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The Tinkering Studio organized the Exploratorium booth at Maker Faire 2015, inviting visitors to build Chain Reactions with us.
Ben Kaufman, Founder and CEO of Quirky (center) and Alex Tepper (Global Director of Innovation at GE), left) at the W2NYC 'Makers Evening' at the QUIRKY offices in NYC.
Photo taken at Maker Faire NoVa, which was held at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia on March 18, 2018.
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.
Once again the Bay Area LEGO Users' Group had a large 2000 square foot exhibit at Maker Faire Bay Area in San Mateo, CA.
Model Brittany Jean from Cincinnati was one of the best models I ever worked with. She had a certain energy and ambition, and was so terrific to work with. She also possessed great beauty and elegance. She really understood vintage sentiments.
These were shot in studio using twinned Canon Powershot cameras. Stereo pairs were made using Stereo Photo Maker. There may be some window violation on a couple images.
I believe in getting the shot 'in camera'; trying to have bubbles flying around while also directing the model was challenging. The water and 'tub' were also real; I bought a half barrel at a local store, and then finished it with stain and paint. The inside had a large plastic liner I fashioned from some other landscaping item. I enjoyed the process of concepting and executing the shoot as much as the shoot itself.
It was a very long, full, and productive shoot. We did many studio looks, then met later in Dayton where I shot more photos of her with my 1956 VW Karmann Ghia (seen elsewhere in this album). It was one of the best shooting days I ever had.
L’area espositiva RUFA, curata da Claudio Spuri e Alessandro Ciancio, ha ospitato l’esposizione delle opere di Gaia Improta, Ghofran Elrayas, Claudia Matarazzi, Arianna Piantedosi, Maria Gavrilova, Elisa Quadrini, Margherita Belli, Nunzia Campana, Mattia Alongi, Antonio Reda coordinati dai docenti Emanuele Tarducci, Paolo Parea e Giorgio Marcatili.
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.
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.
The history of Western psychiatry is replete with mistakes as well as successes. Currently, high-income countries desperately need reforms to enhance the effectiveness, efficiency and availability of behavioral health care (relating to mental functioning and substance use). Meanwhile, developing behavioral health systems in low- and middle-income countries presents major challenges to policy makers. Unmet behavioral health needs and burdens are enormous, but as change occurs, there is the danger that Western mistakes will be repeated.
We need to review bio-psycho-social understandings and see how these may be implemented most effectively in the context of diverse cultures, beliefs and values. Innovations in service delivery, taking advantage of upcoming and adapted technologies, offer opportunities which should be assessed in ways appropriate to those different contexts. We also need to explore how patients’ interests, rights and preferences may be best elicited, protected and acted upon, consistent with institutional and legal norms informed by health care delivery science. Both aspects are key to determining how health systems’ capacity can be built most economically and effectively, and how ‘patients’ can be ‘agents’ in their own behavioral health care.
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.
The Portland Mini Maker Faire is presented by OMSI and Make: Magazine, and supported by ESCO. It celebrates the Maker movement and brings together Makers of all fields with the goal of supporting grassroots innovation in the community.
Museum of Contemporary Craft and PNCA had two activities at this year’s Mini Maker Faire. MoCC + PNCA’s Continuing Education department provided a hand’s on mask-making activity and participants learned what's coming up at the museum and saw what fun and making awaits them at the Museum or in a CE class.
PNCA’s make + think + code lab was on hand to provide a basic understanding of how 3D printing technology works. Utilizing 3Doodler pens, visitors made 3D printed objects by hand, enabling them to gain a new perspective into the blooming field of 3D Printing and fabrication. Photos by Sara Kaltwasser.