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Vending machine culture is a very special culture in Japan. Everywhere you go, you'll sure see one on the street. There're many kind of machine available, from toy to tobacco, beer, to soft drink. Even some of the ramen shop need you to buy food ticket from the machine. One special thing about the softdrink machine is they have hot drink, this is very helpful especially the weather is cold during the winter.
Machines & Macchiatos is run by the Sydney Machina Social Club in Sydney, New South Wales.
It's a modern motoring club, for all types of Machines, Vintage, Classics, Customs, Rods, Modern Exotics, Motorcycles & more. If you love Ford Mustangs, Porsche 911, Ford GTHO Falcons, Corvettes, Ferrari then head down.
www.sydneymachinasocialclub.org/
For more photos go to www.flickr.com/photos/behindthesteeringwheel/albums
Florence and the Machine at Molson Canadian Amphitheatre August 2, 2012.
Shot for TOROmagazine.com
Full set of photos here: www.toromagazine.com/music/in-pictures/gallery/949e111c-d...
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Do not use without written consent.
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Machinal
American Airlines Theatre
By Sophie Treadwell
Directed by Lindsey Turner
Cast List:
Rebecca Hall
Suzanne Bertish
Michael Cumpsty
Morgan Spector
Damian Baldet
Ashley Bell
Jeff Biehl
Arnie Burton
Ryan Dinning
Scott Drummond
Dion Graham
Edward Hyland
Jason Loughlin
Maria-Christina Oliveras
Daniel Pearce
Henny Russell
Karen Walsh
Michael Warner
Production Credits:
Lyndsey Turner (Direction)
Es Devlin (Scenic Design)
Michael Krass (Costume Design)
Jane Cox (Lighting Design)
Matt Tierney (Sound Design)
Photo by Joan Marcus
Model: Amythia
Two more to go after this. I think I rotated the camera for this, which is silly in a square format camera, but the double exposure rotated too making a ghostly car roof appear, which is kinda nifty.
Vending machine culture is a very special culture in Japan. Everywhere you go, you'll sure see one on the street. There're many kind of machine available, from toy to tobacco, beer, to soft drink. Even some of the ramen shop need you to buy food ticket from the machine. One special thing about the softdrink machine is they have hot drink, this is very helpful especially the weather is cold during the winter.
My brand new sewing machine (Janome) needed a brand new cover so I dived into my stash and pulled out this vintage piece of sewing machine embroidery that I have had for ages (20 years?) and I am pleased that I could put it to good use. All hand quilted by the way!
Rock Island Arsenal Museum, Illinois, early 1960s, digital copy of print. Complete indexed photo collection at WorldHistoryPics.com.
1.5" glass ball ornaments filled with pony bead "gumballs." My 3 & 4 year olds loved filling these up with a funnel.
THE LIE MACHINE (2014)
Suitcase, computer, speaker, Voice Stress Analysis software, autobiographical read-by-the author audiobooks (Palin, Obama, Clinton, Bush)
Voice Stress Analysis (VSA) is a highly contested and controversial lie detection technology. Through the detection of variations in the microtremors of speech, truthfulness is evaluated through analysis of live or recorded voice. As a result, the technique can be applied surreptitiously, even posthumously, to the vast storehouses of spoken audio available.
The Lie Machine processes recorded audio with standard Voice Stress Analysis algorithms. The archive chosen for this analysis is a set of audiobook autobiographies, each read by its author: Decision Points by George W. Bush, Going Rogue: An American Life by Sarah Palin, A Journey: My Political Life by Tony Blair, My Life by Bill Clinton, The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream by Barack Obama.
The title, “The Lie Machine” is taken from a 1973 Playboy Magazine article by Craig Vetter of the same name, on the subject of the Psychological Stress Evaluator (PSE). The PSE was the first commercially available VSA-based instrument, “designed to fit into a Samsonite briefcase.” The algorithm gained notoriety recently in the U.S. trial of George Zimmerman for the charge of the second-degree murder of Trayvon Martin, where Zimmerman was cleared of the charges based partly on his successful passing of a CVSA test (Computer Voice Stress Analysis).
“We are not concerned with the guilt or innocence of a suspect, only in whether or not he seems to be lying. He’s either D.I. or N.D.I. -- deception indicated or no deception indicated.” (Playboy, 1973)
The project was produced and supported by LEAP Berlin. Many thanks to John McKiernan, Daniel Franke at LEAP, as well as Samo Tadin and Tuk Bredsdorff in Copenhagen, for their interests, generosity and contributions.
