints gets to dictate where the future will go.
Leg hair, sock imprints, tan lines, and scars make Mapplethorpe's nudes look airbrushed in comparison.
Either way, the technology of the photograph imprints itself on the technology of the automobile.
Vertigo, one of the canceled imprints, was a valuable resource for material aimed at adults.
The potter Frances Palmer imprints clay vessels with the vivid dahlias from her Connecticut garden.
Many publishers also have specific imprints focusing on diverse books for children and young adults.
Which of the company's many imprints would release the books, and who would edit them?
Others are distributed by small, activist imprints or the publishing arms of white nationalist organizations.
Because certainly animals have imprints on them all the time—patterns, camouflage—that are quite exact.
She made major imprints on the fabric of Black music, entrepreneurship, and culture even before Lemonade.
Threshold Editions exists to serve a constituency that is often overlooked by Simon & Schuster's other imprints.
But all this only works if Google has access to the digital imprints of your life.
Penguin Random House's sales total around 4 billion annually, and they operate around 275 imprints worldwide.
Random House had hardcover imprints like Alfred A. Knopf and Pantheon Books and published Ballantine paperbacks.
Broadside Books, which branded itself as the intellectual pinnacle of conservative publishing — the William F. Buckley to the other imprints' Sean Hannity — is still listed on HarperCollins's imprints page, but it has no homepage of its own, and its Twitter page hasn't been updated since 2013.
Any changes to it leave imprints on the cosmic microwave background that we can measure very sensitively.
Random House and Amazon have recently launched imprints to try to sate readers' lust for steamy stories.
The idea of specifically right-wing imprints in the Big Five houses is a relatively new one.
Fossilized imprints suggested dinosaurs had feathers during the cretaceous period, between 145 to 65 million years ago.
There have been more layoffs than the media coverage would suggest, and redundant imprints have been shuttered.
The rope has left imprints all over my arms—marks that turn into bruising the next day.
Along with the canvases, there are bodily imprints on the wall, made by a model painted blue.
It leaves behind traumatic imprints on the psyche of an entire generation—ones that may never heal.
Random House and Crown are among the most prestigious and commercially successful imprints within the larger company.
Seal wax is dripped in gestural manner across the page, with overlapping imprints from a signature stamp.
Recently, they took another look at the skull fragments and found imprints left behind by the brain.
Two years later she was promoted to executive vice president and publisher of all Random House imprints.
Our imprints on global progression, though written out and glossed over in history, are not to be disputed.
Interested to know why I needed to open my legs further than the yellow feet imprints, I inquired.
To understand publishing's right-wing imprints, first you have to understand how modern American book publishing is organized.
DC will shut down three major imprints in January 2020, including Vertigo, Zoom, and Ink amidst a reorganization.
Sonar images showed imprints of where the wrecks used to be on the ocean floor—but no ships.
Amazon now oversees tens of millions of self-published works on its platform and nearly two dozen imprints.
It's hard to imagine this Acer headset leaving imprints on your cheeks after a few hours of use.
Reidy is very aware that her company and its imprints need to provide profits to the parent company.
Big publishers have lots of imprints, which allows them to enter more books, which results in more nominations.
At the same time, the rows of imprints evoke ritual, both in the making and in the looking.
Ms. Jenkins's novels are published by Avon Romance and William Morrow, both of which are imprints of HarperCollins.
Yelling for correction is ineffective as a tool and merely imprints the habit of yelling onto the children.
Exercise also probably leaves long-lasting imprints on our genes and cells that affect health, Dr. Kraus says.
Each of the Big Five houses is made up of smaller imprints, each with its own distinct brand identity.
These groups and imprints are just small parts of a much larger company, but the names obscure that fact.
But she had trouble getting the company to accept a new set of imprints — they've been rejected multiple times.
"Most influences on vote intentions during these periods leave permanent imprints that survive to Election Day," the authors write.
There's no question that the illness and death of a parent imprints in unpredictable ways on children and teenagers.
More importantly, editorial independence also shields imprints from the intrusions of Simon & Schuster's parent company CBS and its shareholders.
It's a southern bounces he always manages to bring to releases on imprints such as Ultramajik, Ellium and Kompakt.
This was rejected, and at least eight publishing imprints, including Morrow, began to bid for the North American rights.
The house music that Tee occasionally releases on some of the world's best imprints is the real thing, too.
But in 2008, Random House, which owned Doubleday Broadway, reorganized some of its imprints and eliminated Mr. Rubin's position.
Instead, researchers must look indirectly for evidence of brain shapes, based on the way brains leave imprints on skulls.
From the imprints on the skull, they were able to reconstruct the types of soft tissue covering the face.
In a company memo, the Random House publisher Susan Kamil said Spiegel & Grau's authors would move to other imprints.
Imprints of school shootings are visible in other writings by student survivors, even after they arrive on college campuses.
Inside, he seems to recognize the concepts "agent" and "case files," and imprints on coffee cups like a baby duck.
In fact, a breakdown done by Pitchfork uncovered that between 15 popular music imprints only four females rappers were signed.
Ms Lee notes that it follows the rise of the paperback novel and coincides with a proliferation in romance imprints.
The process is the same as the one that my books go through when they are published by traditional imprints.
But it's Lucas's painful cries for his mother whilst begging for his life that imprints on Claire's memory the deepest.
Like his July countermeasure to support ICE, this new resolution bore all the telltale imprints of an election-year ploy.
"I always differentiate between the 'writer' and the 'author,'" said Molly Stern, publisher of the Crown, Hogarth and Archetype imprints.
Now, Harper Perennial, one of HarperCollins' paperback imprints, has revealed that it will publish two new books by Tamblyn in 2018.
Threshold Editions is just one of the most recent Big Five imprints created specifically to give right-wing authors a platform.
White Hot Moon still bears the imprints of Feasts of Love's more feelings centric themes paired with sharp, sometimes booming riffs.
Politics materialize on the show in the smallest way, tiny imprints that prove Trump and his smothering presence cannot be avoided.
Kenneth is like a brother to me, and I really think his label is one of the best Balearic imprints going.
But as Indigenous writers have noted, Toronto, Canada's most populous city, has precious few imprints of their culture in its streets.
And as those originals, like "Stranger Things" or "Bird Box," make significant cultural imprints, they drive sign-ups and encourage retention.
Snow can help prevent your getting lost too, by allowing you to trace your own imprints back to your starting point.
Despite some spectacular failures, neoconservatives have left the imprints of that impulse on almost all Americans leaders interested in foreign policy.
