View allAll Photos Tagged COMPACT
As I was looking around on Flickr I saw a trash compactor shot, I decided to give it a try came out with this. I'm really happy with it and thought it was pretty accurate to the film.
Hope you like it! :D
Recreation of the vz 58 compact. Fully recolourable :)
pastebin.com/eu7mUXpa Code for anyone who wants it
Stock unfolded: i.imgur.com/Ltm1XSg.png
Grey colour:
Reference
R-101 Compact Assault Rifle with Holographic Combat Optical Gunsight (HCOG) attachment
Working features: removable mag, moving trigger, sliding charging handle, flip-up iron sights, attachable HCOG sight. Non-Lego parts: rubber bands, Lifelites for the HCOG sight
See all the photos and video in this photoset.
Huge thanks to Drew, Abbie, Ryan, and the rest of the Respawn Entertainment team for their help on this project.
I didn't know drops of water have dents.
Shots with compact sony and mini tripod.
Too little sunlight and poor processing of jpg.
A female White-breasted Nuthatch. A compact bird that clings to tree bark moving down, up and around the trees. Females look like males but have a grayer cap.
My kids have remote control helicopters that look kind of like this, with much shorter, wider rotor blades than a typical full-size helicopter. It allows for a smaller overall size for the aircraft, which makes it easier to maneuver and land. I don't know if it's a practical design for a full-size chopper, but I wanted to make one in Lego anyway.
Also on display is a bunch of stuff I picked up at Brickfair. I think the minifig cat miniguns I got from MBW work great with Chris' drones because of their larger size relative to minifigs. I also love the eclipseGrafx torsos and Brickarms pulse rifles I got from contributing to the Cyberpocalypse collaboration. Thanks Vic and Will!
My newest sketch gear. The bag takes 7x10 inch paper or books. The two front pockets take my pens, a quarter pan watercolor set, water brush, and a spray unit. Compact with little wasted space. Love it.
Creo que apartir de ahora voy a usar mucho más la compacta que la grande. Me están gustando los resultados y esto del Wi-Fi mola mogollón!
Würzburg is een stad met overzichtelijke afmetingen en de trams die er tijdens mijn eerste bezoek in 1977 dienst deden, waren compact. Ook de grootte van het in 1954 opgeleverde stationsgebouw is afgestemd op de behoefte van een provinciestad. Het voor de jaren vijftig karakteristieke stationsgebouw is ontworpen door architect Hans Kern. De kraam met worstjes voor de uitgang van het station ontbreekt uiteraard niet.
De enkelgelede Düwag-tram heeft ook deuren aan de linker zijde. Op het achterbalkon is een hulpstuurstand aangebracht. De wagens konden zodoende bij behoefte in tweerichtingbedrijf gebruikt worden. Primair zijn de wagens echter voor eenrichtingbedrijf ingericht. Men sprak in dit geval ook wel van anderhalfrichtingwagens. Op de kopwand zien we de verschillende contactdozen voor bijwagenbedrijf. Destijds werd er op werkdagen nog met kleine tweeassige bijwagens achter deze gelede trams gereden.
Tram 233 maakt deel uit van een serie van tien enkelgelde zesassers die in 1967 en 1968 door Düwag werden geleverd. Vanwege het krappe profiel van vrij ruimte zijn de koppen sterk afgeschuind. In 1982 werden de wagens door het invoegen van een nieuwe tussenbak verlengd tot dubbelgelede achtassers.
Bekijk mijn fotoalbum in de klassieke versie.
The final to my future-auto exploration. This time, based on several retro-future compact-car designs (including by Syd Mead of course). Ironically, this is the only of the three that actually fits a full figure.
The purpose of the three cars was to look at what I consider the three main areas of consumer-cars in futuristic media: Luxury, Show, and Utility. I am disregarding Industrial and Military as I have made a ton of the former already and I don't really like the latter.
Hi!
I made a remake of an old photo, but this time, with a stop motion clip: www.youtube.com/watch?v=q5d9783-Ib4
Enjoy!
To me, it would seem that a dandelion bloom would be somehow different than this. I think that it's because a dandelion's fibers are all so scattered, at first glance, that it seems unlikely that they start out so orderly. Then the reasoning kicks in that dandelions use air dispersal to get their offspring away from the parent plant. Of course, then, there isn't a random combination of structures. They must be grown specifically to take advantage of being both light and fluffy.
Still with me? Gone to take a snooze?