View allAll Photos Tagged NonFolding
Andrei Sokolov (1931-2007), Russia's foremost space artist, had his artwork carried into orbit in March 1971 aboard Soyuz 11. The paintings were gouache on nonfolding cardboard, measured 47 centimeters by 36 centimeters, and weighed 130 grams each. They were transferred to the orbiting space laboratory Salyut, to become the first orbiting art exhibition in history.
Andrei Sokolov (1931-2007), Russia's foremost space artist, had his artwork carried into orbit in March 1971 aboard Soyuz 11. The paintings were gouache on nonfolding cardboard, measured 47 centimeters by 36 centimeters, and weighed 130 grams each. They were transferred to the orbiting space laboratory Salyut, to become the first orbiting art exhibition in history.
Andrei Sokolov (1931-2007), Russia's foremost space artist, had his artwork carried into orbit in March 1971 aboard Soyuz 11. The paintings were gouache on nonfolding cardboard, measured 47 centimeters by 36 centimeters, and weighed 130 grams each. They were transferred to the orbiting space laboratory Salyut, to become the first orbiting art exhibition in history.
Andrei Sokolov (1931-2007), Russia's foremost space artist, had his artwork carried into orbit in March 1971 aboard Soyuz 11. The paintings were gouache on nonfolding cardboard, measured 47 centimeters by 36 centimeters, and weighed 130 grams each. They were transferred to the orbiting space laboratory Salyut, to become the first orbiting art exhibition in history.
The art is a concept for an automated moon rover. The Soviet Union's Luna 2 mission was the first human-made object to reach the surface of the Moon, on September 13, 1959. The United States' Apollo 11 was the first manned mission to land on the Moon, on July 20, 1969.
Andrei Sokolov (1931-2007), Russia's foremost space artist, had his artwork carried into orbit in March 1971 aboard Soyuz 11. The paintings were gouache on nonfolding cardboard, measured 47 centimeters by 36 centimeters, and weighed 130 grams each. They were transferred to the orbiting space laboratory Salyut, to become the first orbiting art exhibition in history.
Andrei Sokolov (1931-2007), Russia's foremost space artist, had his artwork carried into orbit in March 1971 aboard Soyuz 11. The paintings were gouache on nonfolding cardboard, measured 47 centimeters by 36 centimeters, and weighed 130 grams each. They were transferred to the orbiting space laboratory Salyut, to become the first orbiting art exhibition in history.
Andrei Sokolov (1931-2007), Russia's foremost space artist, had his artwork carried into orbit in March 1971 aboard Soyuz 11. The paintings were gouache on nonfolding cardboard, measured 47 centimeters by 36 centimeters, and weighed 130 grams each. They were transferred to the orbiting space laboratory Salyut, to become the first orbiting art exhibition in history.
Author Alexei Leonov is a former Soviet cosmonaut who is also an accomplished artist. In 1965, he became the first person to step out of a spacecraft and walk in space. In 1975, he commanded the Soyuz spacecraft that took part in the first rendezvous between a Soviet and United States spacecraft.
Andrei Sokolov (1931-2007), Russia's foremost space artist, had his artwork carried into orbit in March 1971 aboard Soyuz 11. The paintings were gouache on nonfolding cardboard, measured 47 centimeters by 36 centimeters, and weighed 130 grams each. They were transferred to the orbiting space laboratory Salyut, to become the first orbiting art exhibition in history.
The half-title page of the book is signed and inscribed by space artist A. Sokolov to Fred Durant, and below, 19 cosmonauts have signed in colorful markers: Kubasov, Rukavishnikov, Leonov, Beregovoy, Zholobov, Lazarev, Klimsik, Yeliseev, Shonin, Sevastianov, Filipchenko, Artyukhin, Diomin, Aksyonov, Volynov, Markarov, Gorbatko, Khrunov, and one unidentified.
Author Alexei Leonov is a former Soviet cosmonaut who is also an accomplished artist. In 1965, he became the first person to step out of a spacecraft and walk in space. In 1975, he commanded the Soyuz spacecraft that took part in the first rendezvous between a Soviet and United States spacecraft.
