View allAll Photos Tagged Loader

LOAD Festival,

Presented by the Daydream Network,

Royal Albert Hall,

15/6/2009

 

Artists: Ben Slow, Eyesaw, Dan K, Snik, Blam, Grafter, Babel, Finbarr Dac, DBO.

 

(Long long over due photos from aw nice exhibition!)

Zestaw 1633 Loader Tractor z 1990 roku. W pudełku 24 klocki. W moich zbiorach dwa takie traktorki Konstrukcyjnie bardzo zbliżony do zestawu 6504 i 6603. W 6504 traktorek był koloru niebieskiego i posiadał figa, w 6603 były koła starszego typu, żółte siedzenie i ludzik.

Zestaw 1633 był "bez ludzikowy" . Brak pudełka i instrukcji

Dragonboat Racing with Amathus - Milton Keynes 06-Jun-2023: Loading the Boat

Loading docks in Imabari, Shikoku

Mark loading the Cab grapes into the crusher on the side yard.

I saw Becky Higgins post this link to facebook yesterday and in addition to making me cry, it made me think of what I would tell my sixteen year-old self.

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=_4jgUcxMezM

 

Used a Cathy Z template and papers from Anna Aspnes

U.S. Army soldiers load wildland firefighting equipment at military base camp. Forest Service photo by Kerry Greene

All lining up, on breaks, ready to run there services again. Taken at Stevenage bus Station on either 8th or 10th of April 2013.

A single three-inch steel brick weighs about 42 pounds. (There are thinner bricks available for fine-tuning!) This chart tells you how high to stack the bricks to achieve a particular weight. If the brick stack goes too high, there is a third rail above the second rail to allow the loaders to remove the bricks without too much trouble. The list on the right gives the approximate number of bricks to use for a given, known set piece, be it a border, a leg, a full black, or what have you... Counterbalancing is an art!

Beauty @ an asphalt plant, lined up front ened loaders

Almost ready for kick off.

Walt Disney World Haunted Mansion Backstage / Lights On Historical Archive (Scans)

Some scrap goodies waiting patiently for LOAD to begin.

Can't wait to scrap, chat, scrap and chat some more!

Bring it on!

...we saw loads of these while flying around London.

Thanks to Tony Crowe for the flight..

www.flickr.com/photos/tonycrowe/

This is a quick throw together. I went to early church so I could get out early to do this. This was a digital kit which I printed on sticker paper and cut out. Thought it went well with my granddaughter's Kindergarten picture. I keep updating the photos and they just collect in a box so I've been scrapping them. The flowers are old but thought it needed something else.

 

What have I learned from LOAD? I learned that I have my own style/styles which I like. I noticed they seem to follow a lot of "the rules of good layouts". I take photos sporatically at family events or special days but do not have children here every day to inspire everyday photos. I definitely scrap for fun and love working with papers. I use ribbon in assorted ways and buy cheap flowers on a bush and pull them off to use. I guess I'm cheap but I do buy other scrap items but do not own any die-cut machines. (Oh my!) I cannot afford any of the million scrap classes being sold all the time. I won this LOAD opportunity. I love taking time to make the "Perfect Page" which just means it's perfect for me. I don't like being prompted daily and the feeling that I "must do this now". My journaling is in a journal so I do very little on layouts at times. School pics just need a date. I don't think I'd do another LOAD. It's very tiresome by the end of the month and it stinks over holidays and Sundays. I'm sticking with this only to say I finished a LOAD and did one every day. I will probably throw one together tomorrow and end up doing it over. LOAD can be fun and educational but it's not "my style". I did however mark "favorites" to help remember certain layouts I liked. It's been educational to me to see and read stories from others although I realize I can do that by looking through all sorts of galleries.

A day trip to the National New York Central Railroad Museum in Elkhart, Indiana.

 

A day in the past...

Loading dock in St. Louis

Waterford, Ireland. Loading "A Seabhac Mara" on the trailer took 10 people and about three hours time. This is the boat I'll be cometing in Italy with. Her max is 12 knots...I've only witness 8, but hopefully she'll shine in Genoa this summer.

I've had these brown chipboard hearts forever....like over 3 years! I just never used them.....but I have to say I like them on this simple layout!

Trebuchet Loading | Four people in the two wheels walk to pull the rope to lower the boom to raise the 6.5-ton counterweight. The loose line on the outside has a pouch; in this case they loaded it with a flaming shot. Note the archers to the right just loosing their arrows. | June 2, 2011 | Canon EOS 5D Mark II | ¹⁄₄₀₀ sec at f/5.0 250

1 June 2007

 

Nicole loads gear into the tent

I'm loading the boat in preparations for a technical dive in Portofino, Italy.

This is for the Sketchapalooza Class over at Feeling Scrappy.

Canon AE1 x Nation Photo 400

Giodi, presumably from a Kinder Surprise.

T - 2 days till the big day... carbo loading is go!

A load of donkeys being transported to somewhere.

Loading Maybach car into container for overseas shipping

1 2 ••• 74 75 76 77 79