View allAll Photos Tagged Capsule
This is a photo of a small glass container filled with cod liver oil capsules, positioned above an image of a painting by Tom Thompson.
The British Columbia Time Capsule is a time capsule in Victoria, British Columbia, containing records from 1966–1967. The capsule was placed in Confederation Garden Court on December 31, 1967, and is scheduled to be opened on January 1, 2067, as part of Canada's bicentennial celebrations
A single shot HDR of one of my favorite art pieces at Burning Man. You could step inside this and go through an entire story about it crash landing into the Playa
119 pictures in 2019 (58) in your time capsule
A few things representing most of the decades I have lived through - I was born in 1958.
1960s The Moody Blues Days of Future Passed album released.
1970s Rubik's Cube invented & Pink Floyd concert at Wembley.
1980s Compact discs invented.
1990s Elton John and Billy Joel 'Face to Face' tour and the start of the Harry Potter series by J K Rowling.
2000s George Michael '25 Live' tour.
2010s £5 note (paper) replaced with plastic.
The ticket for Pink Floyd in 1977 was £4.25, Elton and Billy Joel in 1998 was £32.50 and George Michael in 2006 was £60 - that's inflation for you! (in the 1980s the average ticket price was £15)
Hello Minimal´s!
This time , we got inspired by the Mongolian side of the GOBI desert
Combined with a futuristic vision of a Nomad Yurt
All together to give you that little comfy habitat in the middle of nowhere
Let the adventure begin !
Information :
Everything you see its included , like always :)..
It include the whole land and for sure the capsule! with copy and modify permissions. There is a slide script on the door with a really cool sound!
The Nomad Yart has a total of 155 landimpact.
Hope you like <3!
Taxi : ↪ Uber
▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
I came across this impressive building when I was walking around Shimbashi. After I came home, I checked on the web and found it is famous architecture but owner decided to tear down it. I think I am lucky to find this building before it is broken down.
The London Eye is a giant Ferris wheel on the South Bank of the River Thames in London, England. The entire structure is 135 metres tall and the wheel has a diameter of 120 metres.
The wheel's 32 sealed and air-conditioned ovoidal passenger capsules, designed and supplied by Poma, are attached to the external circumference of the wheel and rotated by electric motors. Each of the 10-tonne capsules represents one of the London Boroughs, and holds up to 25 people, who are free to walk around inside the capsule, though seating is provided. The wheel rotates at 26 cm per second (about 0.9 km/h) so that one revolution takes about 30 minutes. It does not usually stop to take on passengers; the rotation rate is slow enough to allow passengers to walk on and off the moving capsules at ground level.
Last night I dozed off on the last train from Shibuya and found myself in Shimbashi, awoke with a start and ran to what I thought was the right train, but wound up headed to Yokohama. Got off in Kamata and found a "Capsule Hotel."
I'd never stayed in one before, but since the taxi home would have been about a hundred bucks, the $30 "room" was a really good option. They're surprisingly comfortable and not claustrophobic at all...