Andrei Sokolov (1931-2007), Russia's foremost space artist, had his artwork carried into orbit in March 1971 aboard Soyuz 11. The paintings were gouache on nonfolding cardboard, measured 47 centimeters by 36 centimeters, and weighed 130 grams each. They were transferred to the orbiting space laboratory Salyut, to become the first orbiting art exhibition in history.
Fred Durant, for whom the book is inscribed, was assistant director and head of the Astronautics Department at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC. He was hired in 1964 to bring the Smithsonian into the space age and was responsible for making the Museum the official repository for all flown NASA hardware. Numerous satellites, spacecraft, space suits, and other space paraphernalia were collected during his tenure as director. He retired from the Smithsonian in 1980.
Retina was the name of a long-running series of German-built Kodak cameras. Retinas were manufactured in Stuttgart by Nagel Camerawerk, which Kodak had acquired in 1931, and sold under the Kodak nameplate. Retinas were noted for their compact size, quality, and low cost compared to their competitors and retain a strong following today. The original Retina, introduced in 1934, was notable for being the first camera to use the modern 135 film cartridge. The Retina line continued through the 1960s with a variety of folding and nonfolding models, including the Retina Reflex SLR.
Kodak also sold a companion line of less-expensive Retinette cameras.
The first Retina, a compact folding camera which pioneered the 135 format, was followed by two new models in 1936. The Retina I, which was the more popular of the two, was essentially the same as the previous model. The Retina I was most commonly equipped with a 50 mm f/3.5 Schneider Kreuznach Retina-Xenar lens and Compur or Compur-Rapid shutter, though other lenses and shutters were available. The Retina II was a more expensive model which included a rangefinder.
The Retina Ia and Retina IIa of 1951 were similar to their respective predecessors but with the addition of flash synchronization and wind levers rather than knobs. [1] The sleeker Retina Ib and Retina IIc came out in 1954 along with the Retina IIIc, which was basically a Retina IIc with a selenium light meter. The fifth and final generation of folding Retinas, which included the Retina IIC, Retina IIIC, and meter-equipped Retina IB, was introduced in 1957.
Kodak sold a number of larger, non-folding cameras (mostly automatic rangefinders) under the Retina label between 1958 and 1966. There was also a series of Retina Reflex SLRs produced between 1957 and 1966. The last cameras labeled as Retinas were the plastic-bodied Retina S1 and Retina S2, produced from 1966 to 1969. Kodak also manufactured the Retinette model series around the same time.
Kodak Retina S2 (061)
The needle of the coupled exposure meter is visible in the brightline viewfinder. One is able to use the then-popular flashcubes as well as the hot-shoe, though as the meter has a selenium cell, the PX23 battery is only necessary to fire the flashcube. This, with the more basic Retina S1, were the last cameras to bear the Retina name.
name : Kodak Retina S2 (061)
produced between : 1966 - 1969
lens : Reomar f/2.8 45mm
shutter : B, 1/30-1/250
film type : 135
picture size : 24 x 36 mm
quantity made : 100,000+
categories : 35 mm, retina
I still don't know what is so deluxe about it... But it does have a nice (if rather camp) rainbow on it...
Retina was the name of a long-running series of German-built Kodak cameras. Retinas were manufactured in Stuttgart by Nagel Camerawerk, which Kodak had acquired in 1931, and sold under the Kodak nameplate. Retinas were noted for their compact size, quality, and low cost compared to their competitors and retain a strong following today. The original Retina, introduced in 1934, was notable for being the first camera to use the modern 135 film cartridge. The Retina line continued through the 1960s with a variety of folding and nonfolding models, including the Retina Reflex SLR. Retina IIa (1951-1954)
Retina was the name of a long-running series of German-built Kodak cameras. Retinas were manufactured in Stuttgart by Nagel Camerawerk, which Kodak had acquired in 1931, and sold under the Kodak nameplate. Retinas were noted for their compact size, quality, and low cost compared to their competitors and retain a strong following today. The original Retina, introduced in 1934, was notable for being the first camera to use the modern 135 film cartridge. The Retina line continued through the 1960s with a variety of folding and nonfolding models, including the Retina Reflex SLR. Retina IIa (1951-1954)
Retina was the name of a long-running series of German-built Kodak 35mm cameras. Retinas were manufactured in Stuttgart by Nagel Kamerawerk, which Kodak had acquired in 1931, and sold under the Kodak nameplate. Retinas were noted for their compact size, quality, and low cost compared to their competitors and retain a strong following today. The original Retina was introduced in 1934. The Retina line continued until 1969 with a variety of folding and nonfolding models, including the Retina Reflex SLR.
