View allAll Photos Tagged BINDING
Rollei 35 SE • Rollei HFT Sonnar 2,8/40
FujiFilm Neopan Acros II developed in Caffenol CL 60min stand @ 20°C
Scanned with Plustek OpticFilm 120 at 2400dpi with Silverfast AI Studio 9
Luxembourg
Caffenol CL
500 ml Filtered Water
8gr Anhydrous Washing Soda
5gr Vitamin C
20gr Instant coffee ("Cora")
10 slow inversions then let stand for 60 minutes
Information and credits are on the blog post - rissasecondlife.blogspot.com/2020/01/the-binding-crystal....
My first Islamic binding that I made while on a 4 day bookbinding course at Flatford Mill (Field Studies Council). Covered it with Chieftain goat skin. The paper is sunflower paper that I bought in Udaipur 2 years ago. I made the marbled paper in 2024 when on a course at West Dean College.
Two errors that I know about. The worst error is the width of the fore-edge flap. The second is at the start of one of the chevron endbands. I learned a lot making this book.
Yesterday.
From the west ridge. I climbed up there with a short ( 130cm ) skis with alpine bindings from Ramer, old, light AT boots, half ( kicker ) skins, ski crampons, and a pair of wipet stocks from Black Diamond.
Pentax MZ-M, Pentax-M 28mm F3.5, negative ISO 100 expired, exposed as ISO 50, developing.time shortened.
Bigger sizes: www.flickr.com/photos/threepinner/16941097359/sizes/l
I hope you don't have messy kids like I do, because I decided to make your binding white! I didn't want to detract from the quilting... I hope you like it as much as I enjoyed making it for you!
E le pagine rimasero bianche, forse ingiallite dal tempo, ma piene di pensieri, come pagine mancanti di un diario dove tutto rimase "in fieri"!
With Flea Market Fancy! Yay! Blogged at coraquilts.blogspot.ca/2012/02/hope-valley-log-cabin-fini...
56115 is pictured in Orton Moor Cutting on 2 September 1994, descending Shap bank with the afternoon Hardendale – Margam limestone hoppers. There appears to be a brake binding near the centre of the train.
20230507_4646_R62-105 Binding
A possible for the next Crazy Tuesday challenge: Office Supplies
#15130
Fused plates! These two snowflakes somehow became one. A mid-air collision with some binding force that I can’t identify, but each tiny snowflake would never be the same afterwards. View large!
Snowflakes grow based on a simple fact: the more access to water vapour, the faster they can collect that vapour into the crystal structure. Snowflakes grow where there is an abundance of material to allow them to do so. You might notice that the larger hexagonal plate isn’t quite symmetrical, because the “baby” snowflake is stealing some of the building materials on that side of the crystal.
The growth of one crystal will forever affect the growth of the other. Even if at some point the two crystals broke apart, it would be easy to see that something was once there, that a piece of the puzzle was missing. This is one of the ways that snowflakes grow “unbalanced” with some branches far longer than others, and the reason why calm weather usually yields more symmetrical crystals; the more the smack into each-other, the more likely they will break or fuse together.
This really hits the message home that no two snowflakes are alike. There are so many factors that affect how they grow, and what influences their growth. These two snowflakes are incredibly tiny plate crystals each measuring less than a millimeter, yet the differences are vast.
Fun side-note: the circle-like shapes on the larger crystal are signs of inward crystal growth. The fact that the left side of the circle is much farther away from its edge than the right side is another indication of the direction of growth. Far more water vapour is accessible from the area away from the point where they have joined together. :)
I wanted to post a larger snowflake tonight, and it’s in the editing process (51 frames!), but it’ll have to wait until tomorrow. Priorities shifted to get a bunch of book and poster orders out the door in time for Christmas!
If you like reading these posts and want them in book form, with all the comprehensive photographic techniques explained alongside, you need a copy of Sky Crystals: skycrystals.ca/book/ - 304 pages, hardcover, and the perfect mix of science, photography, writing and imagery.
If you want to go for a huge image impact, check out “The Snowflake”. Nothing like this has been done before, showcasing over 400 crystals all scaled in relative size to one another. 2500 hours of work creates this: skycrystals.ca/poster/ - Artist’s proofs are shipping now!
Almost done with first week of class, looks like my graphic design class gonna be pretty fun this semester. I am really looking forward to all the cool design projects we gonna get to do. The weather has been freezing cold this past week, just had our first snow storm this past weekend.
This was also taken at the Opryland Hotel in Nashville, for which they has amazing ceiling design. The ceiling is made out of glass to let the sun shine through during the day time. I really like the design aspect of the structures, its very unique in its own way.
Hopefully i find time this weekend to catch up on everyone stream
have a great day! tomorrow is Friday!!
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