View allAll Photos Tagged Manufacturing_process

The Password:JDM Dry Carbon Fiber Engine Cover for the 2013+ Subaru BRZ / Scion FR-S will clean up the look of your engine bay! Like all of our Dry Carbon parts we manufacture, this engine cover has been precision crafted for a perfect fitment every time. We have used a fade resistant resin during the manufacturing process to ensure this plug cover will always look & function as good as the day you bought it!

 

Includes all necessary mounting hardware.

  

Features include:

 

- Perfect dry carbon fitment with structural integrity

- high-heat, fade resistant resin fabrication process

- two options to choose from, dry carbon fiber and dry carbon kevlar

- Extreme lightweight to strength ratio

- Made in the USA

- Badass looks for your BRZ or FR-S engine bay!

This was a shot taken with my iPhone in Habana, Cuba. The cameras were prohibited, so this shot was kinda tricky to get. It was in the Partagas cigar factory, the oldest there is in Habana, Cuba, and also the largest one. This lady is in charge of the final process in the cigar manufacturing process, packing and labeling.

 

If you're wondering about the "Holga" effect, it's done automatically with the iPhone application called CameraBag, very cool little app, it's like having a polaroid/lomo/holga always in your pocket; the quality is not the best, but hey, that's what lomography is all about.

 

All About Steel tubing manufacturing process

 

View this album on Vimeo. Album created by amit paul.

At the Cup Noodles Museum, you can learn the secret of cup noodle and even have the opportunity to make one-of-a-kind ramen yourself.

 

Japanese food company Nissin operates this unique museum for Ramen.

 

The museum shows the 40 year product history as well as the founder, Mr. Ando Momofuku's creativity, by exhibiting 3,000 kinds of cup noodle packages.

 

They also recreate Mr. Ando Momofuku's humble research facility.

 

At "My Cup Noodle Factory," you can make your own cup noodle out of 5,460 soup base / topping combinations.

 

There is also "Cup Noodles Park", a playground for kids where they can experience the manufacturing process of Cup Noodle.

 

There is a "Chicken Ramen Factory" where you can make Chicken Ramen by hand, starting with kneading, spreading, and steaming the wheat flour and then drying it with the hot oil drying method. After experiencing the process that led to the invention of the world's first instant ramen, you can take your freshly made ramen with you and enjoy its delicious taste at home.

 

And of course you can enjoy global varieties of noodles in the contemporarily designed museum restaurant!

Juices Hayler - is a premium quality product. The juices have exquisite taste and aroma of natural fruits and are abundant in vitamins and minerals. The manufacturing process of juices is implemented by means of modern equipment. The established quality is according international standards.

Mascots with complex shapes and textures like Bobo can be replicated with high detail thanks to modern inflatable manufacturing processes.

(En) Founded in 1906, the Coking Plant of Anderlues was specialized in the production of coke for industrial use.

 

Coke was obtained by distillation of coal in furnaces and, thanks to its superior fuel coal properties, it was used afterwards to feed the blast furnaces in the steel manufacturing process.

 

Closed and abandoned since 2002, the site has since undergone many losses and damages, not including an important pollution. While some buildings have now been demolished, there are however still some important parts of the former coking plant.

 

Among them, the former coal tower, next to the imposing "battery" of 38 furnaces, where the coke was produced. Besides them, we still can see the administrative buildings, the power station with its cooling tower, and buildings for the by-products, which were obtained by recovering the tar and coal gas. There are also a gasometer north side, the coal tip east side and a settling basin south side.

 

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(Fr) Fondées en 1906, les Cokeries d'Anderlues étaient spécialisées dans la fabrication de coke à usage industriel.

 

Le coke était obtenu par distillation de la houille dans des fours et, grâce à ses propriétés combustibles supérieures au charbon, il servait par après à alimenter les hauts-fourneaux dans le processus de fabrication de l'acier.

 

Fermé et laissé à l'abandon depuis 2002, le site a depuis lors subi de nombreuses pertes et dégradations, sans compter la pollution qui y règne. Si certains bâtiments (comme l'ancien lavoir à charbon) ont aujourd'hui été démolis, on retrouve encore toutefois certaines parties importantes de cette ancienne cokerie.

 

Parmi celles-ci, l'ancienne tour à charbon suivie de près par l'imposante "batterie" de 38 fours, où était produit le coke. A côté d'eux, on découvre également les bâtiments administratifs, la centrale électrique avec sa tour de refroidissement, ainsi que les bâtiments des sous-produits, lesquels étaient obtenus par récupération du goudron et du gaz de houille. Et en périphérie, on retrouve un gazomètre côté nord, le terril à l'est et un bassin de décantation côté sud.

(En) Founded in 1906, the Coking Plant of Anderlues was specialized in the production of coke for industrial use.

 

Coke was obtained by distillation of coal in furnaces and, thanks to its superior fuel coal properties, it was used afterwards to feed the blast furnaces in the steel manufacturing process.

 

Closed and abandoned since 2002, the site has since undergone many losses and damages, not including an important pollution. While some buildings have now been demolished, there are however still some important parts of the former coking plant.

 

Among them, the former coal tower, next to the imposing "battery" of 38 furnaces, where the coke was produced. Besides them, we still can see the administrative buildings, the power station with its cooling tower, and buildings for the by-products, which were obtained by recovering the tar and coal gas. There are also a gasometer north side, the coal tip east side and a settling basin south side.

 

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(Fr) Fondées en 1906, les Cokeries d'Anderlues étaient spécialisées dans la fabrication de coke à usage industriel.

 

Le coke était obtenu par distillation de la houille dans des fours et, grâce à ses propriétés combustibles supérieures au charbon, il servait par après à alimenter les hauts-fourneaux dans le processus de fabrication de l'acier.

