A large cork board can be used to hold posters, playbills, photos and other memorabilia. It can also be used for class schedules, lunch menus and event reminders can also be put up beside your calendar. Placing one beneath your bed is also perfect for showing off band posters and photos. You can paint the board or cover it with wrapping paper to give it some extra oomph. Get a large cork board that can hang on the wall beside your bed or over your desk so you can admire and study at the same time.
A framed cork board come in various styles and shapes. It would also work well particularly those that have glass doors to prevent people from removing notices. Another neat idea is displaying your pins on it. Just hang the board up and stick your pins on it. Stylish and functional, such boards adds just the right touch to your interior decor.
These are perfect for family areas, game rooms, bedrooms, entryways and dorm rooms. You can actually do a lot of things with a framed cork board. In fact, you can express your artistic and creative self by making a framed cork board. Secure all these items on a framed board and decorate with ribbon and garland. Continue to add and update memories each and every year.
A cork notice board allows information signs to be pinned to the board. When glazed these can be used as outdoor notice boards or as open fronted office pinboards. A cork notice board large enough to take either an A4 or A3 sheet of paper depending on the scale at which you wish to work. For scanning into your computer A4 size is ideal. Just buy a cork notice board and cover it with velvet using a staplegun. They can be laid flat or propped up on stands like artist's easels or cookbook stands. Use a cork notice-board and coloured pins to hang your earrings. This makes a colourful display and makes it easy to find a complete pair exactly when you want them.
A wine cork board is a great wine gift idea. These wine accessories are an easy eco friendly way to recycle those wine corks from your wine cabinet. The next time you complete a bottle of wine, think twice about what you can do with the cork, as making a board out of used corks is very simple and easy to make yourself. This is a perfect craft to make if your father happens to be a wine lover! It would look great hanging in a kitchen, in his garage, or his workshop.
Essentially, a large cork board is an ideal enclosed bulletin board for community centers, student unions, and numerous other locations. Large cork boards are cost effective compared to the alternatives, environmentally sound, and easily found.
Dan Tan welcomes you to select and view news, special offers on a wide range of large cork board at http://www.largecorkboard.org
2008 IACP Award Winner!In Judgment of Paris, George M. Taber masterfully chronicled the historic 1976 wine tasting when unknown California wines defeated top French ones, marking a major turning point in wine history. Now he explores the most controversial topic in the world of wine: What product should be used to seal a bottle? Should it be cork, plastic, glass, a screwcap, or some other type of closure still to be invented? For nearly four centuries virtually every bottle of wine had a cork in it. But starting in the 1970s, a revolution began to topple the cork monopoly. In recent years, the rebellion has been gathering strength. Belatedly, the cork industry began fighting back, while trying to retain its predominant position. Each year 20 billion closures go onto wine bottles, and, increasingly, they are not corks.The cause of the onslaught against cork is an obscure chemical compound known as TCA. In amounts as low as several parts per trillion, the compound can make a 400 bottle of wine smell like wet newspaper and taste equally bad. Such wine is said to be "corked." While cork's enemies urge people to throw off the old and embrace new closures, millions of wine drinkers around the world are still in love with the romance of the cork and the ceremony of opening a bottle. With a thorough command of history, science, winemaking, and marketing, Taber examines all sides of the debate. Along the way, he collects a host of great characters and pivotal moments in the production, storage, and consumption of wine, and paints a truly satisfying portrait of a wholly intriguing controversy. As Australian winemaker Brian Croser describes it: "It's scary how passionate people can be on this topic. Prejudice and extreme positions have taken over, and science has often gone out the window."
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