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keystone, colorado
march 1977
nastar national championships, march 24-26, 1977
part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf
© the Nick DeWolf Foundation
Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com
03/94
Two main things today: Mall of America and Noodles.
Mall of America - Today is the last day I'll see my best friend Krystal before she heads out to North Carolina till end the end of August. Since both of our birthdays are next month, we decided it would only be fair to purchase something for each other. So, we bought beanie hats for each other. I got a skater like one, and she got the artsy one. We dubbed ourselves: "Beanie Buddies". Yes, the pun is that thick.
Noodles - It's been over a week since I last worked at Noodles due to a new job throwing off my schedule. I was a bit frazzled the fist 1 1/2, new shift manager and trying to remember everything I just learned last week made me feel like I wasn't doing as well. But after that stint I was back in my game. I can't complain about tonight outside my legs hurt. I enjoy my coworkers, I'm feeling more comfortable, it's a good environment. Also it's nice to have a shirt that fits, unlike the large I had that sucked balls.
I just wish it was friday, some awesome things are coming up this weekend, and honestly I can't wait for it.
Title: Chemistry Building - 94
Digital Publisher: Digital: Cushing Memorial Library and Archives, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas
Physical Publisher: Physical: Cushing Memorial Library and Archives, Texas A&M University
Description: Buildings: Chemistry Building
Date Issued: 2005-06-14
Dimensions: 7.435 x 10.143 inches
Type: image
Identifier: Chemistry Building 5; Photograph Location: Building Photo; Reference Number: 609
Rights: It is the users responsibility to secure permission from the copyright holders for publication of any materials. Permission must be obtained in writing prior to publication. Please contact the Cushing Memorial Library for further information
This is a recipe for creating a stockinette tube neckwarmer inspired by the I could make this for less than $94 thread on the Ravelry Forum and the neckwarmer pictured which can be purchased from marthastewart.com. To expand on the neckwarmer that inspired this lovingly crafted, though barebones recipe, I generalized the details so that it can be made with any yarn, any size needle, for any size person, or animal if you are so inclined. Really, the instructions work for anything you can measure, so use your imagination for that. It can be worked in the round or flat. With a modicum of skill it can easily be converted to crochet, and probably other media as well.
There’s a bit of personal opinion on copyright and the value of handcrafted work thrown in there too, but that’s really just gravy. This pattern really does work. So if it’s cold outside and you are dying to knit yourself a warm tube, look no further. Help has arrived.
This pattern is dedicated to kakalinaknits who fearlessly asked for information in the face of ridicule and without whom this pattern would not exist.
Please note that I make no claims that this is an original design, just a time-tested basic technique. Ravelry does me the kindness of listing it under original designs.
Blog entry here.
12/16/08: i leave in two days and should not be able to fit inside that suitcase! much packing to be done...france, here i come!
Here's a view of the Blazer that shows the side. I always liked the four-door first-generation Blazers.
Last Friday I got a chance to reshoot the Pier 94 site I had visited week or so ago. In that original session I had struggled a bit with cloudy skies, inconsistent and turbulent winds, and a couple of suboptimal camera settings (e.g., lens wide open and thus soft in the corners).
This session found sunny skies, a lower tide, and a breeze that was still problematically variable but not to the extent of the 4 August session. The photo yield was much improved.
Subject description from the previous set:
Up until the late 19th Century the Islais Creek basin on San Francisco’s southern coast was an impressive tidal marsh. Then the exuberant application of explosives, steam, and later diesel power filled the marsh to create district of industrial works.
In the current day there is little to recognize of the former wetlands. The Islais Creek channel is still there in a formal, channelized way. Here and there you can find small patches of long neglected shoreline where nature has managed to soften the industrial vocabulary of the landscape. One example is Heron’s Head Park, which we documented earlier in the Hidden Ecologies project. On Saturday I visited another bit of the shore right at the outlet of Islais Creek. This is a site called Pier 94 where the Golden Gate Audubon Society is managing a small plot of land to provide habitat for wildlife and waterfront access for humans.
Ipswich Buses Optare Tempo X1200SR YJ12 GWL (94), with Chantry Connexions Route 13 branding, passing through Ipswich operating service 13 (Copdock Tesco - Ipswich Central), 22/08/23