Wearables that monitor everything from sleep to calories, hydration and stress levels can be used for continuously updating our digital imprints.
In recent years, several big publishing houses have been adding imprints, acquiring smaller publishing companies and getting larger to stay competitive.
And on March 5, Hachette staffers from imprints throughout the company, at all levels, walked out in solidarity with the Farrows.
The duo just released "Radiant Imprints," an excellent album documenting their interchange, studded with some personal reworkings of John Coltrane themes.
The artist placed an object on a surface, sprinkled dust over it, then removed the object to exhibit the residual imprints.
The acting is superb, the storylines are both hilarious and meaningful, and the characters will leave permanent imprints on your heart.
Even though Amazon splashily introduced its own publishing imprints, Ms. Bezos still chose traditional houses for her books: Harper and Knopf.
The conservative imprints have always relied on books by loud trollish writers like Yiannopolous's; it's effectively the bedrock of their industry.
In addition to those scribbles, the developed photo, called Maternal Line, also includes imprints of Varga's grandmother's hand, and intentional saliva smears.
Amazon PublishingFounded in 2009, Amazon Publishing publishes and owns a number of imprints, including Montlake Romance, Thomas & Mercer, 47North, and Amazon Crossing.
Imprints including Optimo Music, Flexxseal, and Templo will also be donating all proceeds from music sales for the rest of the week.
Baby creation can be a collaborative work of art between two loved ones, who each weigh in and leave imprints of themselves.
THUMP: What are the major advantages of putting out music on artist-run imprints like Ryan Hemsworth's Secret Songs and Noise Collector?
Like the way writing something down imprints it in one's brain, driving a stick makes a journey more vivid, tactile, and memorable.
Sure, we'd lived through the filter-disco sound peddled by imprints like Roule, but it was never called disco—that was house.
They took an unconventional approach, too, often assuming personas to try and infuse the tracks with imprints of music they both love.
That's because the brain has a process called "value-tagging," which imprints important things onto your subconscious and filters out unnecessary information.
There were calls for a boycott of all of the company's books, a vast catalog of some 2,000 titles from 50 imprints.
And like a proto-Snapchat of its time, a lot of the imprints proved ephemeral because most recipients weren't archiving Imprint 93 works.
Outside it, even the products of the most normative families bear the imprints of aunts, uncles, teachers—a whole network of other people.
The deal follows a deal announced Tuesday by Perseus to sell its publishing business, which has nine imprints, to the Hachette Book Group.
He did a lot of work for Avon Comics, he said, because unlike some other imprints it allowed artists to sign their work.
A photograph in a series by Ana Mendieta, "Untitled (Glass on Body Imprints — Face)," 21961, in the "Twisted" section at the Met Breuer.
Zollar points out that other, race-neutral Hallmark imprints were offering similar cards at the time, as well as cards for single fathers.
Obama's book will be edited by Molly Stern, the senior vice president and publisher of several imprints, including Crown, Hogarth and Crown Archetype.
Lately, however, there have been signs that the biggest publishing houses feel the need to contract and consolidate by eliminating and combining imprints.
Broadside Books positioned itself as the intellectual antidote to the punditry of the other mainstream imprints, but its record is much more mixed.
Their moments left indelible imprints and stand today as essential threads in their Hall of Fame stories, unlikely to be duplicated, impossible to forget.
As for what that will mean for library patrons, consider that Macmillan owns several important imprints, including the popular sci-fi imprint Tor Books.
The cushion blush imprints a pigmented heart onto your face, which you could blend out or leave as is if you're feeling more expressive.
Since carbon-14 is normally quite scarce in the geologic record, this imprints the rocks and biota of the Anthropocene with a distinct signature.
Christophers maintains that the brand wasn't initially aiming for a demographic that lived behind bars, but sometimes highly specific imprints find highly specific audiences.
That's why researchers look to the imprints of ancient ocean tides to determine how fast the moon has retreated at different periods in time.
Last year, Perseus's publishing program generated nearly $100 million in revenue, through imprints like Basic Books, Avalon Travel, Da Capo, Nation Books and PublicAffairs.
Or maybe he will fail spectacularly, in the sort of way that ruins some team or imprints him with "bust" or "madman" labels forever.
They are friends, lovers, touchstones, specific reminders of periods of thinking, particular research in the making of a play and imprints of love affairs.
It had even gone so far as to start its own publishing imprints, which my literary friends scorned and derided as cheesy and shameless.
The overarching idea is that the events of these acts are unreliable products of, or imprints upon, Anna/Anastasia's memory, rather than realistic accounts.
Eventually, the publishing industry caught on to the commercial potential of the conservative market, and many publishers created separate imprints for right-wing authors.
Yet the movie's emotional potency is undeniable, its slow crescendo of wounded feelings and shimmering photography leaving unexpected imprints on the eyes and heart.
After creating digital images of each key, they developed an algorithm to calculate variations of the imprints on the key down to the millimeter.
Nadal's productions also began to attract global attention, leading to releases on imprints like Australia's Cult Trip, England's Black Opal and New York's Lover's Rock.
Generally, the imprints of a particular publishing house will share certain parts of each other's infrastructure — things like printing and distribution, maybe a sales force.
They've also found a home on Germany's Kompakt, a record label as reliable as the band itself, after stints at legendary imprints 4AD and Underwater.
To take a closer look at Factitious Imprints, check it out at the New Museum between the third and fourth floors until June 19, 2016.
After all these years, he was a nomad, seeking approval for projects — even for book jackets — from heads of imprints who were once his peers.
It is to shut down someone else's ability to make choices; it imprints on the victim's deepest lizard brain a sense of insecurity and powerlessness.
In the heated competition for the next political blockbuster, Macmillan, which owns St. Martin's, Henry Holt and Flatiron Books, among other imprints, has often prevailed.
To "finish" an "Untitled" 1968 work here, you stand before a bright light that temporarily imprints your shadow onto a canvas slathered with phosphorous pigment.
BUSINESS DAY An article on Wednesday about Amazon's continuing expansion into various parts of the publishing industry misstated the number of imprints from Amazon Publishing.
And finally, in Breaking Dawn, when Jacob "imprints" on Bella and Edward's daughter, Renesmee, and (understandably, because her name is awful) gives her a nickname.
Most of his titles were published under two imprints with telltale names: first Amok Press and later Feral House (its motto: "Refuses to Be Domesticated").
Doubled dies occur from mistakes in the manufacturing process, in which the hub imprints an additional image onto a die — or stamp — causing some misalignment.
Rather than shooting images of nature, Falls goes back to photography's roots and makes analog photogram imprints of natural elements, including palm trees and fern leaves.
