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Exhibition Jean Tinguely - Machine Spectacle 1 Oct 2016 - 5 Mar 2017 in the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam

 

Jean Tinguely is famous for his playful, boldly kinetic machines and explosive performances. Everything had to be different, everything had to move. Precisely twenty-five years after his death, the Stedelijk Museum opens a Tinguely retrospective: the largest-ever exhibition of the artist to be mounted in a Dutch museum.

 

The Swiss artist Jean Tinguely (1925–1991) played a key role in the rise of kinetic art in the fifties. With over a hundred machine sculptures, most of which are in working order, paired with films, photos, drawings, and archive materials, the presentation takes the public on a chronological and thematic journey of Tinguely’s artistic development and ideas, from his love of absurd play to his fascination for destruction and ephemerality.

The presentation features his early wire sculptures and reliefs, in which Tinguely imitated and animated the abstract paintings of artists such as Malevich, Miró, and Klee; the interactive drawing machines and wild dancing installations constructed from salvaged metal, waste materials, and discarded clothing; and his streamlined, military-looking black sculptures.

 

Tinguely’s self-destructive performances are a special feature of the Stedelijk presentation. The enormous installations Tinguely created between 1960–1970 (Homage to New York, Étude pour une fin du monde No. 1, Study for an End of the World No. 2, and La Vittoria) were designed to spectacularly disintegrate in a barrage of sound. The presentation also spotlights the exhibitions Tinguely organized at the Stedelijk, Bewogen Beweging (1961) and Dylaby (1962), and the gigantic sculptures he later produced: HON – en katedral (“SHE – a cathedral,” 1966), Crocrodrome (1977) and the extraordinary Le Cyclop (1969–1994), which is still on display outside Paris. The survey ends with a dramatic grand finale, the remarkable, room-filling installation, Mengele-Totentanz (1986), a disturbing display of light and shadow never previously shown in the Netherlands. Tinguely realized the work after witnessing a devastating fire, reclaiming objects from the ashes to piece together his installation: scorched beams, agricultural machinery (made by the Mengele company), and animal skeletons. The final piece is a gigantic memento mori, yet also an invocation of the Nazi concentration camps. Its juddering movements and piercing sounds evoke a haunting, grisly mood.

 

Jean Tinguely created his work as a rejection of the static, conventional art world; he sought to emphasize play and experiment. For Tinguely, art was not about standing in a sterile white space, distantly gazing at a silent painting. He produced kinetic sculptures to set art and art history in motion, in works that animated the boundary between art and life. With his do-it-yourself drawing machines, Tinguely critiqued the role of the artist and the elitist position of art in society. He renounced the unicity of “the artist’s hand” by encouraging visitors to produce work themselves. Collaboration was integral to Tinguely’s career. He worked extensively with artists like Daniel Spoerri, Niki de Saint Phalle (also his wife), Yves Klein, and others from the ZERO network, as well as museum directors such as Pontus Hultén, Willem Sandberg, and Paul Wember. Thanks to his charismatic, vibrant personality and the dazzling success with which he presented his work (and himself) in the public sphere, Tinguely was a vital figure within these networks, acting as leader, inspirator, and connector.

Amsterdam has enjoyed a dynamic history with Tinguely. The exhibitions Bewogen Beweging (1961) and Dylaby (1962), for which Tinguely was (co)curator, particularly underline the extraordinarily close relationship that sprang up between the museum and the artist. Not only did he bring his kinetic Méta machines to the Netherlands, he also brought his international, avant-garde network, leaving an enduring impression on museumgoers who flocked to see these experimental exhibitions. Close relationships with Willem Sandberg, then director of the Stedelijk Museum, and curator Ad Petersen prompted various retrospectives and acquisitions for the collection: thirteen sculptures, including his famous drawing machine, Méta-Matic No. 10 (1959), Gismo (1960), and the enormous Méta

Used concrete block machine system.

