All that glitters game
Register Don't have an account? All That Glitters. View source. History Talk 0. Categories Kane's Wrath Nod Missions. Universal Conquest Wiki. Act 1: We are then taken to an open rooftop gathering where multiple Filipinos are dancing to the music of a Kulintang playing. Then the trailer takes us to a studio where the Kulintang Dialect is rehearsing. The trailer then takes us back to that same rooftop, where we see more people dancing.
Finally the final shot of the teaser shows Sayson playing the Kulintang herself. The teaser introduces us to the Kulintang Dialect band and its members. Its message could mean that this ancient form of music could be telling us a story of legacy. That is our duty to keep the legacy of this wonderful form of music alive and well for future generations. Especially in Filipino culture.
All That Glitters Bronze is a love letter to the Philippine tradition of Kulintang, which was once nearly wiped out by colonization. Around the Bay Area in California, a local band called Kulintang Dialect is keeping the tradition alive.
This short documentary offers a brief glimpse of the cosmos through clips of performances interspersed with interviews from the band. Just adding five milligrams will change the color of an entire kilogram of cellulose, making the crystals refract shorter wavelengths, like greens and blues. With less salt, they refract longer wavelengths, like red.
The team also figured out how to control the production process carefully so that they can now create meter-long sheets of glitter using a roll-to-roll machine, a common piece of industrial equipment. The mixture has to be thin enough that it's easy to deposit on the roll, but viscous enough to leave a deep, even color.
After the water evaporates, only a film of the nanocrystals remains. The color suddenly emerges and deepens. The film can then be peeled off the web and ground into craft glitter or mixed into paint. Using the equipment at Cambridge, it currently takes Droguet about two months to make a kilogram of glitter.
Vignolini and Droguet also want to run tests to understand how this material breaks down over its lifecycle and how that decomposition could affect the environment. They've partnered with Dannielle Green, an ecologist at Anglia Ruskin University in the United Kingdom, who has studied other cellulose-based glitters to see how they affect the growth of algae.
If cellulose nanocrystals break down more quickly than plastic, and without needing certain ideal conditions to decompose, they could keep one source of plastic out of that chain. But even adding organic matter like cellulose can influence an ecosystem, Green says. As the crystals degrade, they can add biomass to the environment, which can lead to an increase in chemicals like inorganic nitrogen.
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