 

Fermé et laissé à l'abandon depuis 2002, le site a depuis lors subi de nombreuses pertes et dégradations, sans compter la pollution qui y règne. Si certains bâtiments (comme l'ancien lavoir à charbon) ont aujourd'hui été démolis, on retrouve encore toutefois certaines parties importantes de cette ancienne cokerie.

 

Parmi celles-ci, l'ancienne tour à charbon suivie de près par l'imposante "batterie" de 38 fours, où était produit le coke. A côté d'eux, on découvre également les bâtiments administratifs, la centrale électrique avec sa tour de refroidissement, ainsi que les bâtiments des sous-produits, lesquels étaient obtenus par récupération du goudron et du gaz de houille. Et en périphérie, on retrouve un gazomètre côté nord, le terril à l'est et un bassin de décantation côté sud.

New spatial search dialog box in Manufacturing Process Planner provides more precise control of the search bounding box for cross-boundary and in-boundary results from complex assemblies.

Eight-cylinder engine components for the Ferrari 488 GTB, 2015

 

Ferrari: Under the Skin (November 2017 to April 2018)

In an Italy ravaged by the Second World War, Enzo Ferrari and a small team decided to create the perfect racing machine. The exhibition will explore Ferrari’s powerful personality, the design and manufacturing process, the famous clientele and the future of the luxury car brand.

From the very first Ferrari to Michael Schumacher’s winning Formula One car and the newest hybrid model, the exhibition features rare cars and memorabilia displayed in public for the first time. Discover the Ferrari experience through original hand-drawn sketches, sculpture-like models and engines, alongside films and interviews telling one of the great design stories of all time.

[Design Museum]

 

In the Design Museum

Quality Assurance is key in the manufacturing process.

(En) Founded in 1906, the Coking Plant of Anderlues was specialized in the production of coke for industrial use.

 

Coke was obtained by distillation of coal in furnaces and, thanks to its superior fuel coal properties, it was used afterwards to feed the blast furnaces in the steel manufacturing process.

 

Closed and abandoned since 2002, the site has since undergone many losses and damages, not including an important pollution. While some buildings have now been demolished, there are however still some important parts of the former coking plant.

 

Among them, the former coal tower, next to the imposing "battery" of 38 furnaces, where the coke was produced. Besides them, we still can see the administrative buildings, the power station with its cooling tower, and buildings for the by-products, which were obtained by recovering the tar and coal gas. There are also a gasometer north side, the coal tip east side and a settling basin south side.

 

-----------

 

(Fr) Fondées en 1906, les Cokeries d'Anderlues étaient spécialisées dans la fabrication de coke à usage industriel.

 

Le coke était obtenu par distillation de la houille dans des fours et, grâce à ses propriétés combustibles supérieures au charbon, il servait par après à alimenter les hauts-fourneaux dans le processus de fabrication de l'acier.

 

Fermé et laissé à l'abandon depuis 2002, le site a depuis lors subi de nombreuses pertes et dégradations, sans compter la pollution qui y règne. Si certains bâtiments (comme l'ancien lavoir à charbon) ont aujourd'hui été démolis, on retrouve encore toutefois certaines parties importantes de cette ancienne cokerie.

 

Parmi celles-ci, l'ancienne tour à charbon suivie de près par l'imposante "batterie" de 38 fours, où était produit le coke. A côté d'eux, on découvre également les bâtiments administratifs, la centrale électrique avec sa tour de refroidissement, ainsi que les bâtiments des sous-produits, lesquels étaient obtenus par récupération du goudron et du gaz de houille. Et en périphérie, on retrouve un gazomètre côté nord, le terril à l'est et un bassin de décantation côté sud.

In an age where the Internet of Things (IoT) meets the manufacturing process, tampering and reverse-engineering become an aspect no one can any longer ignore. At the Automatisierungstreff 2014, Wibu-Systems has offered its technological expertise in product know-how protection. www.wibu.com/en/whitepapers.html

back of cap is damaged - could have been done during the manufacturing process...

 

John William Delveaux (b. March 15, 1937 in Chicago, Illinois) was a Canadian football fullback and linebacker who played for the Winnipeg Blue Bombers from 1959 to 1964, a team which won the Grey Cup in 1959, 1961 and 1962.

 

Delveaux played college football at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign and was their team captain. He joined the Blue Bombers in 1959 and played both offense and defense. In the 1961 Canadian Football League season, he replaced an injured Charlie Shepard as the punter and did a commendable job in the team's Grey Cup victory. In 1962, he became their regular punter up to his final year, averaging 42.1 yards per punt over 5 years. As a linebacker, he intercepted 9 balls in his career, 4 of which in 1962, and recovered 4 fumbles.

 

Positions - FB / LB / P

Height - 6 ft 1 in

Weight - 220 lbs

 

Link to his CFL stats - www.justsportsstats.com/footballstatsindex.php?player_id=...

 

Link to some of his issued football cards - www.footballcardgallery.com/search.php?search=jack+Delveaux

 

Embossed writing on the back of this coin (type 2 back / dark blue cap) - POTATO CHIPS / NALLEY'S / AND SNACKS * SAVE A COMPLETE SET OF 100 WESTERN CONFERENCE FOOTBALL STARS

(En) Founded in 1906, the Coking Plant of Anderlues was specialized in the production of coke for industrial use.

 

Coke was obtained by distillation of coal in furnaces and, thanks to its superior fuel coal properties, it was used afterwards to feed the blast furnaces in the steel manufacturing process.

 

Closed and abandoned since 2002, the site has since undergone many losses and damages, not including an important pollution. While some buildings have now been demolished, there are however still some important parts of the former coking plant.