 

Lorev Impianti, ITALY.

 

Visit us at:

www.lorev.com

Graphic Arts Building

"For A Healthy Earth"

Just a couple extras .. a fat quarter of this cute owl fabric, Hoot! that had the perfect matching colors. And a bird that I machine embroidered from a design by Urban Threads. I hope you like them partner. Maybe they'll end up in another quilt or perhaps a tote bag?

Geheimschreiber

 

Although the ENIGMA remains the best know German cryptographic machine of World War II, in the early 1940's the German military introduced several new cryptographic teletypewriters known under the name Geheimschreiber - sometimes translated as "private secretary", sometimes as "secret writer".

 

These machines offered on-line encryption and decryption, that is plain test could be typed directly into the machine, automatically converted to encrypted text, and sent directly to the transmitter. In addtion to security, these "secret writers" provided the Germans with the ability to encrypt large volumes of test at high speed.

 

Learning that the Germans had named an early version of these machines SWORDFISH, the British and Americans bestowed nicknames associated with fish on the machines and the communications links in which they were used. The two most famous are TUNNY and STURGEON.

 

Just as they developed the Bombe to assist decryption of ENIGMA , the British developed data processing to attack the fish family of machine ciphers. (I must add: This was a whale of a job!) This led to the construction of the COLOSSUS which British historian F. H. Hinsley is "justly claimed as a pioneer programmable electronic digital computer."

The 40 (SZ40) when first encountered in 1940 was nicknamed TUNNY by the British - after a fish better known to Americans as TUNA.

 

The Schlüsselzusatz SZ40, manufactured by the German firm Lorenz, was used by the German Army for high-level communications, generally between Army groups. It provided on-line encryption and decryption and was capable of handling large volumes f traffic at high speed. The TUNNY depended on wheels for encryption and decryption but unlike ENIGMA it did nut substitute letters but insted encrypted elements of the electrically generated Baudot code used in normal telegraphic transmissions.

 

Source: National Cryptologic Museum 13 February 2009 with some hyperlinks added

 

Link to report on TUNNY

 

A modern day COLLOSSUS

 

i09_0214 088

Love the green paint ! The three ports on the fenders indicate a six cylinder under the hood but I'm sure this had a V8.

Sewing machine cover, made using 'Beyond Measure' pattern by Bloom. Main fabric is Mikko by Surface Art, along with fabric by Saffron Craig and Kona solids (tomato, snow) and grey homespun.

 

theelvengarden.blogspot.com/2011/10/funky-ing-up-my-sewin...

Slot machine used on a submarine for fund rising.

Crayons and rubber bands in pastry cutter.

simultaneous decapitation and limb amputation... and his foot was still on the pedal

Paragon Machine Works in Richmond, CA specializes in custom bicycle part manufacturing.

 

bradwenner.com/new/paragon-machine/

 

Strobist: bare head right, indirect window light from left

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Nye Hede Rytmer, Silkeborg 2016

DAY 06

 

6.00am, another lie in, but it’s not long enough, it takes me 30 mins to wake up. First I try to get her to go back to sleep but she just keeps offering me the Winnie The Pooh Star Machine thing remote control, she just wants to share aawwww! I attempt to make apple & weetabix for Carys. Carys climbs up onto the arm chair, and then up to the arm, and then stretches out for the books on the 2nd from top shelf of the book case. I grab her, this could have been a nasty fall for her, I put her near me 25 foot away from the books. But as I chop apple she scampers back to the armchair and begins her perilous climb again, I repeat step 2, and on it goes 6 or 7 times back and forth, back and forth until I realise my apple isn’t getting chopped. I remove the cushion off the armchair and it still doesn’t help, she still has the ability to climb, next I move the armchair 3 feet forward, but she still goes for it, how on earth is she going to leap her own body length across and half her body height upward and then grab a book in mid-air before landing on her feet to flick through the pages and scrumple them up? And a fat Oxford Russian dicitionary at that? She doesn’t know the limit of her abilities, even I don’t but we’re both learning.

