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Ensaio Newborn
Modelo: Noah - 13 Dias
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I'm making a jeans for Noah, my bjd, poor he only have 1 outfit, he needs more clothes ^^U
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Pues aquí ando haciendole unos pantalones a Noah, que el pobre no tiene a penas ropa y voy a ponerlo to rebonico :D
New Unisex cardy pattern :)
I'm quite pleased with how this turned out, and I think Noah was glad for some camera time after the girls photo session yesterday :)
Noah Tice, a boy from Ludlow, Ohio, who served as a private in Co. G, 77th Ohio Infantry and later Co. C, 182nd Ohio. Tice survived the war and died in 1934 in Pleasants, WV. Tintype from the Ohio Historical Society: www.ohiomemory.org/
Several generations after Adam and Eve, God saw great evil on the Earth and it made him sad. His mercy came to an end and people of Earth had to be held accountable for the wrong things they were doing. God planned to wipe every man and animal off the face of the Earth and to rebuild the Earth from the family of Noah. Noah was the great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great grandson of Seth (Adam and Eve’s third son) and was a good man who followed God.
bibleblender.com/2011/bible-stories/old-testament/genesis...
at mark hurst's gel conference this week ("gel" stands for good experience live), i had the honor of meeting some amazing, talented, inspiring, funny, sweet, powerful people... including noah scalin, founder of skull-a-day project. he was kind enough to sign the book i'd bought, talk to me about skulls and tattoos and projects and art, and bare his belly so i could shoot his skull.
the conference was amazing, in the truest sense of that word. for example, here's a sampling of some of the people i met, human beings who signed books, laughed with me, hugged me back when i threw my arms around them, sang in my ear, and shared ideas and energy:
- the singer and washboard player of the ebony hillbillies (the singer, who danced her generous ass off onstage, sang a song in my ear about why big women make better lovers, and i gave her a big, long hug for that)
- sal khan, founder of the khan academy, who begged me to tell florian to do some german-language chemistry videos
- robin nagle, anthropology professor and the dept. of sanitation's anthropologist-in-residence; she nabbed a fluffernutter shake-shack custard for me at one of the breaks, and i knew we'd become fast friends
- matt haughey, founder of metafilter, shy and sweet and utterly brilliant
- dr. ysaye barnwell of sweet honey in the rock, whose rousing performance literally made me cry
- larry smith, founder of smith magazine and huge proponent of six-word memoirs; when i told him i'd written more than two hundred of them inspired by photos i'd taken, he said we should talk, cos using imagery for six-word stories was his next project
- sari harris, IA expert for thumbplay music streaming, who offered to trade her orange wallabies for my beat-up chucks... and so we did
- julien smith, writer and speaker, who came down from montreal to just be his fabulous, friendly self (we connected over a 1950s tire on the bottle- and bone-littered shore of dead horse bay)
- the unlikely disciple, kevin roose, who while a student at brown, took a year off to embed himself within jerry falweel's liberty university, and lived to write a book about it
- rachel sussman, photographer of the world's oldest living things
- artists, photographers, technologists, social change pioneers, scientists, anthropologists, teachers, singers, and people who just loved listening to other people
see, that was the theme of this year's conference: listening. as part of the gel challenge, a contest inviting people to devise projects around this idea, i started the listening project, a collection of photographs depicting the passive yet thoroughly engaged act of listening. i was honored to be chosen as a finalist, and it was a privilege to be a part of the conference and listen for that theme as each speaker shared experiences, wisdom, and ideas.
i'm exhausted, overwhelmed, and completely jazzed all at the same time.
thank you, mark, for what was, yes, a very good experience.
"Noah’s Train“ - Mobiles Kunstwerk zum Schutz des Klimas
Je zwei Container von den EVU PKP Cargo, DB Cargo, Lineas, SNCF und RCG. Das sind die beiden Container der Deutschen Bahn im "Noah’s Train“.
