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Hand up, hand down

In front of the gothic cathedral,

a strange module appeared.

Adding a touch of color fantasy in the dark reality.

Is it the latest invention of Professor Calculus (from Tintin) ?

Or a new vehicle from the Count of Champignac (from Spirou) ?

But it is a retro-futurist vision coming from the colorful comic books of my childhood invading the grey present.

 

Sur le parvis de la cathédrale gothique, un étrange module est apparu.

Une touche de couleur acidulée dans la sombre réalité.

Une nouvelle invention du Professeur Tournesol ?

Un nouvel engin du Comte de Champignac ?

C'est en tout cas une bien étrange vision rétro-futuriste, sortie des bd colorées de mon enfance.

 

Liege, Belgique

 

More infos & photos : gilderic.wordpress.com/2011/03/01/bluub-un-etrange-module...

 

Design: Francis Ow

Diagram: Owrigami

Paper: Shadow Fold

I found this picture of the cybercity module I threw together for Bricks By the Bay last April, and realized I never posted it. In the vacant area on the right was a trash lot (at the show).

 

Also I know I haven't posted anything in a long time. These last few months have been pretty packed and stressful, which I'll be sure to explain in about a month. I do have two new MOCs essentially finished and awaiting photography, which should happen in the next week!

One of these stunning birds has taken to roosting during the day in the trees in the grounds of our apartment complex. I doubt that I would have ever seen it had it not been for the effect that it has on the other birds in the area. They have been upset by the presence of the owl, and have aggressively swooped it and made loud calls. I suspect that they are afraid of this predator, and would like it to move on!

 

-———

Links for background information ...

 

www.birdsinbackyards.net/species/Ninox-novaeseelandiae

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_boobook

canberrabirds.org.au/birds/southern-boobook/

 

-———

 

[ Location - Barton, Australian Capital Territory, Australia ]

 

Photography notes ...

The photograph was taken using the following hardware configuration ...

(Year of manufacture indicated in braces where known.)

- Hasselblad X1D-50c Medium Format Mirrorless Digital Camera (Silver) - MFR # H-3013900 (2017).

- Hasselblad X1D GPS Module - MFR # H-3054772.

- FotodioX Hasselblad V-Mount to XCD-Mount Camera Lens Adapter - MFR # HB-XCD-PRO.

- Hasselblad Carl Zeiss lens - Sonnar CF 250mm f/5.6 Superachromat lens (1987).

- FotodioX B60 Lens Hood for Select Hasselblad Telephoto CF Lenses.

 

I acquired the photograph (8272 x 6200 pixels) with an ISO of 400, and aperture of f/5.6 and an exposure time of 1/125 seconds.

 

Post-processing ...

Finder - Removed the UHS-I SDXC card from the camera and placed it in a Lexar 25-in-1 USB card reader. Then used Finder on my MacBook Air to download the raw image file (3FR extension) from the card.

Lightroom - Imported the 3FR image. Applied a standard metadata preset (20161110 Import 001) during the import process.

Lightroom - Made various lighting and color adjustments to the image.

Lightroom - Applied a square crop to the image (i.e., a 1:1 aspect ratio) (2867 x 2867 pixels).

Lightroom - Saved the Develop module settings as a preset.

Lightroom - Output the image as a JPEG image using the “Maximum” quality option (2867 x 2867 pixels).

PhotoSync - Copied the JPEG file to my iPad Mini for any final processing, review, enjoyment, and posting to social media.

 

@MomentsForZen #MomentsForZen #MFZ #Hasselblad #X1D #Color #Bird #SouthernBooBookOwl #SouthernBoobook #NinoxNovaeseelandiae #Feathers #Brown #White #Beak #Eyes #Talons

Designed and folded by me

Assembly on the Artemis II Orion spacecraft that will carry the first Artemis crew on its lunar-bound mission continues at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Nov. 5, 2021. Located in the clean room inside the high bay of the Neil Armstrong Operations and Checkout Building, teams have been working on the closeout welding for the propulsion and Environmental Control and Life Support System. Once complete, the crew module will move out of the clean room and into its workstation to continue with subsystem installations. With Artemis missions, NASA will land the first woman and the first person of color on the lunar surface. Artemis II will be the first crewed flight test of NASA’s Space Launch System and Orion, paving the way for human exploration to the Moon and Mars.

 

Photo: NASA/Kim Shiflett

Part 1/2

Happy folding with the module !

 

And then go to the joining .

Concrete bridge modules for Ciledug - Tendean flyover construction.