 

Among them, the former coal tower, next to the imposing "battery" of 38 furnaces, where the coke was produced. Besides them, we still can see the administrative buildings, the power station with its cooling tower, and buildings for the by-products, which were obtained by recovering the tar and coal gas. There are also a gasometer north side, the coal tip east side and a settling basin south side.

 

-----------

 

(Fr) Fondées en 1906, les Cokeries d'Anderlues étaient spécialisées dans la fabrication de coke à usage industriel.

 

Le coke était obtenu par distillation de la houille dans des fours et, grâce à ses propriétés combustibles supérieures au charbon, il servait par après à alimenter les hauts-fourneaux dans le processus de fabrication de l'acier.

 

Fermé et laissé à l'abandon depuis 2002, le site a depuis lors subi de nombreuses pertes et dégradations, sans compter la pollution qui y règne. Si certains bâtiments (comme l'ancien lavoir à charbon) ont aujourd'hui été démolis, on retrouve encore toutefois certaines parties importantes de cette ancienne cokerie.

 

Parmi celles-ci, l'ancienne tour à charbon suivie de près par l'imposante "batterie" de 38 fours, où était produit le coke. A côté d'eux, on découvre également les bâtiments administratifs, la centrale électrique avec sa tour de refroidissement, ainsi que les bâtiments des sous-produits, lesquels étaient obtenus par récupération du goudron et du gaz de houille. Et en périphérie, on retrouve un gazomètre côté nord, le terril à l'est et un bassin de décantation côté sud.

A view over Dean Clough with "D" Mill on the left and "E" Mill on the right. Both mills were originally built by the Crossleys for various carpet manufacturing processes. The stone circle in the bottom left hand corner of the photo marks the site of a recently-excavated railway wagon turntable. The Dean Clough complex was rail-connected (from the Ovenden and Queensbury GN line) by means of a tunnel under the buildings to my left. Railway tracks ran both straight ahead and to the right along the roadways, to enable materials to be distributed to the various different mills. This would have included coal for the boilers and wool for spinning, weaving into carpets etc.

At the Cup Noodles Museum, you can learn the secret of cup noodle and even have the opportunity to make one-of-a-kind ramen yourself.

 

Japanese food company Nissin operates this unique museum for Ramen.

 

The museum shows the 40 year product history as well as the founder, Mr. Ando Momofuku's creativity, by exhibiting 3,000 kinds of cup noodle packages.

 

They also recreate Mr. Ando Momofuku's humble research facility.

 

At "My Cup Noodle Factory," you can make your own cup noodle out of 5,460 soup base / topping combinations.

 

There is also "Cup Noodles Park", a playground for kids where they can experience the manufacturing process of Cup Noodle.

 

There is a "Chicken Ramen Factory" where you can make Chicken Ramen by hand, starting with kneading, spreading, and steaming the wheat flour and then drying it with the hot oil drying method. After experiencing the process that led to the invention of the world's first instant ramen, you can take your freshly made ramen with you and enjoy its delicious taste at home.

 

And of course you can enjoy global varieties of noodles in the contemporarily designed museum restaurant!

This is Beyoncé's head in the manufacturing process...

(En) Founded in 1906, the Coking Plant of Anderlues was specialized in the production of coke for industrial use.

 

Coke was obtained by distillation of coal in furnaces and, thanks to its superior fuel coal properties, it was used afterwards to feed the blast furnaces in the steel manufacturing process.

 

Closed and abandoned since 2002, the site has since undergone many losses and damages, not including an important pollution. While some buildings have now been demolished, there are however still some important parts of the former coking plant.

 

Among them, the former coal tower, next to the imposing "battery" of 38 furnaces, where the coke was produced. Besides them, we still can see the administrative buildings, the power station with its cooling tower, and buildings for the by-products, which were obtained by recovering the tar and coal gas. There are also a gasometer north side, the coal tip east side and a settling basin south side.

 

-----------

 

(Fr) Fondées en 1906, les Cokeries d'Anderlues étaient spécialisées dans la fabrication de coke à usage industriel.

 

Le coke était obtenu par distillation de la houille dans des fours et, grâce à ses propriétés combustibles supérieures au charbon, il servait par après à alimenter les hauts-fourneaux dans le processus de fabrication de l'acier.

 

Fermé et laissé à l'abandon depuis 2002, le site a depuis lors subi de nombreuses pertes et dégradations, sans compter la pollution qui y règne. Si certains bâtiments (comme l'ancien lavoir à charbon) ont aujourd'hui été démolis, on retrouve encore toutefois certaines parties importantes de cette ancienne cokerie.

 

Parmi celles-ci, l'ancienne tour à charbon suivie de près par l'imposante "batterie" de 38 fours, où était produit le coke. A côté d'eux, on découvre également les bâtiments administratifs, la centrale électrique avec sa tour de refroidissement, ainsi que les bâtiments des sous-produits, lesquels étaient obtenus par récupération du goudron et du gaz de houille. Et en périphérie, on retrouve un gazomètre côté nord, le terril à l'est et un bassin de décantation côté sud.

Custom Presentation Folder / Pocket Folder with Brochure Insert

 

Type of Paper: 80# Diamond Gloss Cover - FSC

Printing Process: Offset Printing

Number of Colors: 7/7 Overall Satin Aqueous Coating

Binding: Trim, Score, Fold and Pack

Page Size: 25.5" x 11"

Finished Size: 8.5" x 11"

 

This presentation folder and brochure had very tricky cross page line ups. We spent the time to make sure all line ups we accounted for in all manufacturing processes.

The Password:JDM Dry Carbon Fiber Engine Cover for the 2013+ Subaru BRZ / Scion FR-S will clean up the look of your engine bay! Like all of our Dry Carbon parts we manufacture, this engine cover has been precision crafted for a perfect fitment every time. We have used a fade resistant resin during the manufacturing process to ensure this plug cover will always look & function as good as the day you bought it!

