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Eventually I've got my shot of the nuthatch away from the feeder. He got a peanut and ran up the trunk to tash it away. Very dapply light I took this with my SB-800 using my trusted Moose Peterson settings (-1.0EV on the body, -2.0EV on the flash). Didn't find my flash extender until later so it was throwing up much light and was draining very quickly…
Photos from CTA's experience capitalisation workshop on "Catalysing actionable knowledge to facilitate the next-generation ACP agriculture through youth entrepreneurship and job creation" from 6-8 November 2018 in Wageningen, the Netherlands.
Copyright 2015 Hilde Heyvaert.
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No unauthorized use, reproduction or distribution without prior permission.
This series of resin pendants were inspired by a group of vintage Valentine's Day cards that I found at an antique shop. The cards had been written upon and sent to the owners' sweethearts. They looked like they had been saved for years and well loved. I like the idea of taking a piece from someone's long ago love affair and adding that to a piece of jewelry, possibly to be bought and sent by someone to their own love. It gives it a history of hearts!
They are made from brass with Ice Resin and various found objects, brass components, bits of paper, match sticks, and glass beads. The resin is crystal clear, and very reflective, and amplifies the collage inside the brass pendant with amazing detail. Unfortunately, they are so reflective, they are a bit hard for me to photograph, but I love each one dearly!
This pendant was made from a raw brass frame pendant, which was heated with flame to give it interesting coloration. Some of the pendants in this series were also hand domed with a hammer and dapping block. The pendant was then carefully filled with the paper and found object bits and covered with a water-like layer of crystal clear resin.
This series of resin pendants were inspired by a group of vintage Valentine's Day cards that I found at an antique shop. The cards had been written upon and sent to the owners' sweethearts. They looked like they had been saved for years and well loved. I like the idea of taking a piece from someone's long ago love affair and adding that to a piece of jewelry, possibly to be bought and sent by someone to their own love. It gives it a history of hearts!
They are made from brass with Ice Resin and various found objects, brass components, bits of paper, match sticks, and glass beads. The resin is crystal clear, and very reflective, and amplifies the collage inside the brass pendant with amazing detail. Unfortunately, they are so reflective, they are a bit hard for me to photograph, but I love each one dearly!
This pendant was made from a raw brass frame pendant, which was heated with flame to give it interesting coloration. Some of the pendants in this series were also hand domed with a hammer and dapping block. The pendant was then carefully filled with the paper and found object bits and covered with a water-like layer of crystal clear resin.
Here both the dapped and polished mouthpieces are displayed side by side. Some thread dipped in beeswax has been wrapped around the dapped mouthpiece in order to fit it to the receiver in my horn crooks - in the past, there was no set standard for the size of the receiver and venturi so the shank of the mouthpiece has to be adaptable in this way.
Aside from avoiding the need to modify antique instruments to fit modern mouthpieces, the amount of thread may be varied in order to adjust the position of the end of the shank relative to the venturi in the leadpipe, enabling the player to optimise the intonation. Overall tuning is still adjusted using the master tuning slide.
The Smart Citizens Workshop was a blend of sensor technology, digital fabrication, data analysis and environmental activism, bringing together a group of able and motivated participants, being taught by top-notch maker gurus from Waag Society, data-visualization experts of FGV_DAPP, and with access to the IED Labs and the Olabi Fablab.
Opera, o popular navegador web multiplataforma, anuncia hoje a integração bem-sucedida do BNB Chain em seu Crypto Browser. O BNB Chain é o maior blockchain de contrato inteligente em termos de usuários ativos diários (DAU) e hospeda uma infinidade de aplicativos descentralizados e orientados pela comunidade (dApps).
A integração permitirá que os usuários comprem o token BNB com fiat, bem como enviem e recebam usando a carteira criptográfica Opera integrada e acessem dApps na cadeia BNB. Além do acesso a transações e fundos na BNB Chain, a Opera também oferece a seus usuários acesso contÃnuo a dApps, incluindo exchanges descentralizadas populares como PancakeSwap, 1inch e BiSwap e produtos DeFi inovadores como DRIP Venus, Tranchess, Treehouse, ApeSwap e AutoShark Finance.
Para aqueles que estão mais no lado divertido da Web3, o navegador Opera suporta dApps GameFi como StarSharks, Thetan Arena, StarryNift e SecondLive, bem como aplicativos NFT como Galaxy, NFTrade e Galler.
A integração BNB Chain do Opera Crypto Browser segue seu tão esperado lançamento em abril no iOS, que abriu o serviço para milhões de novos usuários em todo o mundo. Isso seguiu a versão beta original do navegador no Mac, Windows e Android em janeiro.
A BNB Chain possui mais de 4 milhões de usuários ativos únicos semanais, 36 milhões de transações semanais em média e mais de US$ 13 bilhões em valor total bloqueado (TVL) em seu ecossistema de finanças descentralizadas (DeFi)
viucomosefaz.com/stories/opera-crypto-browser-adiciona-bn...
So Bobby's little containers stole my heart and I had to give it a shot, so I made this little pendant out of 20 gauge sheet that I cut and textured then bent around a metal rod and then soldered the seam closed. Next I cut the bottom plate and soldered it on just like you would a bezel. Then I made the little lid out of sheet that I domed slightly with a dapping block for a nice high rise shape, and soldered a thick bezel to the bottom to act as a.... flange is it? To go inside the vial to make it close, lol. Then I soldered the little jump rings on the side to hold the handle....and voila! A vial! The lid closes smoothly and sticks tightly, pretty neat don't you think?