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Cable operated loader at Old Tailem Town, made by Fewings of Findon on a Fordson E27N

Day 30

 

I didn't really feel the prompt today, so I went my own way.

 

Journaling reads:

 

"we tailgate

 

we love to tailgate & this year might be our best yet - with a new alcoholic treat for each show, a pee bucket & tent & 9 shows lined up...we can't wait!!!"

 

Supplies used:

 

Cardstock: Georgia Pacific [white]

Stamps: Papertrey Ink

Ink: Hero Arts

Washi Tape: Heidi Swapp, K & Co.

Rub-ons: Doodlebug

Adhesive: Darice [pop dots], Scotch, Glue Dots

Pen: Staedtler

Sequins: Darice

 

Thanks for looking!

  

Checking the load before entering the Great Northern Highway and heading to Perth.

Southend.... if it wasn't for the sea and a commutable distance to London, it'd be a less desirable place to live than Middlesbrough.

 

Website and Twitter nonsense.

My boss took me on a run to Jellinbah mine to pick up a C508 and take to Emerald here the Two KW C508's Truck 40 pushing truck 39 onto our truck, truck 39 was f*cked, blown turbo, constantly over haeting, engine shot for sh*t and rear axel locking up.

via 500px 500px.com/photo/52217438 If u like my work also check out my page www.facebook.com/rsquare

Flags for coffins on the screen, oil for the machine

This Kataspyder 2S "Little Kat" Log Loader is essentially a small version of their popular 2X Excavator, with a faster, more maneuverable lift arm necessary for logging. The claw apparatus can be replaced by a swing saw to convert the 2S into a feller-buncher, albeit one that can only handle smaller trees.

Loading systems is specialised in total solutions for loading and unloading service on dock equipment and industrial doors

(From L to R) EMT Linda Kobielski, Flight Nurse Sherry Lee Porter and Flight Paramedic Dave Cauley load the patient into the back of Lifestar.

loads of fine taconite, brought up the hill in sixteen-car cuts, are put into the siding at cramer tunnel.

A rather interesting load on MSSPR.

Caracas skyscrapper Parque Central

Glenn Moore demonstrates how to load salmon fish on skewer for baking.

Day 6

 

Inspiration : Red Herring

 

[The background story]

When I watched the video and got the prompt for today, I was completely stumped. I thought about it all day long and decided to use the red from the prompt as a main color on my page. I'm not a huge fan of red so it was a little challenging for me, but since there's so much green in my photos, I actually think it works.

 

Also, it's VERY unlike me to have crooked journaling, but it's straight on the lines of the patterned paper and I purposely put it on an angle to match the photos, so I'll have to live with it.

 

Journaling reads:

 

"I'm a crafty person so when I was in LOWES & passed by all the pretty flowers & plants, I couldn't help but think, "well that could be fun". With some guidance from the parental unit, I loaded a cart full of colorful goodness & added 2 new chairs to the mix. I've got a couple strawberry plants in cinder blocks, some green & red peppers, jalepenos & seranos for Jon & a little cilantro...plus a bunch of colorful plants. An afternoon of soil & sun & I'm on my way! 6 May 2013"

 

Supplies used:

 

Cardstock: Papertrey Ink [summer sunrise]

Patterned Paper: Papertrey Ink [pure poppy red floral], Studio Calico [green grid], My Mind's Eye [tan grid]

Letter stickers: Making Memories

Washi Tape: We R Memory Keepers [black], Anthropologie [orange]

Gems: Queen & Co.

Pen: Staedtler

Adhesive: Darice [pop dots], Scotch

 

Thanks for looking!

Log loader in operation at PT.MAM logpond, Papua.

 

Photo by Mokhamad Edliadi/CIFOR

 

cifor.org

 

blog.cifor.org

 

If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org

Totally off-prompt, but it's still a layout! This is my daughter, taken after she had her self-designed tattoo done. The background paper seemed to suit it perfectly, especially as she loves images of Buddhas, and meant I needed to do very little other than add the photo!

Just another Saturday on the Great Northern , a SMALL part of what goes by on the day.

Energy for the thrush in the making.