#sketch #drawing #linedrawing #livesketch #locationdrawing #urbansketch #usk #lunchbreakdrawing #lunchbreaksketch #jakarta

//Project Log Transmission 2//

:The First Capsule has been completed. It will be fueled and ready to launch within 24 hours. Things have gotten tense on the ship, as all our lives depend on the succes of this Module.:

Well, after having a blast with my first space build I did a second one that goes along with the story line. I made a lot of improvment with this. Tips and critisism are more than welcome!

 

Sorry for the Grainy Photo. I am back to using our Digital one that is having some major ISO issues. :(

Lego Mini castle Modules - village (on cuusoo ~ lego.cuusoo.com/ideas/view/50233 )

July 20 1969 - The Lunar Module Touches Down

Sjøhus, (sea houses, litterally translated) are industrial buildings from the times when boats were the only efficient way of transport. These cladded, timber frame buildings were used for all kinds of purposes connected to trade and fisheries on the Norwegian coast. The typical protruding part of the gable (vindehus) is protecting the hoist mechanism. Herring (sild) fisheries were so important for the earlier economic growth on the western coast it was the obvious choice for an advert on the wall.

“LUNAR TESTS -- Jack Mays, a test subject from the MSC Crew Systems Division, wears an International Latex Corporation spacesuit under a thermal overgarment during tests at the Lunar Topographical Simulation Area. He is also wearing a Portable Life Support System (PLSS) back pack. A full-scale mock-up of a Lunar Module is in background.”

 

…What he is not wearing however, is a helmet. In fact, he may be yelling something like “Where the f**k is my helmet?!?!?! You knew they were coming to take pictures today!!!” Or, being a consummate NASA professional, he may be realistically portraying his final moments in the near vacuum of the lunar surface, attempting to gasp…right before his eyes pop out of his head.

The top of a MSC water tower can be seen 'next' to the Lunar Module Descent Engine (LMDE) skirt/nozzle.

 

Jack Mays:

 

youtu.be/YtbvVZG257o

Credit: Manned Space/YouTube

The two modules are connected with round plates.

Landscape module for LUG train layout

The City Space theme continues to inspire. I wanted to use the curved quarter panels as a windscreen, and by excellent luck had the matching curve plate in sand blue. From then on it was just a matter of mixing the design cues and colour scheme from the sets with my build.

 

Rather pleased with this, looks chunky and industrial near-future. The crane, while functional, can't lift the module without ripping itself apart. Oh well.

 

Probably won't take any more pictures of the module itself either, it's just an empty shell that seems to be more like a double-decker carriage on a scenic train than a science module. Some more work on that will be required, I think. But that's a problem for another time. I already have an idea for a larger build that will incorporate four of these modules.

I have added an Apollo translation controller (left) and rotation controllers (Block I center and Block II on right) to the Command Module couch. They easily snapped into place.

 

This Block II design was manufactured in May 1968, and carries Serial Numbers 1 and 2 (marking plates in photos below).

 

From the NASA Technical Note: "The Block II couch consisted of three individual body supports that were attached by pip pins and clamps to a supporting framework. The body supports could be folded at the hip joint and knee joint, had provisions for locking the seat pan at two angles other than that of the folded position, were capable of being folded at approximately the shoulder position, and could be detached from the framework for storage. The body supports also could be detached and folded in flight by a crewman in a pressurized space suit. As in the case of side-hatch EVA, the center body support is detached and stowed under the couch of the spacecraft commander. The headrest was adjustable in flight for any size crewman and for any pressure-suit condition. The backpan portion of the body support was constructed of Teflon-coated fiber glass, which would conform to the crewman for comfortable support. Restraint of the crewman was the same as in the Apollo 7 couch with the six-point harness and the passive heel restraint."

I wanted to build a ship/probe module that had the textures of current technology coupled with the shapes and lines of the sci-fi world not yet invented. All stickers are official (from the Discovery line.) All pictures at Brickshelf once moderated.

 

Dedicated to nnenn.

One of the 'rocky coast' modules.

10 done, 10 more to go.

I am not going to make it :S

But I'll try anyway.

Operation: MABC - MLS

 

We're here on a planet calle earth. The creatures living here aren't good developed. We're now here since 2 weeks, yet unspotted. They didn't even noticed our landing ship...

The obervation will soon be finished. We don't expect these creatures to defend themselves effectfully against us.

This planet just screems to get conquerred.

 

Interscelar log 15.

Commander "Beast", 24 Intellegence Unit

Commander to the people of L'êgó'órcì

The City Space theme continues to inspire. I wanted to use the curved quarter panels as a windscreen, and by excellent luck had the matching curve plate in sand blue. From then on it was just a matter of mixing the design cues and colour scheme from the sets with my build.

 

Rather pleased with this, looks chunky and industrial near-future. The crane, while functional, can't lift the module without ripping itself apart. Oh well.