 

Includes all necessary mounting hardware.

  

Features include:

 

- Perfect dry carbon fitment with structural integrity

- high-heat, fade resistant resin fabrication process

- two options to choose from, dry carbon fiber and dry carbon kevlar

- Extreme lightweight to strength ratio

- Made in the USA

- Badass looks for your BRZ or FR-S engine bay!

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (May 10, 2017) – Hans-Mill Corporation, one of the nation’s leading manufacturers of metal and plastic household products, will soon open a state-of-the-art manufacturing center near JAXPORT’s North Jacksonville marine terminals. The 121,000-square-foot facility will be used for manufacturing, assembling and distributing stainless steel trash cans and plastic household products sold at major retailers around the world.

 

Hans-Mill will use JAXPORT to import materials used in its manufacturing process from Asia, as well as for the import of finished goods for U.S. distribution. In addition, the company has been granted permission to operate within JAXPORT’s Foreign Trade Zone No. 64. The facility, which already serves as the company’s headquarters, represents an $11 million investment in Northeast Florida and creates 23 new, direct jobs.

 

“The efficiencies Northeast Florida provides have allowed us to bring some of the manufacturing that is traditionally done overseas back to the United States,” said Kenneth Ubillus, Hans-Mill Director of Operations. “We felt welcome in Jacksonville from the very beginning and look forward to being a visible part of this community.”

 

“Hans-Mill’s decision to invest here highlights the many advantages we offer the industry,” said Eric Green, JAXPORT interim CEO. “Excellent ocean service options from Asia, cost-effective transportation, 60 million plus consumers nearby and a business-friendly environment, all continue to attract manufacturing here.”

 

Hans-Mill joins other household names, including Michaels Stores, Inc., Coach, Inc. and Bacardi Limited, in taking advantage of FTZ No. 64’s cost savings and streamlined Customs processes.

  

(En) Founded in 1906, the Coking Plant of Anderlues was specialized in the production of coke for industrial use.

 

Coke was obtained by distillation of coal in furnaces and, thanks to its superior fuel coal properties, it was used afterwards to feed the blast furnaces in the steel manufacturing process.

 

Closed and abandoned since 2002, the site has since undergone many losses and damages, not including an important pollution. While some buildings have now been demolished, there are however still some important parts of the former coking plant.

 

Among them, the former coal tower, next to the imposing "battery" of 38 furnaces, where the coke was produced. Besides them, we still can see the administrative buildings, the power station with its cooling tower, and buildings for the by-products, which were obtained by recovering the tar and coal gas. There are also a gasometer north side, the coal tip east side and a settling basin south side.

 

-----------

 

(Fr) Fondées en 1906, les Cokeries d'Anderlues étaient spécialisées dans la fabrication de coke à usage industriel.

 

Le coke était obtenu par distillation de la houille dans des fours et, grâce à ses propriétés combustibles supérieures au charbon, il servait par après à alimenter les hauts-fourneaux dans le processus de fabrication de l'acier.

 

Fermé et laissé à l'abandon depuis 2002, le site a depuis lors subi de nombreuses pertes et dégradations, sans compter la pollution qui y règne. Si certains bâtiments (comme l'ancien lavoir à charbon) ont aujourd'hui été démolis, on retrouve encore toutefois certaines parties importantes de cette ancienne cokerie.

 

Parmi celles-ci, l'ancienne tour à charbon suivie de près par l'imposante "batterie" de 38 fours, où était produit le coke. A côté d'eux, on découvre également les bâtiments administratifs, la centrale électrique avec sa tour de refroidissement, ainsi que les bâtiments des sous-produits, lesquels étaient obtenus par récupération du goudron et du gaz de houille. Et en périphérie, on retrouve un gazomètre côté nord, le terril à l'est et un bassin de décantation côté sud.

NINGBO INNOVAW MECHANICAL CO., LTD is a professional manufacturer of casting and machined parts which are widely used for Automotive, petroleum, medical, earth mover, electricity and lighting Industry. Die Casting is a manufacturing process in which the molten metal is poured into the mold under high pressure and the pressure remains on the mold till the hot metal hardens. icasting-machining.com/technology/die-casting

Syrup Manufacturing Plant,Liquid Syrup Plant,Manufacturing Plant, Pharmaceutical syrup manufacturing process,Sugar syrup manufacturing plant-Prism Pharma Machinery,Ahmedabad,Gujarat,India.

For more detail visit us at : www.liquidsyrupmanufacturingplant.com

Single source of product and process data in Teamcenter now in a more intuitive and powerful user interface

 

EXHIBITION

100 Best Posters 14

GERMANY, AUSTRIA, SWITZERLAND

MI, MO 11/11/2015, 03/28/2016

MAK Art Print Hall

Already for the tenth time, the MAK in the exhibition 100 Best Posters 14. Germany Austria Switzerland shows the hundred most compelling design concepts in the probably hottest medium of visual everyday culture: the poster. The current winning projects of the popular graphic design competition are characterized by an enigmatic pictural humor, explosive colors as well as precise designs and demonstrate impressively that a poster can be more than just an banal advertising space. Many of the award-winning works furthermore also rely on a subtle play with typography. Innovative ideas can also be found in the manufacturing process: This year's competition shows that you can readily knit posters in high-tech process or use a thermo-insulating space blanket as carrier material for screen printing.

Hardly any medium is such clocked on the consumption and nevertheless sets trends at the cutting edge. "[...] The poster designer challenges himself repeatedly and enjoys himself at gained symbols." Says Götz Gramlich, President of the association 100 Best Posters eV, and he postulats. "A good poster unfolds in the mind of the beholder."

