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(from last night - we're having leftovers tonight!)

 

Yay! Cranberries are available again so we can make our favorite pressure cooker recipe. It's so tasty...it has cranberries, orange juice, pumpkin pie spice and a little red chili flakes. It's tangy, a little sweet and a little spicy too!

 

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making of das modelos Valeria Souza e Fernanda Torres para o site DreamCam

Bury, UK

Elle écrit. Bury, Angleterre

To see more of this custom, visit ---> www.mintconditioncustom.com/custom-mortal-kombat-light-up...

  

In continuing with my project of making Mortal Kombat prop replicas, and with being tasked with doing things I’ve never done before, I was asked to make a fireball, similar to the ones that Liu Kang fires from his hands in the game. The two caveats of the project was that it had to be able to look like it was shooting from your hand, and it had to light up. Not a problem, per se. I know how to wire LED circuits, and I had a pretty good idea of how to start, so I went at it.

 

The “skeleton” of the fireball is made from aluminim foil. The lights are actually from a strong LED strip that you attach to cars. I picked it up at my local Auto Zone. It’s expensive, but worth it for what I needed. I just had to rewire it so it hooked up to a switch and then to the battery so it could be turned on and off. Luckily the back of the LED strip had glue on it and so I just wrapped it around the aluminum foil skeleton, more or less guessing where everything was going to sit at this point.

 

Then I began anchoring everything with hot glue. It was the only thing I could think to use to make it clear, and it’s inexpensive and easy to work with. But I definitely had to use a lot of hot glue for this. Slowly, but surely, it began to take shape. I made sure not to cover the switch, and to leave space for a battery compartment. The battery compartment was constructed from clear styrene with the top covered in hot glue. It’s held in place by friction and holds nicely. The battery doesn’t fall out at all, and the compartment is easy to remove.

 

After that, I made the wrist mount. I used a metal doll stand and bent it to the shape of a wrist and palm. The big c-clip goes around the wrist. I covered it in foam for comfort, and used some velcro straps for support. It’s easy to remove, is comfortable, and can easily be covered up in a costume. Then I made sure the end of the fireball had room for the mount to slip into. And after the glue was all cool, I painted it using clear yellow, orange, and red. I was trying to give a good balance so it looked good with the lights on and the lights off. And then it was complete. It fit great on the wrist mount, wasn’t too heavy, and looked pretty darn cool with the lights turned on! I probably could have done better with hiding the switch, but I had never done anything like this before, and I really wanted to make sure it could be turned on and off. Overall, I’m happy with how this very strange experiment turned out.

This photograph was taken on the 25th May 2015 at the 1940's Weekend on the East Lancashire Railway. I decided to take a short walk outside Ramsbottom Railway Station and follow the railway so I could get a different angle because I had already seen a path [from the train] you could just walk along which looked promising. The locomotive is LMS 2-6-0 No.13065 which was built at Crewe Works, England in 1927. Between 1926 and 1932 there was 245 of this type of steam train made; of which sadly to say that this only one out of three which has survived as the rest where scrapped by British Railways.

Forecast for money showers!

 

Nikon D90 | 35 mm f/1.8 | 1/200 sec at f/1.8 | 35mm | 1600 ISO

The log flume, Gt. Yarmouth Pleasure Beach, Norfolk.

 

See where this picture was taken. [?]

making-off / Quemepongo.com fashion photoshooting (2008)

Collaboratively, a mostly at a time.

Mark Newton, Neil Bond, Tony Ballantyne, Eric Brown, Roy Gray, Ian Whates

Sesión fotográfica realizada el 7 de Febrero de 2012, durante la celebración de la feria de Cevisama y que formarán parte de la nueva campaña 2012 / 13.

 

Fotógrafia: Enríc Perez

Ayudántes de fotografía: Carolina y Sergi.

Dirección creativa: Juan Martinez estudio.

Dirección de Arte: Juan Martínez.

Producción: Maria Martínez.

Maquillaje y peluquería: Kuki.

Estilismo: Begoña Buqué y Angeles Casanova.

Modelos: Ramón, Marina, Manolo, Jesus, Kyra y Elisa.

Model Making by Megan Werner, published by Princeton Architectural Press as part of the Architecture Briefs series.

Book cover.

Visiting ER Pahvityö to manufacture box for About:Blank Folding Chair

Campers in the Outfitters - Bowhunting Skills program learned about blinds and how to make one.

while the sun shines. Photo copyright Pat Adams

A guy blowing bubbles in the Baltimore Bubble Parade. Baltimore, MD.

Between lemons, add a layer of salt, and spices if you're using them.

 

Blog post

With the North Sea and Coquet Island in the background, DB Cargo 66087 approaches Alnmouth with 6X55 from Tyne Yard to Chathill conveying points and ballast for track renewal work in the Belford area on 24.09.2016.

Making Faces marquee inside ImageWorks at Journey into Imagination pavilion in Future World at EPCOT Center.

making kit for fractal studies in pink and blue

sculptures by Alfonso Vieira

Watching the water move in the river nearby our little 'hytte'.

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