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Posts Tagged ‘Films’

splash Masque Clear Screen Protector for iPhone 4 4G AT&T and Verizon (3-Pack + 2 Bonus Back Films)

April 12th, 2011 3 comments

splash Masque Clear Screen Protector for iPhone 4 4G AT&T and Verizon (3-Pack + 2 Bonus Back Films)

  • Compatibility: iPhone 4 4G (16GB 32GB)
  • Material: 3-layer PET film from Japan. Invisible film – once applied, it protectors your screen and it’s invisible, almost as if it’s not even there. The film is re-usable, simply clean with a moist cloth and re-apply to the device.
  • Static-cling Application: Self-adhering film attaches itself to the screen. No adhesive is used, so no residue after application. Easy, quick, clean application without the mess.
  • Fit and finish: Designed to perfect fit your iPhone’s screen allowing full access to the controls and touchscreen. Includes cutouts for the home button, speaker, and front camera. Protects your screen from daily scratches, dust, scrapes, and normal signs of wear.
  • Contents: Masque Films (3-pack), 2 Films for the Back, Application card, Micro-Fiber Cleaning Cloth. Retail packaging.

Introducing Masque from Splash Products – The most elegant, cost-effective, and convenient way to protect the screen of your coveted device. Masque is made from superior quality 3-layer PET film imported from Japan. The film ensures zero-to-minimal bubbles during application, applies easily, and is reusable. The film takes all the abuse and protects your screen from scratches, dust, normal signs of wear. It has just the right level of thickness – not too thin to be ineffective, yet not too thick to impede the touch feature of your device. It allows you to use your device with ease. Apply the Masque to your device and you will forget it’s even there, yet your screen will have the protection it needs.

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Pixar Short Films Collection: Volume 1 [Blu-ray]

April 6th, 2009 10 comments

Pixar Short Films Collection: Volume 1 [Blu-ray]Pixar’s unprecedented string of hit animated features was built on the short films in this collection. John Lasseter and Ed Catmull used these cartoons the way Walt Disney used the “Silly Symphonies” during the 1930s: as a training ground for artists and a way to explore the potential of a new medium. Although it’s only 90 seconds long, “Luxo, Jr.” (1986) ranks as the “Steamboat Willie” of computer animation: For the first time, audiences believed CG characters could think and feel. (It was also the first CG film to make audiences laugh.) When the artists began work on Toy Story, they had learned so much from the shorts, they were ready to undertake that landmark creation. In the later shorts, the viewer can see the artists continuing to experiment: with a more realistic human figure in “Geri’s Game” and with new ways of suggesting atmospheric effects in “Boundin’.” Some of the more recent shorts continue the adventures of the characters from the features. “Jack (more…)

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