 

6.45am Carys starts up her impression of an air-raid siren, a long piercing wail that means that she is wanting something, I know it’s herr stomach, but I haven’t had chance to make the mushabix yet. Look out Axl Rose someone can out-whine you now.

 

7am Sarah arrives from Nod and feeds Carys.

 

7.15am Brekky is finally gobbled down, I go for the Sylvester Stallone option – porridge and dried fruit, but I have honey on top as I’m not as sweet as ole Sly.

 

7.30am Carys grabs my drinking glass and smashes it, she scratches her hand and has her first ever trickle of blood! Awwww, and I was there to see it, the most minimal of blood, but hey at least we know she isn’t a cyborg that was planted in Sarah’s womb at the hospital, or can cyborgs bleed nowadays!

 

8am I attempt to work, this is disturbed by a round of Mutual Growling, carys growls at me, then I gropqwl back and she hides her head and smiles then growls back, and on it goes, my throat starts to irritate, then my cough comes back, Mutual Growling will have to wait.

 

8.15am Not getting much work done, I’ll be late with my deadline, but not too much.

 

11.15am Sarah, Carys & I go over to Telegraph Hill Park (South) for the farmers market and to loll around, a half dozen stalls are there selling wholesome looking home made foods, like pasties, marinated olives, crepes, sausages and cheeses. I have a Cornish pastie, Sarah a crepe, and Carys has Babybel, yoghurt and banana. The park is teeming with upper middle class families with small kids, lots of the dads look older than their wives, and certainly too old to be dads, some are overweight too, they have a good chance of dying before their kids grow up, oh well we can’t all find the love of our lives whence young can we? My lower back is lightly sore today – (old cycling injury), I wouldn’t want all the aches and pains of middle age and a baby to worry about, sarah has a sore shoulder so I massage it under a big old tree.

 

1.30pm Back home for more graphics work, still not getting much done, especially when carys is on my lap facing me and trying to play, I work around her, very literally, weaving my head back and forth to see the screen, lucky it’s a big screen.

 

3pm Try and nap but disturbed, maybe tomorrow.

 

4pm Carys, Sarah & I play ‘Clap Hands’, this entails Sarah ordering Carys to clap hands in a high pitch voice, Carys obliges her, then looks at me for recognition, then I start clapping my hands loudly and raise my voice and then approach her with my clapping hands and then smother her and growl at her like a bear, she then squeals and laughs, and I laugh too. Then Sarah starts it all again, but it’s not the best time while I’m in the middle of work, how can I ignore the little lady, I find her very irresistible and always aim to make her smile. Perhaps put a bolt on the upstairs office?

 

4.30pm I’m trying to download my music onto my new computer, but half of them don’t work, they’re ok on my hi-fi, frustrated.

 

8pm Carys asleep, no afternoon nap today again, I have shoulder of lamb today – Free Range it said on the packet, is that all Bernard Matthews can brag of nowadays? Well I hope they don’t battery farm those poor little lambs anyway.

 

8.30pm Go down off license for 4 cans of beer, the jolly Sri Lankan shop keeper tries to persuade me to go for the ‘6 cans for a fiver’ offer I am very tempted, but wouldn’t have any money left over for chocolate, it’s a hard decision to make, in the end I decline, on the way home a deep aggressive African voice comes from out of the shadows ‘you got cigarette?’ I say ‘I don’t smoke’, that’s’ the type of place this is, varied, edgy and fun.

This wonderful image of Paula took me to a beloved film: Michel Gondry’s La Science des rêves…especially to one scene: where Stéphane was giving Stéphanie a time-machine as a present only because she was pretty! And of course, as every mature lady would have done, I asked my love why he had never given me a time-machine!