He has a remarkable gift for loose, raw, figurative painting, often infused with macabre humour and arresting colour, which straightaway imprints itself upon the viewer's imagination.
Imprints want those kinds of books, but it's feeding the crowd who wants…I don't want to call it trauma porn, but it kind of is.
And as conservatism evolves in the Age of Trump, these imprints are going to change with it in order to keep churning out books that sell.
But Baden was quick to correct me — she felt the piece spoke more to the imprints we leave on domestic spaces even after we have gone.
These truly are imprints and they are made through touch, through the force of the body, rather than through sight, which is so primary to photography.
Threshold Editions, after all, is a relative oddity in the generally liberal publishing ecosystem, a conservative imprint in a house whose employees and imprints skew liberal.
The area is also an important habitat for many birds and wildlife, and contains imprints of human passage through the landscape over the past 10,000 years.
Its imprints, which publish around 500 books a year, will give Hachette a stronger toehold in the nonfiction market and add to its overall market share.
DC Entertainment, the home of Batman, Superman, Wonder Woman and a legion of other heroes, is planning two new graphic novel imprints aimed at younger readers.
For the project, Campolese turns her considerable talent for light art to the subject of the human form through the sculptural imprints of 3D-scanned portraits.
Mr. Pietsch, in an interview on Tuesday, defended the decision to publish Mr. Allen's book and said the company's imprints don't interfere editorially with one another.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Last week, DC Comics announced that it was shuttering its different imprints and consolidating all its titles under one brand.
"The trackways are somewhat irregular, consisting of two rows of imprints that are arranged in series or repeated groups," explained notes from the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
They also left their imprints on the distribution of galaxies, which is what BOSS is using to map the positions and distances of galaxies back through time.
Sony owns it, and sticking around for the end credits confirms that many of the musicians on the pop soundtrack are signed to the corporation's various imprints.
"Paleontological resources would mean any fossilized remains, traces, or imprints of organisms preserved in or on the Earth's crust," the Interior Department said in the Federal Register.
But, as Simon & Schuster recently found out when one of its imprints signed right-wing hatemonger Milo Yiannopoulos, public pressure can adversely affect a publisher's other business.
I don't dream up my food ideas all the time, but only more recently have I realized how dream imprints can be an inspiration for a chef.
It has left deep imprints on American society in the form of disrupted families, disenfranchised citizens, declining marriage rates, poor health outcomes, and increased rates of poverty.
We searched behind the high school baseball diamond in Fossil for the imprints of ancient ferns and crawled through buildings abandoned by the cult of the Rajneeshee.
" Each print measured nearly a foot long by a foot wide, and consisted of "five markings, with very clear, three-pronged imprints in a hard clay substrate.
DC has also started to reorganize its comic-book lineup, dropping three imprints, DC Zoom, DC Ink and Vertigo, and moving its content under age-specific labels.
As they remove paper hair masks, face shields, then goggles, one can see how this protective gear has left imprints and faint bruises across the women's faces.
Coogler is from the Bay Area, where the Black Panther party was created, and he imprints some of the party ideologies into the film in subtle ways.
Now, with the signing of Yiannopoulos and similar figures who are likely to follow, conservative imprints are perfectly positioned to profit off our current "post-truth" moment.
Many of the books the Free Press published were far too conservative for any other imprints in the Big Five publishing houses to touch at the time.
The mammy caricatures and slave ship imprints are painful reminders that this nation's history of trading Black lives for economic gain extends long after the abolition of slavery.
A better response would be supporting progressive writers and writers of color and the imprints that promote them, to amplify voices that are too often undermined and ignored.
E-books once terrified publishers, who lamented the certain end of nice-smelling libraries, but now they're embracing them with e-book-only imprints such as Bloomsbury Spark.
The company also launched a subscription service earlier this year called Comixology Unlimited, which allows subscribers to read titles from popular indie imprints like Dark Horse and Image.
The leather headband sits so softly that it doesn't even leave one of those classic "I've been wearing headphones for a couple of hours" imprints on your hair.
Emmerich, known for films like "White House Down", "The Patriot" and "Independence Day", left imprints of his hands and feet in cement at the famed TLC Chinese Theatre.
I make these literal imprints of what's in front of me, and then I bring them back and they're my artifacts of my actual engagement with the world.
Mr. Hammons responded to it with a series of ingenious life-size body-prints – literally, oil-smeared bodies, including his own, leaving imprints on paper — on political themes.
As part of the New Museum's ongoing Stowaway Series, Papamargariti unveils the new episode, Factitious Imprints, to investigate the conflicting boundaries between our past, present, and future realities.
Microstamping is technology that imprints a bullet's casing with a microscopic array of characters that can be used to identify the firearm, similar to a license plate number.
No decision has been made yet as to which of the company's major imprints — which include Random House, Doubleday, Alfred A. Knopf and Crown — will publish the books.
The dry season is getting longer, and scientists are finding imprints of deforestation in the record droughts seen in major cities like São Paulo, some 1,500 miles away.
They initially appear abstract, with gentle push-pull tensions of plane and brushwork complicated by the imprints of steel mesh in three sizes (extra fine, fine and small).
Over the next 15 years, Furukawa (1921–2008) established himself as an artist in Japan, making paintings that in retrospect bare deep imprints of the European avant-garde.
While imprints of fingerprints can often be left behind on surfaces just by touching them, vein patterns cannot, and are considered to be much more secure as a result.
Looking closely at "Zacaba," the viewer can identify not only the pocked imprints of rough stones on the paper, but also the reddish tinge of soil intermingled with graphite.
This picture of a "second line" parade is from a series that focuses on race and class, as I was looking at the imprints of history on the present.
That perception remains widespread, in part because romance imprints have traditionally published so few writers of color that there have been limited opportunities for those authors to break out.
Content partners at launch include "dozens" of major publishers — including Chronicle Books, Macmillan, Oxford University Press, Rodale, Simon & Schuster, Workman Publishing and Penguin Random House's Rodale and Struik imprints.
Only the share usually involves the next user adding new personal imprints to the original footage, usually either new music to existing footage or new footage to existing music.
JULIE CRESWELL In the liberal-leaning publishing world, right-wing authors are often relegated to conservative imprints that specialize in catering to the interests and opinions of Red America.
Additionally, sub-label imprints Lupus Lounge and Auerbach Tontrager were formed in order to help distributors and customers better categorize the many sonic territories in which Koller was finding interest.
Given that more corporate environment, it wasn't all that shocking that Sire Records, officially part of the Warner Music family of imprints since around 20113, would want to sign Sebadoh.
