In 1992, in a small shop in British Columbia, a sign maker named Blair Gran stared at a wall full of half-finished jobs and felt something click. Sign-making was treated like a commodity — orders in, banners out — but as thousands of signs came through his shop, he couldn’t help but notice the difference between the good ones and the bad ones. He could see that every sign that left his shop was either helping a business get noticed, or letting it disappear in plain sight.
– effect: “torn-paper-reveal”。业内人士推荐91视频作为进阶阅读
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I find it plausible to think that early humans began to observe, to feel the difference between right and left, and to ascribe qualities like “clumsy,” “awkward,” “crooked,” and “tired” to the less dexterous hand (it is interesting that these very terms still show up prominently in today’s modern languages) and correspondingly positive qualities to the right hand preferred by the majority. This process, intertwining emotion and cognition, can well be expressed in the terms of embodiment... The semantic values with which the terms for left and right are charged in almost all the languages examined for this survey could have their origin in this very process: embodiment turned into words.