Poor he had spent most of his morning creating a time-machine for me… by all the film photographs of Cunda we took during our months-long road trip last year…and presented the time-machine in the form of a board/card-game!

So in the day that I had to stay at home, I went to Cunda-a beloved Aegean island by a time-machine, traveled back in time and played an extremely enjoyable board/card game, which I lost!

:o)

 

So i got war machine and i thought he desurves a cool pic ;)

 

At Pevensey Castle

 

Pevensey Castle: a Saxon Shore fort, Norman defences, a medieval enclosure castle, and later associated remains

The monument includes Anderita Saxon Shore fort, traces of later, Norman defences, an enclosure castle, a 16th century gun emplacement and World War II defences situated on a low spur of sand and clay which now lies around 2km north west of the present East Sussex coastline at Pevensey. During the Roman and medieval periods the spur formed a peninsula projecting into a tidal lagoon and marshland, but coastal deposition and land reclamation have gradually built up the ground around it so that it is now completely land-locked. The roughly oval, north east-south west aligned Roman fort is the earliest of the structures which make up the monument and has been dated to the first half of the fourth century AD. Covering almost 4ha, the fort survives in the form of substantial ruins and buried remains. It is enclosed by a massive defensive wall with a flint and sandstone rubble core faced by coursed greensand and ironstone blocks, interspersed with red tile bonding courses. The whole is up to 3.7m thick and survives to a height of up to 8.1m. The wall was originally topped by a wall walk and parapet. Part excavation in 1906-8 showed that the wall was constructed on footings of rammed chalk and flints underpinned by oak piles and held together by a framework of wooden beams. Investigation of the internal face indicated that this was stepped upwards from a wide base so as to provide extra strength and support. Despite these precautions, a landslip on the south eastern side of the fort has resulted in the destruction of a c.180m length of the perimeter walls and, although fragments of the fallen masonry do survive, most have been removed over the years. Smaller sections of wall have also collapsed along the north western and eastern stretches. The defensive strength provided by the perimeter wall was enhanced by irregularly-spaced, externally projecting semicircular bastions with diameters of around 5m. There were originally at least 15 of these, of which 10 survive today. The fort was entered from its south western, landward approach by way of the main gateway. In front of this a protective ditch 5.5m wide was dug, and, although this became infilled over the years, a 40m stretch located towards its south eastern end has been recut and exposed. The ditch would have been spanned originally by a wooden bridge, although this no longer survives. The main gateway takes the form of a rectangular gatehouse set back between two solid semicircular bastions 8m apart. The 2.7m wide, originally arched entrance is flanked by two oblong guardrooms and the whole gateway structure projects beyond the inner face of the perimeter wall into the fort and is thought to have been originally two or even three storeys high. On the eastern side of the fort is a more simply designed subsidiary gateway, originally a 3m wide archway entrance, giving access to part of the adjacent Roman harbour, now overlain by Pevensey village. The extant archway is a modern reconstruction of the Norman rebuilding of the original entrance. Traces of a wooden causeway which led from it into the fort have been found during partial excavation. Midway along the north western stretch of perimeter wall is a now ruined postern c.2m wide, approached by a curved passage set within the wall. Part excavation between 1906-1908 indicated that the internal buildings which housed the garrison of up to 1,000 men, along with their livestock and supplies, were constructed