In Samus Returns, the hero acquires a very unexpected child of her own: a baby Metroid that hatches from an egg and immediately imprints on her as a mother figure.
To celebrate these unique tokens, Railroad Station Stamp Designs, recently published by Japan's Seigensha art press, brings together imprints of 380 stamps from across the country over the past century.
"The Hunger Games helped establish the kick-ass female heroine in a terrible, dystopic world," Jean Feiwel, senior vice president and publisher at a number of Macmillan's children's imprints, said.
Although human DNA has been found to contain vestiges of our dalliances with Neanderthals from about 50,000 years ago, none of those genomic imprints are on the human Y chromosome.
For Ms. Elgey, however, history was not simply a subject of study; it was a presence in her life, leaving imprints of Roman Catholicism and conservatism, anti-Semitism and war.
Among them are The New York Times and the Crown Publishing imprints Clarkson Potter and Ten Speed Press, which provide recipes that the Chef'd culinary team packages into meal kits.
But in this case, the students were bathed in cold, filthy air so dense that those at the back of the soccer field seemed like ghostly imprints in the air.
They're any traces that have been made by an organism, and that includes imprints of soft tissue, such as skin and blood vessels, as well as footprints, burrows, and nests.
" He went on to say "When you register your fingers and you're getting all these imprints—you'll see that when you register—but it's a high resolution image that we're taking.
You know, just all of those beautiful memories that he had of Marcel, his brother, and the imprints that he made on Charles&apos life, A.B., and you write about that.
As you've probably gathered by now, publishing houses often share names with some of their groups and some of their imprints, which means that it gets complicated to distinguish between them.
The imprint model's built-in stability means that a boycott will probably not hurt the house as a whole, but it may well hurt the imprints designed to reach progressive audiences.
The imprints were run by two old friends; Mark Ranger (aka Mark X) and James Stephens, (better known as one third of Noise Factory, along with Kevin Mulqueen and Terry Tee).
Comixology Unlimited, the digital comics company's Netflix-style subscription service, launched last year, giving readers access to work from a variety of indie imprints like Dark Horse, Image, and Boom Studios.
Using her body as an instrument, Carly Terreson creates abstractions on muslin in her work Composition, saying the imprints on cloth are the poetic result of cleaning her body of ink.
He's also continued his Ambivalent guise, partnering up with techno stars Sven Vath, Josh Wink and Sasha to release music on their Cocoon, Ovum and Last Night On Earth Imprints respectively.
The genetic imprints of one person led to the far wider web of suspects around dawn on Monday, many of them known figures of the French underworld, a police source said.
You can't get everything, and there were a lot of duff things that I didn't need, but there were certain cassette labels and imprints that you needed everything that they released.
At best, the letter uses Threshold Editions as a shield to protect the publishing conglomerate's other imprints; at worst, as GQ's Kevin Nguyen and others pointed out on Twitter, it's disingenuous.
To make the material more malleable, 300 degree (Fahrenheit) steam is applied to the biscuit, while the stamper makes an impression of the master recording on it and imprints the audio.
One of those labels was International Feel, one of those rare imprints that's been selective enough with signings over the years to attain the much sought after "buy on sight" status.
While many of Penguin's imprints have been preserved, multiple former Penguin employees and agents told me that the company's unique corporate culture—a confederacy of personality-driven fiefdoms—no longer exists.
There's a classical vibe to some of his trove, like the French copy of a Roman bust of Marcus Aurelius and the framed grouping of plaster imprints of ancient Roman seals.
Badging is what the car industry calls marking the front and back of a vehicle with a brand logo, name, model number, engine specification, and other stickers, pendants, imprints, etchings, and more.
Elliott's imprints join a long list of Hollywood icons in front of the TLC Chinese Theatre including former Mask costar Cher, Meryl Streep, Sandra Bullock, Jackie Chan, Steven Spielberg and George Lucas.
Investigators rely on debris, bags and clothes as well as chemical analysis to detect the imprints of an explosion, according to people involved in two previous probes where deliberate blasts were involved.
Lawrence Lee has moved to Berlin as well now, so were doing a lot of events in Europe and UK. We have also each launched our own vinyl only imprints under SAN.
And unfortunately, the imprints that dampen—and sometimes destroy—our lives don't just begin long before our formal education, but by ignoring their importance, our society and its institutions help create them.
" Her wish for her TikTok community is to "always be thoughtful and kind," because all that counts in life are "the imprints of love which we leave behind us once we're gone.
PIAS, a European company that owns the label Harmonia Mundi and works with orchestras that have their own imprints, like the Berlin Philharmonic, gets most of its listeners these days through streaming.
I had rented a cabin in the hills, from which we could see across the town to the Anyksciai Pinewoods, an ancient forest webbed with riverbeds bearing imprints of prehistoric armored fish.
Investigators rely on debris, bags, and clothes as well as chemical analysis to detect the imprints of an explosion, according to people involved in two previous probes where deliberate blasts were involved.
Depending on your opinion of Clinton, you might prefer fictional Hillary—especially the naughtier imprints—because they offer an interiority and complexity that the candidate, by virtue of her career, cannot provide.
In 1989, Terada founded Tokyo-based label Far East Recording, putting his distinctively cheerful, proto-chiptunes stamp on the deep house sound nurtured by New York imprints like Strictly Rhythm and Nu Grooves.
He has a book deal with Simon & Schuster, the publishing house that includes such imprints as Enliven (New Age books) and Jeter Publishing, the official publishing imprint of New York Yankee Derek Jeter.
But I don't love the one on my décolletage I got in Austin, Texas when I was really drunk any less – they all become these imprints of these different times of your life.
Launched in 2009, Amazon Publishing is currently made up of 15 imprints — the most recent addition being Amazon Originals, which exclusively publishes 5,000-to-20,000-word works of short fiction and non-fiction.
Audio, the spoken word, is humanity's primary means of sentient communication: the sounds a fetus hears in utero; a lover's whisper; a marriage proposal… all leave deep imprints on our hearts and minds.
Transit officials approached Penguin Random House, the publishing colossus with more than 228 imprints, because it had run a similar e-book promotion in the London Underground last year, celebrating Penguin's 2218th anniversary.
A lot of people in the publishing industry were worried when they heard Amazon planned to open bookstores, in part because they assumed Amazon would heavily promote books published through its own imprints.
Founded over in Amsterdam a few years back by record-obsessives Abel Nagengast, Jamie Tiller, and Tako Reyenga, Music From Memory has become one of Europe, if not the world's, most cherished imprints.
