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Photographed the antique Moody Threshing Machine at Elmer's Hideout in Taylor Township in Black River Matheson in Northeastern Ontario Canada

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Moccino. - Coco Skin EvoX | Espresso x LeLUTKA Briannon Head

 

MICHAN - Coco Earrings

 

Unorthodox Bria Locs

 

ELEVEN - Sara Body

 

ELEVEN - Sara Short

 

rue / snow cone machine (decor & dispenser) | Tres Chic

 

 

La Machine made its North American debut from July 27 to 30 on the streets of downtown Ottawa. The show, created by a French theatre production company, is called "The Spirit of the Dragon-Horse, The Stolen Wings."

 

It features Long Ma, who has the body of a horse and the head of a dragon, stands 12 metres tall, and can breathe fire, and Kumo, a spider who is about 20 metres long when fully outstretched. The two creatures have an Ottawa backstory for the show.

 

“We found out that as we were excavating the tunnel in the LRT, workers saw some giant spider webs, then scientists did a bit of research and found some fossil arachnid eggs and they also found some bones from a prehistoric species of dinosaur that seems to be associated with a dragon,” Laflamme said.

 

Part of the appeal of La Machine, is that spectators are able to get very close to the creatures. There will be no barriers cordoning off the viewing area, instead a group of people will form a security blockade known as “la patate” that will make sure people are not under foot when the machines move.

 

These storm clouds left snow.

Énorme backwash pris hier soir quelque part sur la côte nord finistérienne au moment de la marée haute.

Musée de la Vie d'Autrefois

The cogs behind an abandoned water wheel.

Listening to Skin and Bones All worn out and nothing fits, Brennivin and cigarettes, The more I give the less I get ........

I need some sunshine today

The Federal Standard historic printing office in Chiltern Victoria with a very patient caretaker posing for my pic.

It was a warm day when i visited but in this building ( metal roof, unsealed on the inside), it was soooo hot that I was literally dripping with sweat to the max in the small time I was there. How the workers worked in that building with the machines running and making it even hotter, I cannot understand!!!

GHH mining machine underground shovel, when they were introduced in the Monteponi mine, helped to make the work lighter and faster. He wouldn't mind seeing it displayed in a protected area and not exposed to the elements. A machine created to work indoors that ends its "career" outdoors. The most interesting part are the reinforcements made by hand welding along the entire profile of the blade of the shovel. Although not a certainly functional artistic work; this is proof of the mastery and skills that the staff had acquired in working in a mine like this.

  

Pala da sottosuolo GHH mining machine, quando vennero introdotte nella miniera di Monteponi aiutarono a rendere il lavoro più leggero e veloce. Non sabbe male vederla esposta in una zona protetta e non esposta alle intemperie. Una macchina che nasce per lavorare al chiuso che finisce al sua "carriera" all'aria aperta. La parte più interessante sono i rinforzi realizzati con saldatura a mano lungo tutto il profilo della lama della pala. Seppure non un lavoro artistico sicuramente funzionale; questo a riprova della maestria e delle competenze che il personale aveva acquisito nel lavorare in una miniera come questa.

The insides of a mantle clock my mom inherited from my grandmother.

shot with a fujifilm x-t1 and a fujifilm xf35mm f/1.4 lens

Introducing the Arcade series, a range of minifigure scale arcade machines perfect for adding to your LEGO City.

 

Download Instructions at Frostbricks.com

  

Early winter scene after all the leaves have fallen.

Arcade machines from my latest MOC

Tampere - Art Museum - Hyper 2024

 

Evan Penny, Panagiot

 

Tampere Art Museum brings to the city the most interesting international artists in hyper-realistic sculpture from fifty years. HYPER takes the viewer directly to the skin, close to humanity. The works explore the relationship between life and death, reality and fantasy, human and machine, as well as various deformations of the human body. In hyperrealistic pieces, narrative and surprising elements merge with the precise depiction of reality. The sculptures in HYPER are technically skilful, depicting the human body as it is, down to the smallest detail, such as a pore, a wrinkle, facial hair and droplets of sweat. The subjects are everyday situations, ordinary people and the diversity of human existence. This makes the viewing experience strikingly real and immersive.

Looks like the machine was used to move large logs back when logging was in its heyday. This is the radiator on the front. Found it near the road in Ashford, WA. Just outside of Mt. Rainier National Park.

A lonely machine shed along Interstate 80 in Iowa.

This is one cool building! When you come across it wedged in amongst all the other blocks in London's financial district it's immediately recognisable with all the externally mounted, staircases, lifts, and services.

 

Sitting at No 1 Lime Street it was completed 28 years ago at a cost of 75 million quid. it still looks the business. Sometimes known as the Inside-Out Building it's the home of the insurance institution Lloyd's of London.

 

The building is a leading example of radical Bowellism architecture in which the services are located on the exterior to maximise space in the interior. Twenty-five years after completion in 1986 it received a Grade I listing; it was the youngest structure ever to obtain this status. It is said by English Heritage to be "universally recognised as one of the key buildings of the modern epoch.

 

It was designed by architect Richard Rogers and built between 1978 and 1986. The building consists of three main towers and three service towers around a central, rectangular space. Its core is the large Underwriting Room on the ground floor, which houses the famous Lutine Bell within the Rostrum. The Underwriting Room (often simply called "the Room") is overlooked by galleries, forming a 60 metres (197 ft) high atrium lit naturally through a huge barrel-vaulted glass roof. The first four galleries open onto the atrium space, and are connected by escalators through the middle of the structure. The higher floors are glassed in and can only be reached via the exterior lifts.

 

6 exp tripod mounted hdr +3 to -2 long exposure hdr. Post processing in acr, photomatix, photoshop, topaz de-noise and topaz clarity. Fuji X-E2 with 14mm f2.8, f11, ISO 800, av exposure 7.5 secs.

 

Sannomiya, Kobe, Japan

Nothing else as the 'peak' of a joystick from an old machine against a white (and photoshop cleaned) wall.

My first build for the Summer Joust competition, category Castle Interiors. I know I've built the pit of despair before, but this time I built the machine and did it all more accurately. This is also an entry for MAYnifigure 2016, enjoy!

“Do you need a help, sir?”

Tiling machine on the neighbor's farm

York Street, Broadstairs, U.K.

It's so long since I saw one of these I had forgotten about them. Now I remember it was quite a pleasing experience to use one - the sound of the strip of stamps being fed out of the slot when you lifted the flap marked 'LIFT", and the crisp way your purchased stamps would tear off at the perforations. Quite often, the effectiveness of the perforations was deficient, and you would lose a corner of your last stamp to the benefit of the next purchaser. These machines were very convenient, being available when post offices were closed, and with the cost of stamps being around a half penny to tuppence they could be bought with the available coinage. Now, a stamp will cost you 64p (eqivalent to 153 old pennies btw) so you can see why stamp machines died out.

Now I know why San Francisco is always so foggy :)

 

Thanks for dropping by!

 

In the future their will be a fusion of humans and computer machines

For my partner in the Sew Sew Modern swap 6. Machine not included ;-)

After they get off the commuter train on time and get out of the Tokyo Metro station there is an atrium where the high-speed elevators deliver employees to their offices within thirty seconds. They don’t waste even one minute. Everything in their society including themselves is controlled by the machines they made.

 

Taken in Nakano-Sakaue Sunbright Twin

Nakano-sakaue Station, Tokyo.

 

A pattern of interesting old sewing machines.

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