Lgs 2580 4426 361-8 D-BTSK
Lgs 2180 4426 665-6 D-DB
Have you missed Noah? ^__^ I've cut her bangs a little and changed her eyechips, I think she looks much better in this way :D
I was seriously considering selling Noah, I just don't feel the same about her than I do about the others. But I felt so bad about it, because she's my first pullip.
So what do we do? WIG CHANGE!
I think the problem might be solved, at least now she can wear more different types of clothes than with the wine colored wig.
English postcard, no. 40. Photo: Lubin.
American actor Noah Reynolds (?-1948) appeared in a dozen Lubin shorts between 1910 and 1912. He was known for such Lubin shorts as the Western Percy the Cowboy (1910) in which he played the title role, Making a Man of Him (1910) with Harry Myers, and Archibald the Hero (1911), again as the title figure. He died in 1948 in North Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Source: IMDb
And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.
These are my contributions to our club's Noah's Ark Project. They are basswood and about 2.5 inches high.
French postcard. Editions Cinémagazine, No. 253.
Noah Nicholas Beery, better known as Noah Beery/ Noah Beery Sr. (Kansas City, 17 January 1882 – Beverly Hills, 1 April 1946), was an American actor. He was the older brother of another famous actor, Oscar winner Wallace Beery. His son, Noah Jr., also pursued the same career, becoming a highly regarded character actor, especially on television.
He moved to New York at a young age and began his artistic career as a singer, working mainly in theatre for several years. In 1913, he made his film debut at the Kalem company in The Influence of a Child, and soon became famous for his numerous roles as a moustachioed scoundrel or wicked libertine during the silent film era. Among his most famous performances are those of Sergeant Pedro Gonzales in The Mark of Zorro (1920) by Fred Niblo, alongside Douglas Fairbanks Sr., the British consul in the exotic adventure In the Shadow of the Pagodas (1925) by Raoul Walsh, and the brutal Sergeant Lejaune in Beau Geste (1926) by Herbert Brenon. he acted opposite his own brother Wallace in Stormswept (Robert Thornby, 1923).
With the advent of sound, Beery continued his prolific career, working regularly in numerous Technicolor musicals, westerns and serials, such as Zorro Rides Again (John English & William Witney, 1937), often in villainous roles. Among his notable performances in the early 1930s was that of Gus Jordan, the saloon owner opposite Mae West as Lady Lou in the comedy She Done Him Wrong (Lowell Sherman, 1933). Yet, his star declined when in the 1930s his brother Wallace gained an Oscar and became the highest paid actor in Hollywood. When his son, Noah Beery jr, born in 1913, became a film star as well, Beery was named Noah Beery sr.. Beery died in 1946 after a heart attack at the home of his brother Wallace.
Sources: Italian and English Wikipedia, IMDb.
8x10 Clear Glass Ambrotype
A test plate with a new chemistry batch, and the collodion turned out a tad thick...hence the flow lines...slowly reducing that problem as I put more Ether/alcohol mix to dilute it...will take a few more plates to iron it out.
Oh...and I cracked the plate while drying it :-((
www.gettyimages.com/detail/88647127/Flickr
this was originally for a giant banner to go in a kid's playroom
"God spoke to Noah and his sons, ‘See, I establish my Covenant with you, and with your descendants after you; also with every living creature to be found with you, birds, cattle and every wild beast with you: everything that came out of the ark, everything that lives on the earth. I establish my Covenant with you: no thing of flesh shall be swept away again by the waters of the flood. There shall be no flood to destroy the earth again.’
God said, ‘Here is the sign of the Covenant I make between myself and you and every living creature with you for all generations: I set my bow in the clouds and it shall be a sign of the Covenant between me and the earth'" - Genesis 9:9-17.
The story of Noah has been read in the liturgy this week, and this window showing Noah sacrificing to the Lord so that the Covenant between God and him is ratified is from Ely Cathedral.