She communicated with textile artists who live in communities whose borders have been marked "by imprints of power and scars of destruction," creating connections across cultures that dismantle physical, political, and historical borders.
The moto pair left imprints of all the seams on my legs, which probably could have been lessened with a larger size, but they generally just weren't the most comfy of the two.
Celadon's fairly broad territory of adult fiction and nonfiction, which overlaps with other imprints at the company, and its small list might make it difficult to distinguish itself and produce a breakout hit.
"Digital exhaust" left by personal electronic devices, social media imprints, toll payment trackers, DNA analysis, license plate readers and the proliferation of security cameras would make this infinitely easier in the 21st century.
Penguin Random House, a global publishing house with more than 250 imprints, has worldwide rights to the books, which means the company can make a good deal of money overseas and in translation.
A segment of the Sphinx is decorated with the lacy designs of the women's marriage quilts, which they brought to the garden's workshop and pressed against unbaked clay tiles to leave their imprints.
Einstein theorized that objects actually leave imprints on the space-time around them — and when objects move, they create ripples in space-time, similar to how a moving object creates ripples in a pond.
These imprints were established because conservative readers have demonstrated that they can put a book on the best-seller list, and the Big Five houses are in the business of trying to publish bestsellers.
"Flights" appeared in Poland in 2007, winning the Nike prize there, and was quickly translated into French and German, among other languages (English-language imprints were strangely slow to respond to Ms Tokarczuk's achievement).
Various Trump-related imprints existed between 22009 and 20183, including Trump Style, Trump World, and the subsequent Trump Magazine, which reportedly shut down due to decreasing advertising revenue in the wake of the recession.
In the past year, three teams of researchers have independently put the theory to the experimental test by looking for its key feature: how a quantum system imprints replicas of itself on its environment.
DC and Marvel are refreshing legacy heroes to suit middle grade readers and young adults, creating new superheroines, assembling teams comprised entirely of women, and giving classic heroes their own stories through new imprints.
The changes at Crown reflect a broader cyclical shift in the publishing industry as bigger companies like Penguin Random House and Hachette try to streamline their overlapping imprints after major growth spurts and acquisitions.
According to a yearly publishing survey by the romance store The Ripped Bodice, works by authors of color made up less than 10% of the titles published by most major romance imprints in 2018.
Some of the biggest publishing houses have been adding imprints and acquiring smaller publishing companies to stay competitive, hoping that getting bigger would give them an advantage when negotiating terms with retailers and distributors.
For the same reason, it's all too easy to overlook Ana Mendieta's serial expression of the grotesque in relation to the perception of a woman of colour in her "Untitled (Glass on Body Imprints)" (1972).
In support of this theory, when he examined the statue in detail Dr Ingo found the imprints of woody fibres, possibly from decking it had been resting on, in the patina of the satyr's hair.
Publishers Weekly touted Penguin Random House's size ($3.4 billion in sales, 275 imprints, 700 million books sold a year, 14,000 new releases, 10,000 employees), prestige (60 Nobel laureates), and the seamlessness of the merger itself.
The editorial independence of various imprints was of great concern for agents, who worried that a single publisher controlling more than half of the market in some genres, including literary fiction, would drive advances down.
To make alarmingly lifelike fern and bamboo leaves or replicate a sprig of lavender, the Ukrainian-based artist paints one side of the foraged flower with ink and then imprints the plant on the body.
"We wanted to go back to what we used to have in comic books: story arcs for younger readers," said Bobbie Chase, a vice president at DC and the executive editor for the new imprints.
So why was the overall percentage of books that were written by nonwhite women and released by the major romance publishing imprints, like Avon Romance, at HarperCollins, and Berkley, at Penguin Random House, so low?
Told in alternating perspectives, this novel is also very much about the imprints that characters leave on each other, a deeply meaningful exploration of the ways in which the lives of human beings are intertwined.
The title is a reminder that the skins — and the identities they represent — are as interchangeable as that roomful of Bernards, and it's the imprints made on these alien-looking forms that make the difference.
As I took my turn helping to push the 1,900-pound mass, I struggled not only against its weight, but to somehow gain purchase, to fit my own hand into the jagged imprints of that violence.
That's the basic business model of the Big Five: Publish as much as possible, as widely as possible, but keep different kinds of thinking and writing siloed off in different imprints to avoid diluting anyone's brand.
Just like the old-guard editors and publishing companies that they once defined themselves against, these new imprints promise to anoint fledgling authors with legitimacy and give them an edge in a flooded and cutthroat marketplace.
"When we write about today's art scene in art historical books in the future, we will see clear imprints of the effects of #Metoo, the struggle for equality and feminism," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
Already, other imprints are cloaking their contemporary romances in visually appealing covers: Good Luck Charm by Helena Hunting, which was published by Forever in August, is a trade paperback with cartoon redhead gazing over her shoulder.
In any case, if they are disciplined—never a safe bet—liberal book buyers could use Milo's book as a wedge to pressure Simon & Schuster into dropping the book, by effectively holding its other imprints hostage.
That might be one of the unacknowledged cultural imprints of this particular laptop line: the fact that much of the software and code that defines our web experience today was first synthesized on Apple's lightweight classic.
This essay is adapted from the "The Chernobyl Herbarium: Fragments of an Exploded Consciousness," featuring the art of Anaïs Tondeur, comprised of photograms, or direct imprints on photosensitive paper, of plants grown in Chernobyl's radioactive soil.
She stays alert for obvious body parts that would survive fire, "skulls often," but also looks for imprints of bodies, a discolored area in the shape of a human, that may be the most obvious remnant.
But young Asian-Americans and Latinos are already tilting left, and future generations will probably show the same imprints from their formative years, said Janelle Wong, a professor of American studies at the University of Maryland.
Since the summer, X Artists' Books, a small press that Reeves launched in Los Angeles with the visual artist Alexandra Grant, has been producing aggressively esoteric titles of the kind that wouldn't fly at larger imprints.
Kensington and Testa couldn't agree on a deal, so the book was put up at auction and submitted to a number of publishers, including imprints at Penguin Random House, though not to Pamela Dorman, Moyes' imprint.
In 2015, Publishers Weekly rounded up five recently launched celebrity imprints — from Chelsea Handler, Johnny Depp, Derek Jeter, Rachael Ray, and Anthony Bourdain — and found that most of them were either dormant or had been quietly shuttered.
The Big Five houses often expand by buying up existing independent imprints or by merging — as Penguin and Random House, formerly independent entities, did in 2013 — and promising each imprint editorial freedom helps smooth over those transactions.