 

Probably won't take any more pictures of the module itself either, it's just an empty shell that seems to be more like a double-decker carriage on a scenic train than a science module. Some more work on that will be required, I think. But that's a problem for another time. I already have an idea for a larger build that will incorporate four of these modules.

The Orion spacecraft will ferry astronauts to the Moon on NASA's Artemis missions. The European Service Module is ESA’s contribution to Orion and provides electricity, water, oxygen and nitrogen as well as keeping the spacecraft at the right temperature and on course. In case of a problem during launch the European Service Module can also activate to fly the astronauts to safety. This infographic shows the steps of a targeted abort.

 

Credits: ESA

The chevrons are part of Module 1 of my modular microscale Space Base.

the prototype for this cheese slope design is here and, of course, I have to acknowledge inspiration from Katie, the master of cheese slope mosaics.

 

More pics in the Mars Base set.

OK, I know, it's Wacky Wednesday again ...!

Now you can purchase pdf templates of my recent curved folding modules!

bit.ly/1F3SsAL

 

The Theed Palace modules shown in a previous diorama have been extended from the basic two modules in the middle to four. There's now two modules with the windows and a roof module (expansion pack).

 

Some scenes to demonstrate their use are currently in progress.

 

If you enjoy viewing this and my other works, please support the Star Wars Modular Buildings/Locations project that I've created on Lego CUUSOO.

Module 14, More light gray, I don't have a great deal of slopes in light gray :S

MILS module: BTM with some terrain features

Here is my LDD model of the Apollo Lunar Module. It is built to minifig scale. As always, leave a comment if you like.

For Teunis. Doesn't meet the M>LTC modular standard's requirement for a standalone module, but makes it easier to fit modules in a yard module set together.

2 inks Screenprint (brown and gold)

Printed on "Le Modulor" by Corbusier.

 

Le Corbusier described it as a "range of harmonious measurements to suit the human scale, universally applicable to architecture and to mechanical things."

 

Available in my shop!

This completed module for a big project in Alberta - on the road to his destination

The Apollo 11 command module Columbia hatch exterior, as seen during the exhibition, Destination Moon: The Apollo 11 Mission, at The Museum of Flight, Seattle. The hatch served as the entry and exit point to the command module Columbia on the launch pad and after landing.

Image generated with Midjourney

The final module for the upcoming event (Bricktastic). When everything is connected at the event, I will take some pictures.

 

prototype sheet 1

iss059e017127 (April 9, 2018) --- NASA astronaut and Expedition 59 Flight Engineer Christina Koch works inside the U.S. Destiny laboratory module's Combustion Integrated Rack. She was replacing hardware for a series of experiments collectively known as Advanced Combustion via Microgravity Experiments (ACME). ACME is a set of five independent studies researching improved fuel efficiency and reduced pollutant production in practical combustion on Earth, as well as spacecraft fire prevention through innovative research focused on materials flammability.

Drupal modules as of 11/9/07

 

Full-sized, legible photo can be seen here: http://www.flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne?id=2007464793&size=o

 

Linkable version here: www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_all.html

 

This photo set contains the 5 smaller printable sections.

 

These linkable Cheat Sheets are here:

www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part1.html

www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part2.html

www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part3.html

www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part4.html

www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part5.html

 

I created this graphic because I felt overwhelmed with how many Drupal modules were out there, and I wanted to have a single cheat sheet that I could print out and reference. But this proved to be impossible, and it took me splitting up this massive photo into 5 subsections listed above in order to legibly print out all of the modules -- all of the modules as of November 9th, 2007 that is. (There's been another 20+ new projects created since then according to http://drupal.org/taxonomy/term/14/0).

 

A couple of technical points: The modules are color coded according to the 30 categories listed here: http://drupal.org/project/Modules

 

Also this massive graphic actually has repeating modules in the sense that if a module is in three different categories, then it'll be listed 3 different times.

 

There were also 36 projects that weren't categorized and inadvertently left out of this big graphic, but were included in part 5 of the cheat sheet -- along with the project pages that have been created without a release, projects w/ deprecated HEAD or pre-4.7.x releases & CVS namespaces that don't have a current project page.

 

Finally, this listing doesn't take into consideration the fact that many Drupal project releases actually contain multiple modules within them. For example, the Drupal for Facebook module is actually composed of 9 modules.

 

UPDATE: The 30 MB excel file that contains the raw data used to generate these visualizations has been uploaded to scribd.com

Im Moment kreist die ISS fast senkrecht zur Sonne, d.h. 24 h Sonne am Tag für uns, linke Erdhälfte immer dunkel!

 

Presently ISS orbiting nearly perpendicular to Sun: 24 hour sunlight and Earth's left hemisphere is in darkness!

 

Credits: ESA/NASA

 

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