of timber infilled with wattle and daub. A c.1m sq timber-lined Roman well was found in the south western sector of the fort, at the bottom of which were the remains of the wooden bucket with rope still attached. The well was found to have been filled with rubbish in Roman times and the presence of the bones of cattle, sheep, red deer, wild boar, wild birds, domestic dogs and cats, along with sea shells, gives some indication of the diet and lifestyle of the fort's original inhabitants. Anderita is thought to have been abandoned by its garrison by the latter half of the 4th century AD, and although little is known of its subsequent history until the 11th century, the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records a massacre of Britons by the invading Saxons at the fort in AD 491. The Bayeux Tapestry states that William the Conquerer landed at Pevensey in 1066, and the Norman army are believed to have made use of the Roman fort as one of their first armed camps. The defences at Pevensey and the surrounding land were granted to King William's half-brother Robert, Count of Mortain. The medieval defences then went through at least 300 years of development, culminating in the construction of a stone built enclosure castle within the largely intact walls of the earlier Roman fort. It is thought that the first Norman defences took the form of a wooden palisade surrounded by a bank and ditch, and a c.40m length of partially infilled ditch up to 9m wide which survives across the north eastern sector of the earlier fort may indicate their original extent. Limited excavations in 1993-94 showed that the ground surface in the south eastern sector of the fort, in the vicinity of the later stone-built keep, was artificially raised some time before 1200, suggesting that a motte may also have been constructed. The original Roman gateways were rebuilt and a new ditch dug in front of the south western gate. Most of the Norman defences and interior wooden buildings will now survive in buried form beneath the later medieval castle, although herringbone-pattern repairs to the Roman masonry, by then serving as the outer bailey of the medieval defences, also date from this time. Around 1100 the defences were strengthened and the accommodation improved by the addition of a masonry keep in the south eastern sector of the earlier fort. The subject of a complex history of alteration, collapse and repair, the keep utilises part of the earlier, Roman perimeter wall and bastions. It takes the form of a rectangular block measuring c.16.8m by c.9m internally, reinforced by apsidal projections on all sides. Now surviving in ruined form up to first floor level, the keep originally took the form of a tall tower with an entrance on the first floor. A rectangular building measuring 7.6m by 6m was later constructed in the south eastern angle between the keep and the Roman wall. At around 1200 work began on the construction of a smaller, stone-built inner bailey in the south eastern sector of the earlier fort. An L-shaped ditch around 20m wide was dug to define the new enclosure, and this retains water in its northern arm. The material excavated from the ditch and from the destruction of the earlier bank was spread over much of the outer bailey to a depth of up to 1.5m. The ditch was recut during extensive renovations carried out during the early 20th century. The first structure to be built in this phase was the gatehouse to the south west which has an arched entrance between twin, semicircular external towers, now ruined. The basement chambers beneath each tower have ashlar-faced walls and barrel-vaulted ceilings, the southern chamber being entered by way of a newel staircase, the northern by a trapdoor. Both were used to house prisoners. Many subsequent alterations included the replacement, during the 15th century, of the wooden bridge over the outer ditch by a stone causeway. The originally embattled curtain wall enclosing the inner bailey was built within the ditch and inner berm around 1250. This survives almost to its full original