From over 1 800 submitted individual posters, composed of contract work, self-initiated posters/self-promotion as well as student project orders from Germany, Austria and Switzerland, awarded the international jury, consisting of Richard van der Laken (Amsterdam, Chairman), Christof Nardin (Wien), Jiri Oplatek (Basel), Nicolaus Ott (Berlin) and Ariane Spanier (Berlin), the 100 winning posters of the year 2014.

In the competition participated 575 submitters (men and women), of which 48 are from Austria, 128 from Switzerland and 399 from Germany. The leader among the winning 100 best is Switzerland with 51 winning projects, followed by 44 German and 5 Austrian contributions.

The by sensomatic design (Christine Zmölnig and Florian Koch, Vienna) designed catalog offers in addition to the illustrations of all the winning posters and the contacts with the designers also this year a captivating essay by Thomas Friedrich: On the dialectics of image and text in the poster today. In a concise way, he looks at the contextuality of posters and explains the theme facetiously and pictorially based on a poster for a bullfight. Read more in the catalog!

For the corporate design of this year's competition and the new Web Visuals also sensomatic design, Vienna, is responsible. Since June 2014, the new online archive on the homepage of the 100 Best Posters Registered Association offers a comprehensive overview of all award-winning works from the years 2001-2014.

The exhibition takes place in cooperation with 100 Best Posters e. V.

100-beste-plakate.de

Curator Peter Klinger, Deputy Head of the MAK Library and Works on Paper Collection

 

AUSSTELLUNG

100 Beste Plakate 14

DEUTSCHLAND ÖSTERREICH SCHWEIZ

MI, 11.11.2015–MO, 28.03.2016

MAK-KUNSTBLÄTTERSAAL

Bereits zum zehnten Mal zeigt das MAK in der Ausstellung 100 BESTE PLAKATE 14. Deutschland Österreich Schweiz die einhundert überzeugendsten Gestaltungskonzepte im wohl heißesten Medium der visuellen Alltagskultur: dem Plakat. Die aktuellen Siegerprojekte des beliebten Grafikdesignwettbewerbs bestechen mit hintergründigem Bildwitz, explosiver Farbgebung sowie exakten Ausführungen und demonstrieren eindrücklich, dass ein Plakat mehr als nur banale Werbefläche sein kann. Viele der prämierten Arbeiten setzen außerdem auf ein subtiles Spiel mit Typografie. Innovative Ideen finden sich auch im Herstellungsprozess: Der diesjährige Wettbewerb zeigt, dass man Plakate ohne Weiteres im Hightech-Verfahren stricken oder eine thermo-isolierende Rettungsdecke als Trägermaterial für einen Siebdruck verwenden kann.

Kaum ein Medium ist derart auf den Verbrauch hin getaktet und setzt dennoch Trends am Puls der Zeit. „[…] der Plakatgestalter fordert sich immer wieder selbst heraus und erfreut sich an gewonnenen Sinnbildern.“ so Götz Gramlich, Präsident des Vereins 100 Beste Plakate e. V., und er postuliert: „Ein gutes Plakat entfaltet sich im Kopf des Betrachters.“

Aus über 1 800 eingereichten Einzelplakaten, zusammengesetzt aus Auftragsarbeiten, selbst initiierten Plakaten/Eigenwerbungen sowie studentischen Projektaufträgen aus Deutschland, Österreich und der Schweiz, prämierte die international besetzte Fachjury, bestehend aus Richard van der Laken (Amsterdam, Vorsitz), Christof Nardin (Wien), Jiri Oplatek (Basel), Nicolaus Ott (Berlin) und Ariane Spanier (Berlin), die 100 Siegerplakate des Jahres 2014.

Am Wettbewerb hatten sich 575 EinreicherInnen beteiligt, davon 48 aus Österreich, 128 aus der Schweiz und 399 aus Deutschland. Spitzenreiter unter den prämierten 100 Besten ist die Schweiz mit 51 Siegerprojekten, gefolgt von 44 deutschen und 5 österreichischen Beiträgen.

Der von sensomatic design (Christine Zmölnig und Florian Koch, Wien) gestaltete Katalog bietet neben den Abbildungen aller Siegerplakate und den Kontakten zu den GestalterInnen auch dieses Jahr einen bestechenden Aufsatz von Thomas Friedrich: Zur Dialektik von Bild und Text im Plakat heute. In pointierter Form geht er auf die Kontextualität von Plakaten ein und erklärt das Thema witzig und bildhaft anhand eines Plakats für einen Stierkampf. Mehr dazu im Katalog!

Für das Corporate Design des diesjährigen Wettbewerbs und die neuen Web-Visuals zeichnet ebenfalls sensomatic design, Wien, verantwortlich. Seit Juni 2014 bietet das neue Online-Archiv auf der Homepage der 100 Beste Plakate e. V. einen umfassenden Überblick aller prämierten Arbeiten aus den Jahren 2001 bis 2014.

Die Ausstellung findet in Kooperation mit 100 Beste Plakate e. V. statt.

100-beste-plakate.de

Kurator: Peter Klinger, Stellvertretende Leitung MAK-Bibliothek und Kunstblättersammlung

www.mak.at/programm/ausstellungen?set-ad=y&event_id=1...

Florence Regional Arts Alliance. Someone from a business in town has a way of casting sand mixed with a binder into various forms. I think they were looking to promote this as a "creative" activity. I have my reservations. To me the creative part is in the design and making of the molds, after that casting becomes more of a manufacturing process.