Loading door for the internal bomb bay

Loading timber on the "Şevkettin Sonay" (IMO 9334313) at the ABES Terminal at the 5th Haven Dock at the port of Antwerp

Brochure for a Malcom Moore cable lift loader c1948

Loading systems is specialised in total solutions for loading and unloading service on dock equipment and industrial doors

An interesting heavy haulage (and craneage) job going on at the Los Christianos harbour wall. Six and eight wheel tractor units and low loaders hauling concrete blocks for a massive crawler crane to lift and lower into the sea, I can't get close to the crane there but I can at the loading point. We are walking seven mile to get there, the sun is shining so Jayne isn't bothered, other people go to Loro tropical park, she says we go to the lorry park( only for half an hour, and it is on our normal walking route)

Exeter Daimler CVD6 JFJ 873 (173) duplicates on Saturday .

16'w 64'l from beasley, Tx to Fallon, Nv

Loading up from Regionals in OKC

This book is one that has really taught me empathy for immigrants and the challenges they face- I love it when a book teaches me something new or challenges the way I am thinking!

 

Journalling:

I love Shaun Tan’s books because I

love both his incredible art works and his quirky

stories. I brought ‘The Arrival’ having only just flicked through it. And then came home and settled in with it once the kids were in bed.

The Arrival is an essentially wordless story that documents the arrival of an immigrant into a foreign country. The manner in which the story is conveyed is sublime for evoking the feelings and thoughts of the main character a father of one who has set off ahead to start a new life for his family in a new place.

Shaun Tans art work is incredible. Incredible.

The sepia and monochrome images demand your attention and detailed study. The variation between full page spreads and panelled layouts which can have up to 30 images on the page help to convey the story and emotions of the main character. The detail is incredible and more of the story is discovered the more often you read it. There are hidden gems of humour and fear amongst the pages.

The only words in the story come from an invented language that the main character struggles to understand as he makes his way through the new land. This is one of the most compelling reminders of just how hard it can be for stranger in a foreign land.

Slowly he makes his way through the world encountering other refugees in the new land. Each recounts their own tale in the images of how they came to be there. I won’t say any more lest I ruin the story. The true gift of this story comes from the way that the reader must also decipher the land and it’s workings, creatures, food alongside the main character. Shaun Tan’s invented and surreal country is so unfamiliar that the reader ends up developing strong empathy for the stranger in the strange land- putting us in the same shoes as many immigrants. It’s not often that I find a story that makes me really think, hold my breath, gasp and sigh all at the same time.

I got a second page done in amongst dinner and bedtime and laundry and The Mentalist.

Grain ship Nord Atlantis is shown loading wheat at Port Kembla's Inner Harbour. Haven't seen this much dust before.

Sadly, the flood rains of this summer have severely damaged the massive NSW grain crops, destroying or downgrading a very large percentage of potentially record production.

Mar-Apr.1966 Adelaide Hills - South Australia loco SAR 717 on special passenger to Ambleside entering tunnel - end loading cars ( Murray Billett mb-n232-09)

mills loader, second one, first went for a trip down hill and fell apart

Since I'm in a cartoon mood I did todays challenge as a doodle of myself. This was really fun to do. :)

Pole-mounted steel-encased loading coils on the telephone circuits near Coilantogle, between Kilmahog and Brig o' Turk, Scotland.

Load/Unload

6 x 6 inch

acrylic, carving on birch

copyright 2011 Barbara Gilhooly

www.barbaragilhooly.com

Day Eleven

 

The cost of ... everything.

 

This was a fun one for me.

 

Journaling reads:

 

"I quit my full-time, salary position to go back to serving, bartending & uncertainty. I lost an amazing discount on scrap supplies and I no longer see some of my best friends everyday. I no longer spend 6-8 hours a week in the car. I now pay my own health insurance. I don't get calls & texts about issues at work. I create all day and serve the public SEVEN nights a week. I wouldn't have it any other way. I enjoy what I do & I'm really good at it. I kept my sanity. I spend less & save more. What I gained was more than I lost. And my happiness...priceless. 10-11-11"

 

Supplies Used:

 

Cardstock: Bazzill [black]

Patterned Paper: Basic Grey [background], Jillibean Soup [journaling card, grey photo mats]

Letter Stickers: October Afternoon

Pen: Signo [white], Staedtler

Adhesive: Scrapbook Adhesives, Scotch

Another interesting prompt today. While I thought about it all day I wasn't planning on using these photos or doing this layout but when I sat down this is what spoke to me.

San Ardo, California 2004

...a 2 page 6x 8 layout with a 3 x 8 journaling insert. Welcome Spring! You are indeed gloriously magical !

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