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But it is also an eyecatcher on your resume, she said.
"Put an eyecatcher in the window, and deal fair."
The exception was in the treatment of the bar itself, which was often treated as a decorative eyecatcher.
Alterations including tower which was an eyecatcher to Rockingham House.
The term eyecatcher is also used within advertising and journalism, likewise to refer to an effect which draws the attention of a viewer.
An eyecatcher is something artificial that has been placed in the landscape as a focal point to "catch the eye" or gain a viewer's attention.
But the real eyecatcher is the acres and acres of fields unmarked or constricted by hedgerows.
His principals are aboard, but the eyecatcher is an elderly woman clinging to a battered wing for dear life like an ancient, drenched bird.
Eyecatcher (2011)
Eyecatcher may refer to:
An ad campaign for Church aid for third world countries used JumalAuta as an eyecatcher.
"Hello, eyecatcher.
"Eyecatcher" The New York Times, (Wednesday, February 10, 1999).
TV Asahi also uses a brief eyecatcher of its sticks animation at the top-left of the screen for 3 seconds, appearing after commercial breaks.
Red Rum's lead grew gradually, and he came home 25 lengths ahead of second-placed Churchtown Boy and the mare Eyecatcher in third.
Smaller Kent works can be found at Shotover House, Oxfordshire, including a faux Gothic eyecatcher and a domed pavilion.
PHILIPS TV - Eyecatcher (video installation)
The eyecatcher is a gilded silver chalice made by the Sienese goldsmith Guccio di Mannaia and studded with 80 enamel plaques.
A little over a mile to the north-west of the village is Strattenborough Castle, built in 1792 as both a working farm and an eyecatcher for Coleshill House.
It's official designation is an eyecatcher; the idea was you looked out of the windows of the house and that your eye was drawn to the temple at the end of the lakes.
Eyecatcher When finished, it should be visible for 28 blocks, punctuating the southern terminus of Park Avenue South as Grand Central Terminal and its clock punctuate the northern.
Dunstall Castle: Designed by Robert Adam, this eyecatcher folly, built around 1766, is cut off from the park as it is hidden by trees from within the park.
It was built in the Gothic Revival style both as a working grist mill to grind grains into flour and as an eyecatcher or folly within the formal parkscape of nearby Howsham Hall.
It is Ben Tee which is the real eyecatcher from anywhere along Loch Garry or the Great Glen itself: a solitary, lofty cone seen through birch and pine, mirror-imaged in the waters of the surrounding lochs.