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With apologies to any vegan viewers, I enjoy grilled beef cooked medium rare with the fat trimmed back and served with greens on the side . . .
This photo was taken with an Asahi Pentax 6 X 7 medium format film camera with a Super-Takumar/6X7 1:2.4/105mm lens and Kowa L1A ø67 filter using Kodak Ektar 100 film, the negative scanned by an Epson Perfection V600 and digitally rendered with Photoshop.
Reverse-knee mech frame. I have a Vertical Tank built on a variation of this that I'll get to posting when the Brickcon hullabaloo dies down.
Five points of articulation in each leg. Ball joints are both a blessing and a curse, especially when used as ankle joints bearing the weight of everything above it. They hold just fine, though. Click hinges in the knees, plate hinges and clip-rod joints in the hips.The feet need not be so long, the finished model I have stands on feet have as long (1 x 4).
Feel free to use and modify this, let me know if you do!
Josef's School of Hair Design in Fargo, North Dakota - Photographed with a Hasselblad H6D medium format digital camera
1927-1932
120 film medium format 6x9 camera.
Lens: Skopar 10.5 cm / 4.5.
This is a high quality camera with a nice lens.
I would like to thank my collegue Henrik who gave it to me !
It belonged to his grand father (on the mother side). His grand father was born in 1907 (Denmark) so the camera was probably bought by his grandfather's father. Very interesting to have the camera's history and to give a new life to a beautiful object. I think the pictures turned out fine for a so old camera!
This image is protected by copyright, no use of this image shall be granted without the written permission from Yaman Ibrahim.
This image is protected by copyright, no use of this image shall be granted without the written permission from Yaman Ibrahim.
goli in delft, by the canal with stairs
with a 'ghazi' in hand, or as they call it here, turkish pizza
Status: Current
BrickLink: Medium Brown
Introduced in 2022 with Friends and Harry Potter.
Very similar to 217 Brown. Always nice to have more skin tones in the palette :) Hopefully we get some basic bricks too...
One last good weekend of Autumn colors, 10/25/2014: Captain Daniel Wright Woods, Lake County Forest Preserves. Rolleicord III and Velvia @ EI 100, incident metered.
Medium mechs are the mainstay of the MSI's close-range combat support vehicles, and the modern, solidly-designed Raptor is one of the latest additions to the Imperium's ground vehicle arsenal.
Velonnian Lord-Generals approached several heavy engineering corporations with the need for a new medium mech to replace the main mech in service, which was rapidly approaching obsoletion. The now-famed Imperial Ordnance Factory I9 developed the Raptor Mark I, which beat out the competition.
It features a well-rounded balance of firepower, armor, and speed, as well as other useful features such as integrated energy shielding, efficient load-bearing systems, a full comms and sensors package, and heat-dispersers to reduce likelihood of detection.
A pair of particle cannons make for an excellent anti-armor weapon, and do effectively against fortifications and energy shields too. Underslung rotary autocannons provide the ability to cut down swaths of infantry and light armor as well, allowing it to support allied infantry. Two anti-vehicle Short Range Missiles (SRMs) mean it can spot and eliminate other large vehicles in the area with the right amount of finesse, giving it the ability to strike against the greatest danger to a medium mech like the Raptor.
*Fourth wall explodes*
Easily my best Mech to date in every way, and quite possibly my best Lego model period. Suffice to say, I'm extremely happy with how this thing turned out.
It was actually supposed to be a lot smaller (And more raptor-like, too). My original inspiration was Star Wars's AT-PT walkers. Somehow, it wound up very different. ...But whatever. It still turned out well.
Anyway, enjoy. I hope you all like it.
LDD File link: github.com/Arikelliott/LDD-Models/raw/master/Raptor%20Med...
I had waited for a buck during the first two weeks of deer season. There were a lot of doe in the back yard, but never a buck. I figured that with only one week left I better take a doe or risk having no fresh venison this year. We were heading out to do chores when 3 doe showed up in the back yard, so I took the smallest one, which turned out to be a medium sized doe. We still have some venison left from last year and this will ensure we have enough until next season.
This is my second of a continuing "one roll shoot" sessions. I find a model, and I shoot one roll of black and white film. No big productions, no crew, just get out and shoot. I've got 36-ish shots to get something good.
In this case, I decided to shoot medium format, and since the Mamiya 645AF only gives me 16 frames per roll of 120, I shot two rolls (32 frames). Which is close to what I'd have gotten with 35mm and one roll. Hey I make the rules, I can do whatever I want.
This is Ilford XP5.