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Destination Moon

 

Ma proposition pour Macro Mondays sur le thème "Miniature"

 

Reproduction de la dernière case de la planche 41 de l'album d'Hergé "Objectif lune" (1953)

 

Reproduction of the last drawing on page 41 of Hergé's album "Destination moon" (1953)

 

Jeep Willys CJ2a avec Tintin, le capitaine Haddock en scaphandre, Milou et le professeur Tournesol qui s'exclame : ""Eh bien, qu'en pensez-vous, dites ?... Voilà ce qu'il a réalisé le zouave !..."

 

Jeep Willys CJ2a with Tintin, captain Haddock in a spacesuit, Snowy and professor Calculus who exclaims: "Well, what do you think of that ? Look what the goat created !"

  

Echelle / Scale : 1/43 (1:43)

Dimensions de la jeep : 74x34mm

Stack de 44 images assemblées avec Photoshop

 

"Macro Mondays"

"Miniature"

  

Pentax Spotmatic SPII

Lomochrome Metropolis

Takumar 55mm 1.8

Pentax Spotmatic SPII

Lomochrome Metropolis

Takumar 55mm 1.8

Pentax Spotmatic SPII

Lomochrome Metropolis

Takumar 55mm 1.8

Photo composite of downtown San Francisco juxtaposed with calculus formulas.

 

StacyYoungArt.com

View On White

 

That shot reminds me a bit of the Calculus mathematic book I used back in school.

A juvenile Little Blue Heron makes solving differential equations on the fly look like child's play on Horsepen Bayou.

Adder or Viper - Vipera berus

 

Crinan Canal - Scotland

 

Many thanks to all those who take the time to comment on my photos. It is truly appreciated.

 

7469

Do you prefer hands-on experience and discovery or do you rely on your manual?

 

I knew how to use the camera before I purchased it .. the manual is cool and I definitely refer to it when needed but in my opinion there is nothing like hands on experience and discovering what you can do on your own at times ...

 

P.S. I HATED math in high school!! Except Algebra because we had a really cool teacher!!

Man I love this series. Except for the really questionable entries that we don't talk about. Sealnoon just informed me that lego now makes the Birthday Boy hair in that earth-orange color and goddamn do I know what I'm gonna scour the earth for now.

 

Anyways, here's some figs.

 

Thompson: With a P, as in Pterodactyl.

 

Thomson: To be precise, "P", as in Psychology.

 

Tintin: Great Snakes!

 

Snowy: Arf!

 

Captain Haddock: Blistering Blue Barnacles!

 

Professor Calculus: A GOAT? ME!

 

lemme know what you think!

Sometimes. ..sad. ..Sometimes ...proud ..Sometimes. ...frantic. ...Sometimes so bleak...Sometimes. .calculus...Sometimes the thing we see when we close our eyes.

Another year is over for my Calculus students, and FINALLY, I will get a new textbook, one that is easy for students to read.

 

I know, I know, you are thinking that the sighting of an easy-to-read mathematics textbook, let alone calculus, is rarer than sightings of the Loch Ness Monster. I had some of my students look it over and some wanted to fail the class just so they could use the new textbook next year.

 

Happy FUTABday, everybody!

A mural on the wall of the CPIT campus in Christchurch

"Well, a crazy landscape already, Professor, and now what do you make of that??"

 

"It looks like 10:10, Tintin."

 

"Is there a meaning there?"

 

"Indeed! It is ten minutes past ten o'clock."

 

"Hm. Okay. I guess I was looking for something a bit more profound. I mean, the clock numbers are weird."

 

"They tend to ten ten to Tintin."

 

"You're... just making this up."

 

⋅•⋅⋅•⋅⋅•⋅⊰⋅•⋅⋅•⋅⋅•⋅⋅•⋅⋅•⋅⋅•⋅⋅•⋅⋅•⋅⋅•⋅⋅•⋅⋅•⋅∙∘☽༓☾∘∙•⋅⋅•⋅⋅•⋅⋅•⋅⋅•⋅⋅•⋅⋅•⋅⋅•⋅⋅⋅•⋅⋅⊰⋅•⋅⋅•⋅⋅•⋅⋅•⋅

 

A year of the shows and performers of the Bijou Planks Theater.