R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Buildings 2-1 and 2-2 meet Criterion A for local industrial significance. Due to spatial constraints at the company’s downtown Winston-Salem location, the expansive three-story-on-basement Buildings 2-1 (1937) and 2-2 (ca. 1955) were erected at RJR’s satellite facility known as “Tiretown,” three miles north of the city’s center. Building 2-1 housed two essential elements of the tobacco manufacturing process: stemming and redrying, both necessary to reduce leaves to strips that could be incorporated into tobacco products. Building 2-1 supplied ample space for improved stemming machines and vacuum chambers introduced during the late 1930s. Building 2-2’s completion provided more square footage for the redrying process and allowed for the installation of more advanced equipment, thus increasing efficiency. Buildings 2-1 and 2-2 appear to be the city’s only extant R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company structures constructed primarily for these purposes.

Greneker is working with the Los Angeles Community Redevelopment Agency on its Cleantech Development Strategy. A founding member of the LA Cleantech Incubator, Greneker is using the experience the company gained through the development of sustainable soy-system mannequins, forms, and fixtures and its 85% post-consumer recycled-content engineered stone, Grenite, to mentor and assist the development of new clean technologies, products, and manufacturing processes in Los Angeles. Greneker CEO Erik Johnson joined EPA administrator Lisa Jackson for a day-long roundtable discussion about the future of clean technologies in Los Angeles; he will further discussions with administration members in Washington, D.C.

At the Cup Noodles Museum, you can learn the secret of cup noodle and even have the opportunity to make one-of-a-kind ramen yourself.

 

Japanese food company Nissin operates this unique museum for Ramen.

 

The museum shows the 40 year product history as well as the founder, Mr. Ando Momofuku's creativity, by exhibiting 3,000 kinds of cup noodle packages.

 

They also recreate Mr. Ando Momofuku's humble research facility.

 

At "My Cup Noodle Factory," you can make your own cup noodle out of 5,460 soup base / topping combinations.

 

There is also "Cup Noodles Park", a playground for kids where they can experience the manufacturing process of Cup Noodle.

 

There is a "Chicken Ramen Factory" where you can make Chicken Ramen by hand, starting with kneading, spreading, and steaming the wheat flour and then drying it with the hot oil drying method. After experiencing the process that led to the invention of the world's first instant ramen, you can take your freshly made ramen with you and enjoy its delicious taste at home.

 

And of course you can enjoy global varieties of noodles in the contemporarily designed museum restaurant!

(En) Founded in 1906, the Coking Plant of Anderlues was specialized in the production of coke for industrial use.

 

Coke was obtained by distillation of coal in furnaces and, thanks to its superior fuel coal properties, it was used afterwards to feed the blast furnaces in the steel manufacturing process.

 

Closed and abandoned since 2002, the site has since undergone many losses and damages, not including an important pollution. While some buildings have now been demolished, there are however still some important parts of the former coking plant.

 

Among them, the former coal tower, next to the imposing "battery" of 38 furnaces, where the coke was produced. Besides them, we still can see the administrative buildings, the power station with its cooling tower, and buildings for the by-products, which were obtained by recovering the tar and coal gas. There are also a gasometer north side, the coal tip east side and a settling basin south side.

 

-----------

 

(Fr) Fondées en 1906, les Cokeries d'Anderlues étaient spécialisées dans la fabrication de coke à usage industriel.

 

Le coke était obtenu par distillation de la houille dans des fours et, grâce à ses propriétés combustibles supérieures au charbon, il servait par après à alimenter les hauts-fourneaux dans le processus de fabrication de l'acier.

 

Fermé et laissé à l'abandon depuis 2002, le site a depuis lors subi de nombreuses pertes et dégradations, sans compter la pollution qui y règne. Si certains bâtiments (comme l'ancien lavoir à charbon) ont aujourd'hui été démolis, on retrouve encore toutefois certaines parties importantes de cette ancienne cokerie.

 

Parmi celles-ci, l'ancienne tour à charbon suivie de près par l'imposante "batterie" de 38 fours, où était produit le coke. A côté d'eux, on découvre également les bâtiments administratifs, la centrale électrique avec sa tour de refroidissement, ainsi que les bâtiments des sous-produits, lesquels étaient obtenus par récupération du goudron et du gaz de houille. Et en périphérie, on retrouve un gazomètre côté nord, le terril à l'est et un bassin de décantation côté sud.

Sebastian Wrong is a British designer and creative director who specializes in contemporary manufacturing processes and materials, and possesses a passion for quality product fabrication — an interest evidenced in his work as the creative director of the London-based lighting manufacturer Wrong.London and his own progressive designs.

 

Wrong’s ergonomic chair formation, intended as communal seating, wraps an intricate textile around a hollowed steel frame. Fashioned from Nike Flyknit, the detailed skin celebrates Umberto Boccioni’s 1913 painting “Dynamism of a Soccer Player” and reflects Wrong’s own contemplation of Italian Futurism and the movement’s examination of modernity, speed and dynamism.

 

Wrong lives and works in London, England.

TomyTec series. This Prelude includes extra accessories like a rear spoiler and rear view mirrors that has to be installed. I don't understand why they couldn't been added during the manufacturing process.

The company was founded by John Dyson who began mining clay and making bricks in the early 1800s. From the very beginning the business was a success. The 1834 Sheffield trade directory lists - “John Dyson - Brick Maker, Stannington” which indicates that he ran the business on his own. However, by 1838 the business was listed as “John Dyson and Son - Black clay miners and firebrick manufacturers, Griffs House, Stannington.

 

Dyson's were manufacturers of Refractory material, ceramics for the steel industry, they also produce fire backs and other household ceramic bricks for the likes of Aga's etc. They have also been know to sell clay for use in Well Dressings.

 

Unfortunately Dyson's traditional manufacturing process relied heavily on gas fired kilns. With increased in energy costs the plants was no longer economically viable, despite the very best efforts of the management and staff alike the site closed around 2005.

