User:Alainr345/Sandbox/Selected article

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Please click here to nominate a new article.

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Selected article list[edit]


User:Alainr345/Sandbox/Selected article/1[edit]

Eames Lounge Chair
Eames Lounge Chair

Charles Ormond Eames, Jr (June 17, 1907 – August 21, 1978) was born in 1907 in Saint Louis, Missouri. Charles was born the nephew of St. Louis architect William S. Eames. By the time he was 14 years old, while attending high school, Charles worked at the Laclede Steel Company as a part-time laborer, where he learned about engineering, drawing, and architecture (and also first entertained the idea of one day becoming an architect).

Charles briefly studied architecture at Washington University in St. Louis on an architectural scholarship. After two years of study, he left the university. Many sources claim, with little evidence, that he was dismissed for his advocacy of Frank Lloyd Wright and his interest in modern architects. Several websites claim that "In the report describing why he was dismissed from the university, a professor wrote the comment 'His views were too modern.'" This alleged comment has yet to be attributed to any specific member of the architectural faculty. Other sources, less frequently cited, note that while a student, Charles Eames also was employed as an architect at the firm of Trueblood and Graf.

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User:Alainr345/Sandbox/Selected article/2[edit]

Glass
Glass

The materials definition of a glass is a uniform amorphous solid material, usually produced when a suitably viscous molten material cools very rapidly to below its glass transition temperature, thereby not giving enough time for a regular crystal lattice to form.

A simple example is when table sugar is melted and cooled rapidly by dumping the liquid sugar onto a cold surface.

The resulting solid is amorphous, not crystalline like the sugar was originally, which can be seen in its conchoidal fracture.



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