How To Use plaster of Paris In A Sentence
- Her artisans generally use plaster of Paris, though she does use stone dust, fibreglass and bronze on request.
- Stoneware began to overtake delftware as a practical and stylish dinnerware with the introduction, between about 1740 and 1745 from France, of plaster of Paris for making molds.
- Unlike tin-glazed earthenware, white salt-glazed stoneware was ideally suited to slip casting and press molding into intricate shapes, and plaster of Paris greatly facilitated these processes.
- Plaster of Paris is widely used as a mold or model material in the metal and ceramic industries.
- Then, another set of plaster of Paris molds were created.
- Within their doors also, such as are of ability do oft make their floors and parget of fine alabaster burned, which they call plaster of Paris, whereof in some places we have great plenty, and that very profitable against the rage of fire. Chronicle and Romance (The Harvard Classics Series)
- Plaster of Paris equals arris; arris equals Aristotle; Aristotle rhymes with bottle; bottle is short for bottle and glass; glass rhymes with arse. VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XI No 1
- The splint can be made with various materials ranging from thin metal to plaster of Paris.
- Mix up some plaster of Paris with the water in the paper cup, stirring until smooth with the Popsicle stick.
- Mix dry plaster of Paris with water until you have a thick, pudding-like consistency.