 

The high performance niche products in Dyson's range are still available and are the cornerstone in Dyson's progression. The company have a wholly owned manufacturing facility in Tianjin, PRC which produces is high quality products.

"When it was operating full time, Watkins Mill employed 40 workers -- 25 men, 10 women and five children. Most of the men were highly proficient workers called operatives. The women were weavers and the children were often apprentices who were learning the mill industry. The Mill's original work force included immigrant English, Irish, French, Canadian, German and Swedish employees, as well as individuals from the eastern United States. Because of the skill involved, mill workers were often well-paid.

 

The process was quite detailed. After a sheep was sheared, the wool was matted together to resemble a thin rug, then rolled into bundles. About two-thirds of the material was then sorted by grade and scoured by a willower, a machine that pulls the wool apart and removes dirt and natural oils. It could then be made into yarn or cloth, or dyed. From there, the scoured, unscoured and dyed wool went to the picker room, where the sorts were divided and placed into uniform layers, then fed into the picker, which prepared the wool for carding by pulling it apart into small, fluffy bits.

 

Carding machines untangled individual fibers and reduced sheets of wool to a continuous strand. The material was then ready to be spun into yarn. After this, it could be sold or continue within the manufacturing process to be woven into cloth, often with complex patterns.

 

Powering the Mill's looms and machines was a 60-horsepower slide-valve steam engine that Waltus Watkins purchased from a company in St. Louis, Mo. The engine had been salvaged from a river steamboat and its wood-fired boiler provided the 100 pounds of pressure needed to operate the Mill's equipment at the correct speed.

 

Although the milling process and its associated equipment and employees were expensive to coordinate, the business was profitable. Because of transport costs during the 1850s and '60s, goods produced on the East Coast were not always readily available throughout America. As a result, by 1870 there were about 880 woolen mills located in the Midwest alone."

 

www.watkinsmill.org/process.html

Leo Brossollet (left) worked at ModRoof in Ahmedabad, India working to streamline the manufacturing process of creating roofing systems from recycled materials for urban slums.

Bursera graveolens, known in Spanish as palo santo ("holy wood") is a tree that inhabits the coast of Ecuador. The tree belongs to the same family (Burseraceae) as frankincense and myrrh. It is widely used in folk medicine. Aged heartwood is rich in terpenes such as limonene and α-terpineol.

The use of Palo santo (or Palo Santo) from Bursera Graveolens is reported to be traditional in South America, especially in Ecuador. According to the local customs, it is used against the "mala energia" (bad energy) ("Palo Santo para limpiar tu casa de la mala energia, Palo Santo para la buena suerte" or "Palo Santo to clean your house of bad energy, Palo Santo for good luck").

 

The big day is near. On 7 October 1948, the Motor Show, the 2 CV creates the event. The first comments are grinçante. Its design hurts. Aback Her allure of the familiar Citroën historical, more accustomed to the Traction and its high-end allure. The least we can say is that it leaves no one indifferent. And even if the press is skeptical, the general public finally adopted very quickly. The order books to inflate to eye. This success also colossal that causes rapid "gridlock" in the manufacturing process. At that time, it is not uncommon to wait several years to recover its 2 CV.

 

However, the result is there. The 2 CV is a success and his epic does start while

The Password:JDM Dry Carbon Fiber Engine Cover for the 2013+ Subaru BRZ / Scion FR-S will clean up the look of your engine bay! Like all of our Dry Carbon parts we manufacture, this engine cover has been precision crafted for a perfect fitment every time. We have used a fade resistant resin during the manufacturing process to ensure this plug cover will always look & function as good as the day you bought it!

 

Includes all necessary mounting hardware.

  

Features include:

 

- Perfect dry carbon fitment with structural integrity

- high-heat, fade resistant resin fabrication process

- two options to choose from, dry carbon fiber and dry carbon kevlar

- Extreme lightweight to strength ratio

- Made in the USA

- Badass looks for your BRZ or FR-S engine bay!

From the planting of the seed to the end of the manufacturing process, Portuguese cork makes for authentic, high quality and eco-efficient cork products that are created with true craftsmanship and care.

 

www.realcorkfloors.com/

Ferrari 250 GT Cabriolet, 1957

V-12, 3.0 litre, 240 hp, Chassis no. 0655GT

 

The 250 GT Cabriolet, designed by Pininfarina, marked Ferrari's increasing ability to build sophisticated road cars as well as single-seat and sports racing cars.

This car was displayed at the Geneva Motor Show in 1957, and was acquired by Peter Collins, one of Ferrari's top drivers. Collins had it repainted at Pininfarina in dark green - a patriotic gesture reflecting the British international racing colour.

[Design Museum]

 

Ferrari: Under the Skin (November 2017 to April 2018)

In an Italy ravaged by the Second World War, Enzo Ferrari and a small team decided to create the perfect racing machine. The exhibition will explore Ferrari’s powerful personality, the design and manufacturing process, the famous clientele and the future of the luxury car brand.

From the very first Ferrari to Michael Schumacher’s winning Formula One car and the newest hybrid model, the exhibition features rare cars and memorabilia displayed in public for the first time. Discover the Ferrari experience through original hand-drawn sketches, sculpture-like models and engines, alongside films and interviews telling one of the great design stories of all time.

[Design Museum]

 

In the Design Museum

At the Cup Noodles Museum, you can learn the secret of cup noodle and even have the opportunity to make one-of-a-kind ramen yourself.

 

Japanese food company Nissin operates this unique museum for Ramen.

 

The museum shows the 40 year product history as well as the founder, Mr. Ando Momofuku's creativity, by exhibiting 3,000 kinds of cup noodle packages.