But as time went on, they've slowed down and shifted their focus to other projects—including the pair of labels that Britt has a hand in, the beloved experimental electronic imprints Not Not Fun and 100% Silk.
Some traditional publishers have created imprints dedicated to digital stars; other players, including studios like The Weinstein Co. and multi-channel network AwesomenessTV, have also joined the fray by launching their own publishing divisions with YouTube creators.
In comments to Hyperallergic, Moudhy Al-Rashid, a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Oxford, remarked on the prevalence of such imprints on cuneiform tablets: Clay tablet are not easy to shape or inscribe without smudging.
"  He went on, "I made the mistake of including Imprints which not only dulled my overall point of trying to uplift artist...But also singled out artist-owned ventures that have only worked to progress the culture.
"Lewiston" and a companion play by Mr. Hunter entitled "Clarkston," which had its premiere this year in Dallas, are haunted by the physical and psychological imprints of the American West and the 1804 Lewis and Clark expedition.
Despite some changes, Penguin Random House's imprints still compete against one another for books in a system that angers some executives, but ultimately serves to further the company's ultimate goal of increasing its likelihood of acquiring bestsellers.
That act was to touch a loaded brush to a vertical sheet of paper or canvas, making a row of imprints resembling a teardrop or raindrop, one after another, row after row, until the surface was filled.
After examining the imprints, or endocasts, from five Homo naledi skull fragments, the team found that the species had a frontal lobe that was very similar to that of modern humans and unlike that of an ape's.
It was one of the only sequences in the movie that made it seem like Spielberg and Co. wanted to say something about about the ways culture imprints on our psyches instead of just making off-hand references.
Leveraged buyout experts Apollo Global Management made the latest move into the red-hot global watch market, taking its Watches of Switzerland brand — an official Rolex retailer that also sells luxury imprints Patek Philippe, Cartier and Longines — public.
With R&S' 2017 shaping up to be truly memorable, we decided to have a quick chat with label manager Andy Whittaker about the past, present, and future of one of the iconic imprints of the electronic age.
In 2014, News Corporation bought the romance publisher Harlequin for $415 million, and two years ago, Hachette Book Group struck a deal to acquire Perseus, an independent publishing house, acquiring imprints like Basic Books, Nation Books and PublicAffairs.
" She adds, in a sentence that imprints itself on one's mind like a nighttime flare: "I consider the role that good manners might play in the sphere of rat-eating, and it seems to me an important one.
The business models for author-led imprints vary, but most of them buy publication rights to the books and take a cut of royalties in exchange for editing, formatting, packaging and marketing the books, much like a traditional publisher.
Also, clad in face masks, goggles, gloves, and protective gowns — which cause imprints and even scars — they're not allowed to "eat, drink or use toilets" while on a shift in infectious disease wards, according to the National Health Commission.
" Like many other dance imprints, R-N-T has suffered the consequences of what JKriv describes to me unequivocally as "major labels repressing useless crap that clogs up the plants that were used mainly by small labels like ourselves.
It is only through this lens that we can know what is at stake during the systematic erasure of Yemeni communities and heritage, which is not only being wounded but [is] permanently scarred by imprints of power and destruction.
Alexander published "The Undefeated" under his new diversity-focused imprint Versify, one of a number of new mission-driven imprints, including Kokila, Rick Riordan Presents and Christopher Myer's Make Me a World, that are making waves in the industry.
But the experts in Livermore, about 21950 miles southeast of San Francisco, have been working for years to retrieve and preserve the films, which over time had begun to turn brittle or curl, and then to create digital imprints.
In the resulting video, we see the artist (in biker boots and her underwear) empty a can of green paint onto the floor, dip her derrière in the puddle, and leave imprints of it on a sheet of paper.
And as conservative imprints continue to publish outraged hot takes about how Islam is inherently violent and American racism is a myth, they're giving a platform to figures like Milo Yiannopoulos to tell the truth as they feel it.
Though the company —  which has a staff of around 35, Kid told Music Business Worldwide  — has traditionally maintained all copyrights while leveraging UMG's imprints for global marketing, promotion and distribution, it appears KidInAKorner is taking on a new level of independence.
For Grant, compiling  and sharing select, birds-eye-view patches of the Earth — ones that speak of humans' imprints on our collective home — is an attempt to have us see the planet differently and, like spacemen, be moved by these visions.
Finally, there are two experiments designed to target the imprints left by primordial gravitational waves in the cosmic microwave background radiation (the afterglow of the Big Bang): BICEP2 (Background Imaging of Cosmic Extragalactic Polarization 2) and the Planck satellite mission.
BOSS is a program within the Sloan Digital Sky Survey III (SDSS-III) that measures the sound waves of the early universe, which left faint imprints on the cosmic background radiation—the "afterglow," as it were, of the Big Bang.
LOS ANGELES, Sept 9 (Reuters) - Film director Tim Burton left his hand and foot imprints in cement outside Hollywood's famed TCL Chinese Theatre on Thursday, bringing with him to the ceremony some of the dark humour often seen in his movies.
I have recently held the tiny hands and feet of one of my own family member's children gently but firmly to etch their imprints into white concrete molds that memorialize the innocence of life both born and lost too soon.
From their own ancient Southern Caucasus heritage to layer upon layer of conquerors' imprints — the Romans, the Persians, the Ottomans, the Russians, the internet — the two women are voracious in their often avant-garde and frequently ironic interpretation of history.
Instead of the small artist-owned imprints she allied with for "Zentropy" in 2014 and "Next Thing" two years later, this one is arriving courtesy of Sub Pop, the Seattle-based indie-rock institution that propelled Nirvana and the Postal Service.
Many of the country's biggest publishing houses have added imprints and acquired smaller publishing companies in an effort to stay competitive by getting larger, which gives them more leverage in setting terms with big retailers like Barnes & Noble and Amazon.
Penguin Random House includes under its roof such imprints as Knopf, which publishes prestigious literary authors like Toni Morrison and Kazuo Ishiguro; Firebird, which publishes sci-fi and fantasy for young adults; and Clarkson Potter, which publishes cookbooks and self-help books.
Today, the brand has expanded to become a global, mult-hyphenate force, with Virgin's imprints flying more than 32 million passengers a year, amassing an estimated annual revenue of around $9 billion and soon taking aim toward the heavens with space tourism.
One coin that the researchers studied came from a grave dug in what is now Tunisia but was then Carthaginian territory, in the 3rd century BC. Like the imprints on the satyr's hair, the coin's patina has preserved the shapes of some fibres.