Opening: Friday 04.4.2014, 19:00
Exhibition:05.04.2014 – 26.04.2014, 12:00 – 18:00 Tuesday-Saturday
Participating Artists:
Jamie Allen, James Auger and Jimmy Loizeau, Ralf Baecker, Rosemary Lee, Sascha Pohflepp and Chris Woebken, Addie Wagenknecht
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The group exhibition Obsessive Sensing features works which as their basis look at the programming of the world as an expression of artistic research. The participating artists aim to ‘’sense’’ with the help of complex systems and thus to reimagine how we perceive the world. How do we go about sensing that which we cannot perceive? This is reflected in the idea of technical images, as described by Vilém Flusser – the preparation of the information which we cannot perceive for our senses. ‘’This can be achieved neither with hands nor with eyes nor with fingers, for these elements are neither graspable, nor are they visible. For this reason, apparatuses must be developed that grasp the ungraspable, visualize the invisible, and conceptualize the inconceivable.’’ (Vilém Flusser, Into the Universe of Technical Images)
(Photos by LEAP)
Those who have the resources control the machine.
More of my Creative Common images are available on my Picasa page.
If you find this image useful, please link it to my blog at: www.azrainman.com
This sewing machine dates to 1918. I know, because I still have the original manual. It belonged to my grandmother, my mother, and now me. Grandma was married in 1920, and she sewed all her own clothes on this machine. My mother and father were married in 1944, and about that time Grandma got one of those new-fangled electric machines and passed this on to my mother. I learned to sew on this machine, and used it to make all of my own clothes until I graduated from high school. My high school graduation gift was a "new-fangled" electric machine. In my family, sewing machines were considered a necessity. Grandmother and mother sewed all of their own clothes. Back in those days you saved a lot of money by making your own clothes. I continued the tradition until my daughters were young and I discovered that I could buy clothes and cheaply as I could make them. Mom got a new electric machine when I got mine, but she continued to use this machine for heavy duty work until shortly before she passed away. I don't use it anymore, but it has a special place in my house and in my heart.
There are more pictures in my photostream. The Free company was a predecessor of the Singer company.
Any details ? Make, location & date unknown, can anyone help? Scanned from an original slide now in my collection.
A lathe at Paragon Machine Works carves a bicycle head tube from titanium.
More work:
bradwenner.com/new/paragon-machine/
Strobist - snoot with grid from above center + ambient
A postcard by Richard Schwarzkopf. Mailed as Feldpost by a soldier of the 3. Maschinengewehr-Kompanie, Füsilier-Regiment von Gersdorff (Kurhessisches) Nr. 80 in May 1917.
www.evandellphotography.com | Facebook | Tumblr Blog| Instagram @EvanDell
quick portrait of Machine Gun Kelly at the Orlando Warped Tour.
5d Mark ii
24-70mm f2.8 L
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ALL IMAGES © EVAN DELL PHOTOGRAPHY ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Pataphysical Studios is building a Time Machine for our next art exhibit. On a balmy spring afternoon, Drs. Rindbrain and Fabio created more visualizations of what the Time Machine might look like.
We sketched out several ideas for the inside and outside walls, for discussion purposes. On each side of the main screen, we designed round portholes through which we could interact with our guests -- or show scenes from the past or future. Behind each porthole would be a magic box that could feature artifacts from distant times -- or the head of a historical figure, projected onto a ‘life cast’. The rest of the inside walls would be used for other interactive artworks such as the Crazy Clock, which sings quotes about time when you press its big green button.
On the outside walls, we sketched out a Face Box that you could stick your head in to get your picture taken. It would include an Infinity Mirror made of LED strips cycling through the colors of the rainbow, with a camera at the end of this light tunnel. We also sketched out where time wonderboxes could be placed on the side walls, proposing that the left wall focus on the past and the right wall on the future. A graphic timeline across both walls could support that idea.
It was a productive meeting and we look forward to presenting these ideas to our fellow doctors at the next Time Machine meeting.
Fire in the hole!
View more Time Machine photos:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157659761749014
See our brainstorm notes for the Time Machine:
docs.google.com/document/d/1rM9kjOu83Qewh1HwaA2nkzbGdmHb9...
Here’s our overview for the Crazy Clock:
docs.google.com/document/d/18h8uK5v-H3fvonbvJaTYOyvuiDDfv...
View more 'Pataphysical photos: www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157623637793277
Learn about Pataphysical Studios: pataphysics.us/