 

The Adventures of Tintin

Tintin Standing (Hands on hips)

PVC Figurine 6cm

Moulsinart

 

The Adventures of Tintin

Professor Calculus The Gardener

PVC Figurine 8cm

Moulsinart

 

The Adventures of Tintin

Snowy & His Bone

PVC Figurine 6cm

Moulsinart

  

In habitat near Bitterfontein. Still one of the most attractive species in my opinion. Large plants like these are quite scarce. Most plants observed had 3 to 6 heads.

Cute pairing of Crassula columnaris and Conophytum calculus, somewhere s/e of Nuwerus.

A long long time ago, I was tagged...I apologize for the super late response!

 

1. I do not know where to transfer this fall.

2. I have scars on my arms resulting from my clumsiness with ovens.

3. This summer, I'll be visiting the place where my affair with photography began.

4. I would love to study abroad.

5. I haven't taken math in almost two years.

6. I miss calculus.

7. I'll be rereading Kundera's Book of Laughter and Forgetting this year.

8. My goal is to read at least 50 books...Last year was a total failure, so I have to make sure I do it this time around.

9. I do not know how to swim.

10. I prefer yellow roses first, then white and lastly red.

 

I have a Christmas Party on Saturday Evening. Nothing "over the top" so I picked out something festive. You can never go wrong with a Prada bag. Versace is always nice for the holidays too. There is only one issue staring me in the face at the moment, as I look down. It looks to be an advanced calculus problem. How to get the items on the left hand side photo into the corset on the right hand side picture? So I asked my husband for assistance. He took a look and then looked again. Finally he said "Its a problem for NASA or the Russians to solve baby. Modern man hasn't come that far yet." End of discussion, back up went his newspaper.

 

Where's Howard Hughes when you need him? Can someone answer that for me?

 

the spine of the world is not a curve, but a series of jagged repetitions.

… with a little help from a 35 year-old TI-37 Galaxy Solar calculator. I'd like to see how useful an iPhone or that laptop will be in 2054...

Dupont & Dupont bump their heads through the fabric roof of their 2CV.

This situation occurs in 'The Calculus Affair' (1954-1956, L'affaire Tournesol/De Zaak Zonnebloem).

And also (in Dutch): www.etsy.com/be/listing/1088720724/atlas-kuifje-auto-6-ci...

 

The development of the Citroën 2CV had started in late 1930s. The first prototypes were ready in 1939. Due to WWII it was not earlier than October 1948 when the 2CV was officially launched.

The 2CV was designed by André Lefèbvre (Fr., 1894-1964) and Flaminio Bertoni (It., 1903-1964).

 

The Belgium cartoonist Hergé (pseudonym for Georges Remi, 1907-1983) used a lot of cars in his Tintin comic albums. His stories about reporter Tintin roughly cover the period 1930-1975.

The comic books are still very popular. His albums are reissued over and over. In addition to the comic books, an extensive merchandise trade has also been developed. Small figures of the characters are especially popular, as are scale models of the cars that feature in the stories.

See also: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Adventures_of_Tintin

 

This shop has a lot of them on display in the shop window.

See also: www.faraos.dk

 

Number seen: 1.

 

København-Indre By, Strøget Vimmelskaftet, Aug. 7, 2021.

 

© 2021 Sander Toonen Halfweg | All Rights Reserved

Tintin / Kuifje

The Calculus Affair

L'Affaire Tournesol

De Zaak Zonnebloem

 

Autoworld

www.autoworld.be

Brussels - Belgium

February 2022

I still have this from my school days. Which we had to use as electronic calculators were scarce and mostly unaffordable.

Using the shown scales, if a circle has a diameter of 1.2 metres then the circumference is 3.77 metres.

  

Thanks for looking.

Branch of mathematics employed by ospreys (and others) to determine the velocity, trajectory, and grappling point for landings on Horsepen Bayou.

Calculus.

 

Algebra is very simple compared to its highly abstract mathematical cousin shown here. Alas, this conjures up bad memories of all but hitting a wall taking calculus in college.

Inktober 2020 - I'm definitely not inspired by this list. Or maybe I just don't have/take the time this challenge deserve.

That's what happens when one is acting the goat...

 

A very international collection of stones (Japan, China, Malaysia, Thailand, USA, Canada, Argentina, Brazil, Scotland, France, Spain, Portugal, Italy) picked up from my travels (and with a little help from my friends).

“Taking a new step, uttering a new word, is what people fear most.”

― Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Crime and Punishment (1866)

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