There are imprints of Demme's style on Stop Making Sense found throughout Justin Timberlake + The Tennessee Kids: from the shadow of the suit at the beginning of the show to close-ups of the performers to an intimacy onstage in Stop Making Sense.
DJ, producer, and bandleader Matthew Dear has been heading towards the top of the techno game since he was straight out of the University of Michigan, helping to kick off the Ghostly International label, one of electronic music's most iconic and enduring imprints.
Broadly, it's part of the alt, electro-R&B shift in music; the imprints of which we can see often today in the likes of Syd, Frank Ocean, and Charlotte Day Wilson, to name a few who dabble in genre-blending and innovation.
"Making use of time-based mediums to explore the relationship between digital images and our material reality, Eva has made a site-specific installation in which her video work expands into the staircase space of the New Museum," Christoffersen explains of Factitious Imprints.
Two years ago, Hachette Book Group struck a deal to acquire Perseus, an independent publishing house, acquiring imprints like Basic Books, Avalon Travel, Da Capo, Nation Books and PublicAffairs, and in 2014, News Corporation bought the romance publisher Harlequin for $415 million.
When Penguin Random House announced the merger of Crown and Random House in October, many authors and agents wondered what would become of each division's many imprints, which include Hogarth, Tim Duggan Books, Broadway Books, Ballantine Bantam Dell, Delacorte Press and Spiegel & Grau.
In its last crowded last sections, the show is at its most accessible and appealing and nearly everything hits its mark, for example, Ms. Schneemann's harrowing antiwar video "Viet Flakes," and Ana Mendieta's often-monstrous photographic imprints of her face against glass.
Once you can handle and interact with a sample continuously, it allows you to do all kinds of new science, like looking for extraordinarily small things like fossils of ancient microbes, imprints of mold spores, and trails left by stone-eating bacteria.
Her work, nearly all published by G. P. Putnam's Sons or its imprints, was illustrated over the years by some of the foremost children's-book artists of the 20th century, among them Trina Schart Hyman, Margot Tomes and Tomie de Paola. Mrs.
Formed in 2013 by the merger of Bertelsmann's Random House and Pearson's Penguin, the combined business has boasted that it is one of the world's most truly global book publishers, with some 250 imprints responsible for more than 15,000 books each year.
But I was totally stunned by it and thought it was such an interesting take on the way that we view fairy tales, and how it imprints us with certain thoughts and feelings right from a young age that we carry through subconsciously.
The music that he makes as Euglossine—which has popped up on tastemaking experimental imprints like Orange Milk, Phinery Tapes, and Beer on the Rug—is weightless and uplifting, billowing upwards on the backs of glittery guitar lines and satiny synth sequences.
The piece, which is wide at the base and tapers toward the top, is roughly reminiscent of an obelisk, that most ancient of monuments, but its entire surface records the imprints of fists, knees, elbows, and feet: evidence of a furious and thorough beating.
Buy it here >>All is not quiet on the Midwestern front in Ben Lerner's introspective auto-fiction, "The Topeka School", a deft exploration of adolescence, masculinity and violence, and of the enduring imprints parents make on their children's lives, that follow them into adulthood.
For the past two years, Ms. Koch and her sister Bea have conducted a study of leading romance publishers, and found that out of the 3,752 romance novels released by 20 major imprints in 2017, only around 6 percent were written by nonwhite authors.
Figures such as Coulter, Fox News primetime hosts, Laura Ingraham, Rush Limbaugh, and other stars of AM radio and conservative publishing imprints are in the big-time moneymaking business in a way that would have been inconceivable to an ideologue of a generation ago.
There's a fitting, goofy grace to Early Man being rendered in old-school plasticine stop-motion animation: a tale about man's earliest ancestors, told in a form so ancient you can occasionally see, like little fossils, the imprints of the animators' thumbs on the characters.
The imprints that survived were all built specifically to appeal to conservative readers, but not out of any high-minded ideas about celebrating the great American belief in free speech for all, or out of deep commitment on the part of the publishing CEOs to conservative values.
Without a single conscious thought, imprints of the many occasions this statement had rung true in my own life activated somewhere in my chest and led to this instant visceral response, when all I'd wanted was to tire myself out with a stream of social media content.
"The biggest surprise came when we lifted the larger stone anvil and cleaned it; we could see carbon imprints of the smith's knees and hands," explained Dr. Stephen Dockrill, co-director of the excavation and senior lecturer in archaeology at the University of Bradford, in a statement .
But, a quick glance at Facebook's Ad Library Archive — which it launched in response to concerns about the lack of transparency around political ads on its platform, saying it will imprints of ads sent by political parties for up to seven years — the polar opposite has happened.
Inclusion in that roster alone was a sign of an impending rise for any young player, the so-called "house that 'Trane built," was one of the preeminent imprints—along with Blue Note, Columbia, and Riverside—responsible for the mainstreaming of avant-garde jazz in the 1960s.
Lucy: Going back to the sister theme… my sister was once playing in my bedroom and she was really annoying me and wouldn't go away so I bit my own arm and left imprints on my arm and then told my parents it was my sister.
Founded as a publisher of crossword puzzle books in 1924 by Richard L. Simon and M. Lincoln Schuster, Simon & Schuster expanded into a major house with 50 imprints, including Charles Scribner's Sons, the publisher of 20th-century heavyweights like Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald and Thomas Wolfe.
The sisters, who grew up in Chicago and whose father is Steve Koch — until recently the deputy to Mayor Rahm Emanuel — drew up a list of the 227 largest publishing imprints of romance novels and requested from each a list of every romance title published in 22016.
However, we're focusing on the nation's contribution to fashion — in particular, a growing e-commerce site that has introduced a number of indie imprints to the US market since its stateside launch in 2016, and continues to serve up original, outfit-making designs from still-unknown labels.
It's heartening to see more performance and time-based art, like Ana Mendieta's "Untitled (Glass on Body Imprints—face)" (1972), photographs in which the artist, by pressing her face up against a glass window, turns her body not simply into a canvas, but into material, like paint or clay.
"We see a dramatic connection between the sound wave imprints seen in the cosmic microwave background 400,000 years after the Big Bang to the clustering of galaxies 7 to 12 billion years later," BOSS co-leader Rita Tojeiro, of the University of St. Andrews, said in a statement.
Cameraperson leads its audience to contemplate several themes: the startling cruelty of which humans are capable and the ways it imprints itself on the world; the beliefs we hold and abandon that never quite leave us; the startling and inexplicable activity of the natural world; the cost of resistance.
Throughout his works, Bean used pieces of his spacesuit, the imprints of moon boots, marks from tools like a hammer and core tube bit he used on the lunar surface, and even small pieces of foil insulation and dust from the Apollo 12 landing site, known as the Ocean of Storms.
