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Cuisinart Waffle Maker....
Making Waffles!
One of my 7 year old twins loves to be "Little Chef". Ever since the movie, "Ratatouille", we have owned this apron and chef's hat that came with the dvd we purchased. On Saturdays and Sundays, Aidan always wants to be "Little Chef" and help us in the kitchen. Today was "Super Bowl Sunday", and the most glorious, sunny and brilliant day in the Bay Area in a while. Everyone was out in DROVES! It was amazing. My Little Chef helped make waffles today, while his Dad went on a planned, "secret" 4 hour hike to see waterfalls with 2 of his co-workers, leaving me home with the kids. So... we had fun, making waffles and going on our own hike at Loma Alta after our yummy breakfast.
Instant chocolate drinks to suit your discerning taste! – Chocolate Frothy Maker
Enjoy a cup of hot delicious chocolate beverage at any time of the day without any fuss with chocolate Line Frothy Chocolate maker. This chocolate beverage making set is compact and convenient for home, office or traveling, It also comes with a complimentary packet of Chocolate Line Pure Dark Couverture that makes up to 3 servings.
Chocolate Line Pure Dark Couverture is made from the freshest cocoa ingredients from West Africa and South America. The bittersweet chocolate is rich and velvety, just the right balance of taste, aroma and sweetness.
For those who prefect a stronger taste of chocolate, add in more chocolate into the beverage to give that added punch. Spice up the concoction by adding allspice, cinnamon, ground sweet ancho chili peppers, or smoked ground chipotle chili peppers for extra kick. Infuse peppermint syrup for the perfect holiday treat!
Method
1) Scoop 50g of chocolate Line Pure Dark Couverture into Frothy Chocolate Maker.
2) Add 300ml of hot fresh milk into Frothy Chocolate Maker. For stronger taste, add in more chocolate.
3) Pump the lever up and down till all the chocolate bits are melted.
4) Serve hot frothy chocolate beverage in a cup.
Once again the Bay Area LEGO Users' Group had a large 2000 square foot exhibit at Maker Faire Bay Area in San Mateo, CA.
We had a blast at the first meetup for Tam Makers, our new makerspace in Mill Valley. We hosted this free event at the wood shop at Tamalpais High School in Mill Valley on June 8, 2016.
A diverse group of people came to the visit the shop, learn about our classes and discuss how to grow our maker community. Participants ranged from experienced artists, technologists, makers and woodworkers, to people interested in learning new skills, as well as high school and middle school students and their parents.
We opened the shop at 6pm and folks started to connect right away, checking out some of our demos, showing off recent projects and touring the space. At 7pm, we gave a presentation on Tam Makers, and talked about our first courses, meetups and tools for adults and youth. We then discussed these programs as a group and received some really helpful feedback.
Most people were very interested in participating in Tam Makers and using the makerspace regularly. They also liked the mix of classes, ranging from maker art to technology and woodworking. Some people signed up for classes on the spot and most wanted to join more meetups. Many offered to volunteer as well. One person said this event had a great community feeling, unlike more commercially motivated makerspaces.
We’re really happy that this first meetup went so well and that so many folks want to participate actively. We look forward to collaborating with our new maker friends very soon!
Learn more about Tam Makers:
Learn more about this Welcome Meetup:
This photo is licensed under a Creative Commons license. If you use this photo, please list the photo credit as "Scott Beale / Laughing Squid" and link the credit to laughingsquid.com.
An event to celebrate crafts, engineering, science projects, etc. For and by all ages.All of these “makers” come to Maker Faire to show what they have made and to share what they have learned. Maker Faire is primarily designed to be forward-looking, showcasing makers who are exploring new forms and new technologies.
This photo is licensed under a Creative Commons license. If you use this photo, please list the photo credit as "Scott Beale / Laughing Squid" and link the credit to laughingsquid.com.
Circa 13.000 simulazioni di realtà aumentata e con il caschetto digitale, più di 4.000 dimostrazioni del drone e dei DPI intelligenti (Dispositivi di Protezione Individuale) e oltre 2.000 bambini nella sezione dedicata ai più piccoli: sono questi i numeri della partecipazione agli stand Acea per l’edizione 2016 di Maker Faire.
Scopri di più su www.gruppo.acea.it
This guy knew how to pose on this sucker. Got his hands up right where the wings extend outward. Love those shades.
The Weather Makers is the first solo exhibition in Scotland by Canadian artist Kelly Richardson and is programmed as part of Dundee Contemporary Arts’ Discovery Film Festival. Richardson creates hyper-real digital films of rich and complex landscapes that have been manipulated using CGI, animation and sound. Weaving together myth and metaphor with scientific research and new digital technologies, The Weather Makers will present three large-scale video works alongside a new print series.
The exhibition asks the viewer to consider what the future might look like if we continue on our current trajectory of planetary pillaging and consumption, and why we have allowed ourselves to arrive at such a moment of global environmental crisis.
Mariner 9 (2012), Kelly Richardson
A 12-metre-long panoramic view of a Martian landscape set hundreds of years in the future, Mariner 9 (2012) presented in this partnership between Dundee Contemporary Arts and NEoN Digital Arts Festival, evokes the human search for life beyond our own planet that continues even as we damage or destroy entire ecosystems on Earth. This vast video work was created using scenery-generation software employed by the film and gaming industries in combination with technical data from NASA’s missions to Mars to produce a faithful artist’s rendering of Martian terrain, populated by the debris from centuries of exploration.
In Orion Tide (2013-14), Richardson presents a desert punctuated by spurts of light and smoke repeatedly launching into the dark night sky. The viewer is left to question what these rocket-like movements are; why they have been launched; and who or what they are carrying. They could be departing explorers searching for a new world or perhaps the escape of a group of planetary refugees, a mass exodus of humanity.
In Leviathan (2011), a 20-minute loop of footage shot on Caddo Lake in Uncertain, Texas displays the region’s unique bald cypress trees in their swamp environment. Filmed from a single vantage point, like a painting set in motion, Richardson has digitally enhanced the nearly monochromatic setting with strange yellow tendrils of light, undulating and twisting beneath the water, hinting at an undiscovered or mutated bioluminant life-form, or perhaps the aftermath of something altogether more disturbing.
Accompanying the exhibition’s large-scale video works will be Richardson’s latest series of chromogenic prints, Pillars of Dawn, which present images of an imaginary desert in which trees and terrain have been physically crystallised by changes in the environment.
As part of NEoN Digital Arts Festival, Kelly has also been invited to curate an exhibition of digital art making reference to both her own immersive landscape work and the festival theme of Media Archaeology. That exhibition will run in Centrespace in the Visual Research Centre on the lower ground floor of DCA, open from Sat 11 November – Sun 19 November 2017.
Richardson currently lives and works on Vancouver Island where she is Associate Professor in Visual Arts at the University of Victoria. Her work is held in many major international collections including the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, SMoCA and Albright-Knox Art Gallery to the National Gallery of Canada, Art Gallery of Ontario, Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal, Arts Council Collection England and Towner, Eastbourne.
Her work has been selected for the Beijing, Busan, Canadian, Gwangiu and Montreal biennales, and recent solo exhibitions include SMoCA, CAG Vancouver, VOID Derry, Naturhistorisches Museum Wien, and a major survey at the Albright-Knox.
Supported by the High Commission of Canada to the United Kingdom
SCAN Tour
Images: Kathryn Rattray Photography