height and is faced with coursed Greensand ashlar. Three semicircular external towers provided flanking cover from the narrow embrasures which pierce their walls. Each has a narrow staircase to a basement, a branch staircase off it into the ditch and a room and garderobe, or latrine, at ground floor level. Upper rooms were entered by way of the wall walk and were heated by fireplaces. The basement of the northernmost tower has two rib-vaulted bays, the keeled ribs resting on stiff-leaf corbels. The interior castle buildings continued to be built mainly of wood and these will survive in buried form, although the stone foundations of a chapel were exposed during partial excavation of the northern sector of the inner bailey. Around 20m south east of the chapel is a large stone-lined well at least 15.5m deep, and near this is a pile of medieval stone missile-balls, a selection of those recovered from the ditch. These were thrown from trebuchets during the four sieges of the castle. William, Count of Mortain forfeited Pevensey after an unsuccessful rebellion against Henry I in 1101 and the castle, which remained in the royal gift until the later Middle Ages, passed into the hands of the de Aquila family. The most famous siege took place in 1264-65 when the supporters of Henry III, fleeing from their defeat by the Barons at Lewes, took refuge in the castle. In 1372 the castle was given to John of Gaunt, and during his period of office was used to imprison James I, King of Scotland, who had been seized in 1406, and Joan, Queen of Navarre, accused of witchcraft by her stepson, Henry V. By 1300, the sea had gradually begun to recede from around the castle and its military importance declined as a result. Contemporary records show that the castle walls were constantly in need of expensive repair and by the end of the 14th century were not being properly maintained, although the roof leads were kept intact until the middle of the 15th century. By 1500 the castle had ceased to be inhabited and fell rapidly into decay. The threat of the Spanish Armada led to some renewed interest in the defensive value of the site, and a survey of 1587 records that the castle housed two demi-culverins, or heavy guns. These were sited on the contemporary, south east orientated, M-shaped earthen gun emplacement situated in the outer bailey around 90m north east of the main Roman gateway. This takes the form of a raised level platform c.20m long bounded on the seaward side by a slight bank c.0.4m high and around 3m wide. One of the cast iron guns, manufactured in the East Sussex Weald, is now housed within the inner bailey on a modern replica carriage. From the 17th century the castle passed through the hands of various private owners. Valued as a picturesque ruin during the 18th and 19th centuries, it features in many contemporary engravings and illustrations. In 1925 the Duke of Devonshire presented the monument to the state, and extensive repairs began with a view to opening the monument to the public. These were interrupted by the outbreak of World War II, when the castle resumed its original military purpose of protecting the south coast. The castle was refortified in May 1940 as an observation and command post. It was continuously occupied by regular troops, including Canadian forces and the United States Army Air Corps, who used it as a radio direction centre, and by the Home Guard until 1944. The World War II defences include two pillboxes and three machine gun posts of concrete faced with rubble and flints, carefully concealed and camouflaged within the earlier Roman and medieval fabric. An internal tower was built just to the south of the Roman east gateway and a blockhouse housing anti-tank weapons was built in front of the main Roman gateway. The blockhouse no longer survives. Modifications carried out to the medieval mural towers included lining the interiors with brick and inserting wooden floors. In 1945 the monument was returned to peaceful use and is now in the guardianship of the Secretary of State and open to the public.