 

They also recreate Mr. Ando Momofuku's humble research facility.

 

At "My Cup Noodle Factory," you can make your own cup noodle out of 5,460 soup base / topping combinations.

 

There is also "Cup Noodles Park", a playground for kids where they can experience the manufacturing process of Cup Noodle.

 

There is a "Chicken Ramen Factory" where you can make Chicken Ramen by hand, starting with kneading, spreading, and steaming the wheat flour and then drying it with the hot oil drying method. After experiencing the process that led to the invention of the world's first instant ramen, you can take your freshly made ramen with you and enjoy its delicious taste at home.

 

And of course you can enjoy global varieties of noodles in the contemporarily designed museum restaurant!

Nation : Czechoslovakia

Pavilion Name : Czechoslovakia Pavilion

Subject : Handicraft

Island : Ile Notre Dame

Description : Modern Bohemian style crystal showcased in the Hall of Traditions.

 

General Description:

 

The two storey Czechoslovakia Pavilion consisted of two buildings linked by an entrance hall. A simple, clear architectural strategy provided a harmonious backdrop for the exhibition's exciting displays. The first building featured two levels of exhibition space with a central courtyard which drew some of the largest crowds at Expo. Czechoslovakian art, technology and industry were presented to visitors through an attractive mixture of light, sound and video. The Hall of Centuries exhibit showcased texts and artifacts from ancient royalty. In the Hall of Tradition, visitors could find old and new glass and crystal and learn about their manufacturing processes. The World of Children enchanted the pavilion's younger visitors featuring puppet shows performing traditional tales. The second building featured four restaurants; Le Bistro served light snacks; the Bratislava Inn was a wine tavern; the Castle Restaurant featured fine Czechoslovakian cuisine; and the Prague was home to the famous pilsener Urquell beer. Offices, a gift shop and a theatre could also be found in this second Czechoslovakian building.

 

Source: digital.library.mcgill.ca/expo-67

100118-F-0782R-022 Kabul- A Kabul Milli factory employee inspects a finished boot before sending it off for distribution in Kabul, Afghanistan, Jan. 18, 2010. Members of CSTC-A and the Afghan National Army visited the boot factory to observe the boot manufacturing process and to initiate a process improvement program..

(U.S. Air Force Photo/Staff Sgt. Larry E. Reid Jr., Released)

Depicting the Ascension and The Last Supper.

The Gregory coat of arms can be seen on either side.

Glass by Ward & Hughes, c. 1870's.

Note the paint loss and fading. This is probably due to the use of Borax in the manufacturing process.

Noodles Bazaar

 

The menu for this food attraction features eight varieties of noodles that Momofuku Ando encountered during his travels in search of ramen's origins. Enjoy the noodle culture that has spread to every corner of the world in an ambience that is like an Asian night market.

 

------------------------

 

At the Cup Noodles Museum, you can learn the secret of cup noodle and even have the opportunity to make one-of-a-kind ramen yourself.

 

Japanese food company Nissin operates this unique museum for Ramen.

 

The museum shows the 40 year product history as well as the founder, Mr. Ando Momofuku's creativity, by exhibiting 3,000 kinds of cup noodle packages.

 

They also recreate Mr. Ando Momofuku's humble research facility.

 

At "My Cup Noodle Factory," you can make your own cup noodle out of 5,460 soup base / topping combinations.

 

There is also "Cup Noodles Park", a playground for kids where they can experience the manufacturing process of Cup Noodle.

 

There is a "Chicken Ramen Factory" where you can make Chicken Ramen by hand, starting with kneading, spreading, and steaming the wheat flour and then drying it with the hot oil drying method. After experiencing the process that led to the invention of the world's first instant ramen, you can take your freshly made ramen with you and enjoy its delicious taste at home.

 

And of course you can enjoy global varieties of noodles in the contemporarily designed museum restaurant!

(En) Founded in 1906, the Coking Plant of Anderlues was specialized in the production of coke for industrial use.

 

Coke was obtained by distillation of coal in furnaces and, thanks to its superior fuel coal properties, it was used afterwards to feed the blast furnaces in the steel manufacturing process.

 

Closed and abandoned since 2002, the site has since undergone many losses and damages, not including an important pollution. While some buildings have now been demolished, there are however still some important parts of the former coking plant.

 

Among them, the former coal tower, next to the imposing "battery" of 38 furnaces, where the coke was produced. Besides them, we still can see the administrative buildings, the power station with its cooling tower, and buildings for the by-products, which were obtained by recovering the tar and coal gas. There are also a gasometer north side, the coal tip east side and a settling basin south side.

 

-----------

 

(Fr) Fondées en 1906, les Cokeries d'Anderlues étaient spécialisées dans la fabrication de coke à usage industriel.

 

Le coke était obtenu par distillation de la houille dans des fours et, grâce à ses propriétés combustibles supérieures au charbon, il servait par après à alimenter les hauts-fourneaux dans le processus de fabrication de l'acier.

 

Fermé et laissé à l'abandon depuis 2002, le site a depuis lors subi de nombreuses pertes et dégradations, sans compter la pollution qui y règne. Si certains bâtiments (comme l'ancien lavoir à charbon) ont aujourd'hui été démolis, on retrouve encore toutefois certaines parties importantes de cette ancienne cokerie.

 

Parmi celles-ci, l'ancienne tour à charbon suivie de près par l'imposante "batterie" de 38 fours, où était produit le coke. A côté d'eux, on découvre également les bâtiments administratifs, la centrale électrique avec sa tour de refroidissement, ainsi que les bâtiments des sous-produits, lesquels étaient obtenus par récupération du goudron et du gaz de houille. Et en périphérie, on retrouve un gazomètre côté nord, le terril à l'est et un bassin de décantation côté sud.

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