Search results for ""Author Whalen Book Works""
HarperCollins Focus The Tiniest Art Museum in the World: Build-Your-Own Miniature Art Museum with Real Masterpieces!
This easy-to-fold mini art museum comes with more than 16 classic works of art from world-renowned museums, ready for you to arrange and rearrange!Escape into your own creative world! Open up The Tiniest Art Museum in the World to find easily foldable museum walls and more than a dozen masterpieces to place and rearrange in your very own tiny museum! Including classics such as: The Great Wave by Katsushika Hokusai Self-Portrait with a Straw Hat by Vincent Van Vogh The Thinker by August Rodin Esther before Ahasuerus by Artemisia Gentileschi Melencolia I by Albrecht Dürer Study for a Sunday on la Grande Jatte by Georges Seurat This handsome paper box features a complete miniature museum, ready for you to curate. Contents include: Our comprehensive 48-page guidebook to the artworks included, The Tiniest Art Museum in the World Guidebook, plus step-by-step instructions for building your museum and how to keep your art safe and not wrinkled, bent, destroyed, etc.! Foldable museum walls 16+ pieces of classic art for your museum (both portrait and landscape) that attach to the walls so you can mix and match Gift this miniature make-your-own museum to your favorite art lover--or yourself!
£10.99
HarperCollins Focus Make Vegetables Great Again: Over 100 Recipes to Trick Your Kids into Eatin' Their Greens
Make Vegetables Great Again is the go-to cookbook for making kids (and kids at heart) love their veggies!Some kids say vegetables like it's the dirtiest word they've ever heard. (Heck, some parents feel the same way!) But it doesn't have to be like that! It's time to Make Vegetables Great Again! Inside this polished little hardcover cookbook you'll find: Over 100 recipes, variations, and tips and tricks for making every meal (secretly!) chock full of vegetables! Brilliant ideas for sneaking vegetables into kids' diets! Prep-ahead plans and other tricks for making mealtimes (and on-the-go mealtimes) super fun, fast, easy, and delicious! Beautiful food photography that will reel in even the pickiest eater! Fun facts on how to select luscious produce, plus ways to get the most flavor and nutrition out of your vegetables! Feeding a little person healthy, fresh, seasonal produce doesn't have to be difficult. Make Vegetables Great Again will win over even the stubbornest little eater. They'll be gobbling up that cauliflower in no time! Go on, get cooking--veg-filled breakfasts, fresh lunches, healthy snacks, and happy family dinners await!
£12.99
HarperCollins Focus The Germaphobe's Handbook: An Encyclopedic Survival Guide to a Germ-Infested World
Bacteria are everywhere. In your kitchen. On your face. Even under your fingernails. The Germaphobe's Handbook will expose them all, detailing these microbes favorite places to mingle and how to best keep them out of your life. Do you swear by hand sanitizer? Avoid sharing drinks at restaurants? Wash your hands for the full twenty seconds after every meal? Or do you simply want to improve your personal hygiene? Then The Germaphobe's Handbook is for you. This sleek pocket guide will offer everything you need to know about germs, where they live, how they get there, and how you can eliminate or avoid them. (No hard feelings, germs.). Here are just a few examples: Phone Cases: In a world where smart phones are treated like an extra limb, it shouldn't be surprising that they and the cases that protect them are covered in germs, especially considering the heat that they generate which creates an ideal environment for harmful microbes. Luckily, there's an easy fix. Fill a water bottle with distilled water and 70% Isopropyl Alcohol. Squirt this elixir onto a microfiber pad and you have yourself a germ-fighting juice fit for a king. Doorknobs: Public restrooms have made great strides in eliminating germs from their spaces, but one thing they haven't tackled is doorknobs - that little round thing everyone who uses the bathroom uses on their way out. While some places have adopted high-tech measures to combat this issue like plastic-covered doorknobs that automatically filter out after every use, there are other, simpler solutions, like installing copper or brass doorknobs which naturally cut out germs over time. Dollar Bills and Coins: When you hear the phrase dirty money, your mind may immediately jump to drug deals or an assassin's salary, but maybe you should take a more literal approach to this phrase. Why? Because studies show that fibrous U.S. dollars may be one of the dirtiest objects in the world. Their lengthy circulation multiplied by the number of people each bill comes in contact with (single bills see more activity than larger ones) creates a recipe for disaster. Thankfully, the cure for this issue has already been introduced, albeit, for other reasons; with the nation's move towards automation comes a growing preference for cash-free lifestyles that favor credit cards and digital money apps over physical bills. No money, no problems! Bar Nuts: You know the little bowls of almonds and cashews some places serve to keep you occupied while you wait for your blind date or perpetually late best friend? Well, they're filled with more than just healthy nuts - they're also filled with germs contributed by every fingertip that has entered the bowl. How do you combat this threat? Simple. Don't eat them. They're not even that good. Just order an appetizer. Those are just a sample of what this book has in store. Listing the top 100 dirtiest items, and the top 100 solutions, this pocket guide has everything you need to survive in a bacteria-laden world. With graphic spot illustrations that will bring these germs off the page (you know, in a good way), The Germaphobe's Handbook makes a great gift for anyone who craves cleanliness.
£9.99