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Started out as tablescraps while I was ill in bed (hence their kinda off design)

 

Deathstinger

Lekker spelen met (fake-) Tilt-Shift :-)

Nice playing with (fake-) Tilt-Shift :-)

 

> 250 Views!

My first micro-scale Blacktron ship. I plan on making a full minifig scale (Or minifig illusion scale) someday. This one is pretty much 1/6th scale.

Just building with the new pieces. What do you think?--Really should have taken more pictures of this.

Micro Racer Falcon

Micro City edge (corner)

My first Lego Micro City try (will be more to come)

Taken with my 40mm f/2.8 micro

 

Muñeco reborn

 

Esta obra está bajo una

licencia de Creative Commons.

Thinned the beets today, so we had a beet micro green salad with dinner!

This is the smallest flashlight I could make. 5mmx15mm or 0.26" x 0.59"

Oxford Diecast's first venture into the large 1/18 scale was a model of the Messerschmitt KR200 microcar, and shortly afterwards the same vehicle was released in 1/76; the latter is a tiny model, less than 1.5 inches long, but superbly detailed for its size. I believe 627 CD was the car driven by Philip Glenister and Ant Anstead in a recent episode of 'For The Love Of Cars'. Incidentally, the commonly-held belief that Messerschmitt cars used left-over canopies from WW2 fighter planes is a myth; the design is similar but they are different parts.

The Micro CT Scanner in NETL's CT Imaging Facility in Morgantown, WV. The micro CT scanner is used to identify pore surfaces in core samples.

The pictures are not the greatest, but I didn't really feel like dragging the whole photo setup out again for two shots.

Using Adafruit PIR sensor and Neopixel 'thru' LEDs. The nice thing about the LEDs is that you get full RGB for two leds with one digital line. The LEDs are BIG and bright! The PIR sensors are really 'no fuss'.

1987 Lewis Galoob toys. Got this one in Singapore in 1988 on my way to London. This one's American package version.

Micro Racer Hawkeye

Micro built castle with dragons fighting over :)

Micro poem rules: a micro poem consists of three words of 3 letters each arranged in a 9x9 grid.

Holden Cherry Lee Architects and Haack + Hopfner

Taken with

"Panasonic Lumix G1"

"Canon FD 35-70mm F3.5-4.5"

"Canon Extention Tube FD 25"

  

Developed by

"SILKYPIX Developer Studio 3.1 SE"

One of the joys of living in a log cabin in a forest is some native animals do not realise you are not a tree still so they figure it is their right to nest in the tree we call home. Every year we get the odd tree bat or micro bat i believe it is called move in for a while - tiny fellows that only come out at night .This one was on a log just below the ceiling , I taped a torch to the tele lens so it could get enough light to auto focus then used an external flash to light it up. these are the best shots I have of its face so far - love the channels in the ears (profile shot) that little claw on its foot.About the size of a swallow

Micro Machines lookalike

Nikon D600+Nikkor 55mm/f2.8 Micro

The tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) is a plant in the Solanaceae or nightshade family, as are its close cousins tobacco, chili peppers, potato, and eggplant. The tomato is native to Central, South, and southern North America from Mexico to Peru. It is a perennial, often grown outdoors in temperate climates as an annual, typically reaching to 1–3 m (3 to 10 ft) in height, with a weak, woody stem that often vines over other plants.

 

The leaves are 10–25 cm long, odd pinnate, with 5–9 leaflets on petioles[1], each leaflet up to 8 cm long, with a serrated margin; both the stem and leaves are densely glandular-hairy. The flowers are 1–2 cm across, yellow, with five pointed lobes on the corolla; they are borne in a cyme of 3–12 together. The word tomato derives from a word in the Nahuatl language, tomatl. The specific name, lycopersicum, means "wolf-peach" (compare the related species S. lycocarpum, whose scientific name means "wolf-fruit", common name "wolf-apple").

 

Early history

 

A variety of heirloom tomatoes.According to Andrew F Smith's The Tomato in America,[2] the tomato probably originated in the highlands of the west coast of South America. Although Smith notes there is no evidence the tomato was cultivated or even eaten before the Spanish arrived, this thesis is also questionable. Other researchers have pointed out that many other fruits in continuous cultivation in Peru are not present in the very limited historical record. Much horticultural knowledge was lost after the arrival of Europeans.

 

There is a competing hypothesis that says the tomato, like the word "tomato", originated in Mexico, where one of the two apparently oldest "wild" types grows. It is entirely possible that domestication even arose in both regions independently. Diversity data suggests the center of diversity for wild tomatoes is located in Peru, while the that of cultivated tomatoes, in Mexico. Thus, it can be hypothesized that wild tomatoes were introduced from Peru to Mexico, where they were domesticated.

 

In any case, by some means the tomato migrated to Central America. Maya and other peoples in the region used the fruit in their cooking, and it was being cultivated in southern Mexico and probably other areas, by the 16th century. It is thought that the Pueblo people believed those who witnessed the ingestion of tomato seeds were blessed with powers of divination. The large, lumpy tomato, a mutation from a smoother, smaller fruit, originated and was encouraged in Central America. Smith states this variant is the direct ancestor of some modern cultivated tomatoes.

 

Two modern tomato cultivar groups, one represented by the Matt's Wild Cherry tomato, the other by currant tomatoes, both originate by recent domestication of the wild tomato plants apparently native to eastern Mexico.

  

Aw damn it, I didn't realize it was on its side!!

Micro Machines advertising campaign project.

 

© Benedetto Papi / Martino Monti.

This teeny tiny swoon block finishes at 2" square - which means the HSTs finish at 1/4"!! I set it on point inside a thing pink border and matchstick quilted it with some variegated thread.

 

Read more here: www.13spools.com/2014/06/naptown-stitchers-micro-swoon.html

Ericsson at Mobile World Congress Barcelona 2014

snap@my garden by Nikon d80 + Micro-NIKKOR 55mm f/3.5

Well, I really don't have anything to say, even though I have. It's a micro-scale plane. That's it.

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