The new research suggests that the dinosaur might have died with its head positioned upside-down in a deoxygenated and highly acidic bog or swamp, causing its skull to be essentially "pickled," resulting in the exceptional condition of the endocast (the cranial vault upon which the animal's neural imprints are etched).
It is the latest in a wave of consolidations that has swept the industry in recent years, including the 2013 merger of Penguin and Random House, which created a publishing behemoth with about 250 imprints, and the News Corporation's acquisition of the romance publisher Harlequin for $20123 million in 2014.
Writing in 2015, Stevie Marsden broke down how the Booker was stacked in favor of conglomerates even before Americans butted in: Of the 75 books longlisted between 2010 and 2015, 23 came from imprints from Penguin and Random House (the two publishers merged in 2013 to become Penguin Random House).
Where his earlier books — including "The Primal Revolution" (Simon & Schuster, 1972), "Prisoners of Pain" (Anchor/Doubleday, 1980) and "Imprints: The Lifelong Effects of the Birth Experience" (Coward-McCann, 1983) — were issued by major publishers, his later ones were brought out primarily by small presses, vanity presses and print-on-demand houses.
Dr. Giacconi was one of the great captains of Big Science, leaving lasting imprints on major astronomical institutions like the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, which runs the Hubble Space Telescope, and the European Southern Observatory in Germany, where he oversaw the building of the largest telescope on Earth.
These fairs constitute the full range of art and artists' book publishing from independent artist book presses to commercial art book distributors; from institutional presses to artist/publisher zine projects; from artist/activist publishing collectives to blue chip gallery imprints; from deluxe photo-book presses to rare artist book and ephemera dealers, etc.
Along with the Planck satellite mission, the BICEP collaboration was designed to hunt for a specific type of gravitational wave—not those produced by merging binary black holes, as LIGO just detected, but the imprints left by primordial gravitational waves in the cosmic microwave background radiation (the afterglow of the Big Bang).
While many of the imprints at these corporations are devoted to publishing important works, it would be absurd to argue that this is the defining feature of Penguin Random House (part of Bertelsmann), Hachette (part of Hachette Livre), HarperCollins (part of Rupert Murdoch's NewsCorp), Macmillan (part of Holtzbrinck Publishing), or Simon & Schuster (CBS).
The practice of telling stories—imagined tales of cause and effect that fixate on the past and the future while escaping the present, sending us back and forth without being here now—is something that both Wright and Batchelor see as one of the worst delusions the mind imprints on the world.
Former Giuliani aides discern other imprints on the Trump campaign: Mr. Trump's policy addresses about school reform and his recent outreach to black voters in Detroit, they said, contained echoes of Mr. Giuliani's mayoral re-election campaign in 1997, when he argued with black New Yorkers that Democrats had let them down.
While few people will encounter an angry bear in their lives, those in the business of first aid and extreme survival said his social media imprints invited general reflection: When someone finds themselves isolated, injured and bleeding, what should he or she do to survive the lonely trek in search of medical help?
At an archaeological site called Gough's Cave, in southwestern England, human bones that are approximately 15,000 years old bear unmistakable signs of cannibalism, like butchering marks and human tooth imprints that suggest even the ends of toe and rib bones were gnawed to get at every last bit of grease and marrow.
In addition to the Detroit natives, plenty of out-of-town imprints that have left significant marks on Movement's afterparty landscape return, including San Fran promoters DAX, who, working with local promoters My Baby, host their fourth OK, COOL party with Seth Troxler, The Black Madonna, Craig Richards, and Mood II Swing.
URBANDALE, Iowa — Far from the rallies and debate stages, the final days before the caucuses have come down to this: a small army of volunteers trudging through snow with clipboards and messenger bags to knock on doors that have been knocked so many times there may as well be fist imprints in the wood.
Young Money and Cash Money—the Birdman and Lil Wayne imprints to which OVO Sound counts itself as a descendant—became Southern rap supernovas by sharing and spreading star power; Mannie Fresh used his production talents to bolster the career of B.G and Juvenile, who in turn lifted up Lil Wayne, who brought up Drake, Nicki Minaj, and Tyga.
Watching The Matrix, for the first time ever, I felt like I was watching a piece of art from creators who thought the same thoughts about anime, action films, martial arts, philosophy, and technology as I did — and who somehow managed to mash it all together in ways that left deep imprints on 12-year-old me.
"Your policy of editorial independence among your imprints does not relieve you of your moral and professional obligations as the publisher of 'Catch and Kill,' and as the leader of a company being asked to assist in efforts by abusive men to whitewash their crimes," Farrow said in an email to Hachette CEO Michael Pietsch, according to the publication.
In recent years, the company has been expanding its publishing programs, particularly in science fiction and fantasy and young adult, and has started a handful of new imprints, among them MCD/FSG, an experimental imprint at FSG; Wednesday Books, a crossover Y.A. imprint at St. Martin's, and All Points Books, Adam Bellow's new political imprint at St. Martin's.
"Your policy of editorial independence among your imprints does not relieve you of your moral and professional obligations as the publisher of 'Catch and Kill,' and as the leader of a company being asked to assist in efforts by abusive men to whitewash their crimes," Farrow said in an email to Hachette CEO Michael Pietsch, according to the Daily Beast.
The tweet immediately struck a chord, as tens of thousands of users posted the requisite cry-laughing emoji and unfortunate makeup imprints of their own, along with a few classic memes, for good measure: For others, the now infamous pic proved an analogy for life: And for some, the image poses a riddle: How are the teeth marks hued like the face foundation left behind?
So we have, essentially, an ancient shoe that was taken from Japanese culture, popularized in other nations around the world, stripped of its heritage, and today both bastardized with Minions imprints as well as by losers who mindlessly call the entire genre of shoe disgusting because, at some point in their pitiful lives, they heard someone else call them disgusting, and they just repeated it.
Some observers have also suggested that it weights print sales from traditional publishers more heavily than it does digital sales from digital publishers or self-publishers, because books that do very well on Amazon's in-house imprints seem to rarely show up on the Times list: Amazon Charts No. 21 best-sellers like Beneath a Scarlet Sky may never make their way onto the New York Times list.
It could be that Link has an open world purely because Nintendo now has the technological power to give him one, but there are too many imprints from games like Skyrim even in the company's short E3 demo to suggest Nintendo didn't take a long, hard look at the hyper-successful open-world RPGs from the west and — as hundreds of studios copied from Nintendo — decided to take a few ideas of their own.

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