[Historic England]

War Machine's looking for someone to thrash...

Title: Road Boring Machines

Dated: earlier than 1946

Digital ID: 20224_a038_000083

Series: NRS 20224 Photographs of metropolitan, country roads ferries etc., and miscellaneous operations, New South Wales

Rights: No known copyright restrictions www.records.nsw.gov.au/about-us/rights-and-permissions

 

We'd love to hear from you if you use our photos/documents.

 

Many other photos in our collection are available to view and browse on our website using Photo Investigator.

If only it were that simple!

New Uploaded:-Ab machine workout, by: Abtekk Gym ___ Intense Abs Workout Routine

Ab machine workout -Lower ab workouts - abtekk.com/abtekk-give-away - Win a FREE Ab Workout set worth a whopping £100. In today's busy world, staying fit and healthy can seem like an impossible task. It doesn't have to be that way. There are any number of surprisingly easy ways you can get yourself into great shape without having to kill yourself. The tips in this article will help you on your way.No matter what your gender happens to be, you should still do strength training as part of your exercise routine. You don't have to worry about bulking up and looking like a body builder unless you actively try for that result. Those types of builds don't happen overnight and a casual person won't achieve those builds. To increase your endurance, breathe fully and from your diaphragm when you exercise, particularly when running. This increases your oxygen intake and your lung capacity and lets you exercise longer. If you don't know how to breathe from your diaphragm, you can lie down and put something on your stomach, then practice making it rise and fall as you inhale and exhale.If you want to get in shape using yoga, do your yoga stretches and poses on a hard surface. For more Info on Ab Workout see here: www.youtube.com/playlist?playnext=1&list=PLvR-rVWiRMP... Practicing on a soft floor can lead to joint injuries and can throw off your balance, which will reduce the effectiveness of your yoga routine. In a reverse of the common practice, you can place a hard, smooth material onto a soft carpet to create the ideal yoga surface.Even though it is vital, sleep is often overlooked when one plans a fitness regimen. Ab machine workout The modern world tends to encourage one to sleep less and less. This is a mistake if one wants to get fit. Sleep is crucial in restoring the body and maintaining energy levels. Get at least seven hours of sleep every night to stay fit and healthy. Take time to stretch in between sets of weightlifting. Research has shown that people who stretch while waiting to start their next set of lifting weights have stronger muscles than those who just sit and wait between sets. Stretching is a little thing you can do to strengthen yourself while you're resting. To have a healthy body it is important to have a good amount of sleep. The body needs to sleep to rejuvenate, this should not be taken for granted. Sleeping for eight hours maintains the body's healthy immune system, helps the individual manage stress better. So be sure to get a good amount of sleep daily.Exercising increases the oxygen to the brain. Studies have proven that incorporating an exercise program to your daily routine will decrease the chance of getting dementia in up to 60% in older adults. Exercising releases proteins that strengthens the brain's neurons and cells which is directly related to memory and learning. A high calorie diet will allow for you to fully utilize your workout. You will be using the calories to provide energy and make your workout last longer. Ab machine workout This will allow your muscles to grow because the intense workout causes small tears and once healed makes the muscles stronger and also increase in size.Set goals. Whatever exercise you choose to pursue, set weekly goals and track your progress. You may set any goal appropriate for your fitness level, but the key is to persistently follow through on your plan. Record your daily workouts on a chart or keep a simple tally indicating that you completed the exercises you had planned to do.Taking the proper supplements can assure that ones body is getting all the needed nutrients to improve fitness and refuel after exercising. Research should be done to decide what the best amounts for that individual will be. However with the right balance supplements will improve the results of exercising and increase overall fitness. Runners can effectively increase their overall speed not by increasing the length of each running stride, but by trying to increase the actual speed of each individual stride. In the ideal stride, your foot should always land on the ground directly beneath your body instead of landing in front of you.Improve your volleyball contact skills. You may not believe it, but playing foosball is a great way to do this. You need similar skills in foosball as you need in volleyball. These skills can then be improved on and can work great in volleyball.When you need shoes for working out, be sure that they fit properly. Go shoe shopping in the evening time. When it is late in the day, your feet are the largest. When trying on the shoes, be sure that you can wiggle your toes and that you have about a half inch of space between your longest toe and the shoe.

 

via, YouTube: youtu.be/6vy_w5ub9xA

Source/Repost=>

abtekkgym.blogspot.com/2016/11/ab-machine-workout.html ** Mark D. Smith / MarkDSmith / MarkSmith ** abtekkgym.blogspot.com/

Prakash launches non woven bag making machines with complete range from manual sewing to complete automatic plant for D-cut, T-Shirt Cut, U Cut, Loop Handle, Box Type

 

and various other form of Bags used for Shoe Bag, Shopping Bag, Industrial Product Bag ,Rice Bag, and gift Bags. www.youtube.com/watch?v=rJ1I10hMrYs

 

This vending machine was in our hotel room. No snacks from here...I don't think.

I'm grateful for the new cappuccino machine at work. I rarely drink coffee, but maybe all that's about to change!

Sewing Machine Oil:

Precision Oil Pen

Typical Size ~ 5ml

 

1.2mm Needle Tip.

Beer vending machines are nothing new, but I love how this one has everything organized by size (including the house special, that large can of Sapporo on the right). I really question whether this works and/or has beer in it that is less than 10 years old. Also, how do you get "GIANT" out of the machine?

There are approximately 1,300 slot machines at McCarran, in baggage claim, the shopping areas, in terminals near gates—even in the car rental center. ~ www.vegassolo.com/playing-the-slots-at-the-airport-yay-or...

 

LUMIX G Vario 14-42mm f/3.5-5.6 on a Panasonic G2

Settings: 1/160 | ƒ/4.5 | ISO 160 | 19 mm

 

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