View allAll Photos Tagged Inflate
dragon inflable de banda de rock rata blanca,argentina ,su aparicion es violenta y sorpresiva ,con musica y movimiento,es en realidad una gigantezca marioneta animada.
Lots of groaning when I broke my ankle, while in the cast and when learning to walk again when it came off.
I had this inflated for about a week to be sure the air still held and it does!
It was disheartening to discover that my skills at blowing air in, pinching off the valve and plugging said valve have completely gone to heck. This is what happens when you don't have kids!
Title: Inflating balloon
Creator: Unknown
Date: 1907
Part Of: George W. Cook Dallas-Texas Image Collection
Place: Ladonia, Fanin County, Texas
Physical Description: 1 photographic print (postcard): gelatin silver; 9 x 14 cm
File: a2014_0020_3_3_d_0193_r_ladoniaballoon.jpg
Rights: Please cite DeGolyer Library, Southern Methodist University when using this file. A high-resolution version of this file may be obtained for a fee. For details see the sites.smu.edu/cul/degolyer/research/permissions/ web page. For other information, contact degolyer@smu.edu.
For more information and to view the image in high resolution, see: digitalcollections.smu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/gcd/id/987
There are many new COMFORTABLE styles of PFDs. They can even auto-inflate when they hit the water.
Just having life jackets on board is not enough. FWC officers who perform safety checks on vessels often find life vests stowed in a compartment where several steps are required to retrieve one. They regularly find life jackets still in their original plastic wrappers from the manufacturer.
Life jackets that are not readily accessible are not in compliance with the law or its intent. In an emergency, there is no time to dig around for a life jacket, let alone unwrap it and then try to adjust it so it doesn't fall off. Boats can go down quickly, and boaters who get ejected are often unconscious. It is extremely important that people wear their life jackets, or at the very least, have them readily accessible and adjusted before an accident happens.
This week in Canberra is the annual balloon festival. Justin and his family are local balloonists who were kind enough to let me get up close as they prepared their balloon for flight this morning. This one was taken inside the balloon while it was being inflated (!)
Original Caption: Members of wilderness expedition inflate a 28-foot raft at the beginning of a trip through Hells Canyon on the Snake River , 05/1973
U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 412-DA-6953
Photographer: Norton, Boyd
Subjects:
Environmental protection
Natural resources
Pollution
Lewiston (Idaho, United States) inhabited place
Persistent URL: research.archives.gov/description/549438
Repository: Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD, 20740-6001.
For information about ordering reproductions of photographs held by the Still Picture Unit, visit: www.archives.gov/research/order/still-pictures.html
Reproductions may be ordered via an independent vendor. NARA maintains a list of vendors at www.archives.gov/research/order/vendors-photos-maps-dc.html
Access Restrictions: Unrestricted
Use Restrictions: Unrestricted
My new M645 Super w/
Mamiya Sekor-C 80mm f/1.9 @ 1.9
Fuji Velvia 50
Epson Perfection 1640SU
Wow! This was my first roll of Velvia. I am truly impressed with the colors and sharpness from this film. The raw slides are really an amazing thing to behold.
The basic pool shot - a singular floating object on deep blue water. Enjoy your Thursday and think of the weekend ahead.
The sexual generation gall of Andricus inflator is a swollen and stunted growth on a twig. The asexual (agamic) gall is late summer bud gall. Both generations are found on Quercus robur and Quercus petraea.
Camera: Canon Canonet G-III QL17. Film: Fujichrome T64, home-crossprocessed with the Rollei Digibase C41 kit.
The sexual generation gall of Andricus inflator is a swollen and stunted growth on a twig. The asexual (agamic) gall is late summer bud gall. Both generations are found on Quercus robur and Quercus petraea.