Retina was the name of a long-running series of German-built Kodak cameras. Retinas were manufactured in Stuttgart by Nagel Camerawerk, which Kodak had acquired in 1931, and sold under the Kodak nameplate. Retinas were noted for their compact size, quality, and low cost compared to their competitors and retain a strong following today. The original Retina, introduced in 1934, was notable for being the first camera to use the modern 135 film cartridge. The Retina line continued through the 1960s with a variety of folding and nonfolding models, including the Retina Reflex SLR. Retina IIa (1951-1954)
www.nasm.si.edu/research/aero/aircraft/mitsubishi_a6m5zer...
The A6M5 was a modest update of the A6M3 Model 22, with nonfolding wing tips and thicker skinning to permit faster diving speeds, plus an improved exhaust system (four pipes on each side) that provided an increment of thrust. Improved roll-rate of clipped-wing A6M3 was now built-in. Subvariants included the "A6M5a Model 52a «Kou»", featuring Type 99-II cannon with belt feed of the Mk 4 instead of drum feed Mk 3 (100 rpg), permitting a bigger ammunition supply (125 rpg); the "A6M5b Model 52b «Otsu»", with an armor glass windscreen, a fuel tank fire extinguisher, and one 7.7 millimeter Type 97 gun (750 m/s muzzle velocity and 600 m range) in the cowling replaced by a 13.2 millimeter Type 3 Browning-derived gun (790 m/s muzzle velocity and 900 m range) with 240 rounds; and the "A6M5c Model 52c «Hei»", with more armor plate on the cabin's windshield (5.5 cm) and in the pilot's seat. This version also possessed armament of three 13.2 millimeter guns (one in the cowling, and one in each wing with a rate of fire at 800 rpm), twin 20 millimeter Type 99-II guns, and an additional fuel tank with a capacity of 367 liters, often replaced by a 250 kg bomb. The A6M5 could travel at 540 km/h and reach a height of 8000 meters in 9 minutes 57 seconds. Other variants are the night fighter A6M5d-S(some conversion for night combat, armed with one 20 mm type 99 cannon, inclined back to pilot's cockpit) and A6M5-K "Zero-Reisen"(model l22) tandem trainer version, also manufactured by Mitsubishi. Several machines survived the war and are on display in Japan (in Aichi, Hamamatsu and Shizuoka), China (in Beijing), and the UK (Duxford).
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitsubishi_A6M_Zero]
Modello 010 della Retina (I) monta uno splendido Schneider Kreuznach Xenar 50mm f3,5 RED. Ottimamente conservata.
Retina was the name of a long-running series of German-built Kodak 35mm cameras. Retinas were manufactured in Stuttgart by Nagel Kamerawerk, which Kodak had acquired in 1931, and sold under the Kodak nameplate. Retinas were noted for their compact size, quality, and low cost compared to their competitors and retain a strong following today. The original Retina, was introduced in 1934. The Retina line continued until 1969 with a variety of folding and nonfolding models, including the Retina Reflex SLR.
Kodak also sold a companion line of less-expensive Retinette cameras.
The first Retina, a compact folding camera which pioneered the 135 version of the 35mm film, was followed by two new models in 1936. The Retina I, which was the more popular of the two, was essentially the same as the previous model. The Retina I was most commonly equipped with a 50 mm f/3.5 Schneider Kreuznach Retina-Xenar lens and Compur or Compur-Rapid shutter, though other lenses and shutters were available.
Author Alexei Leonov is a former Soviet cosmonaut who is also an accomplished artist. In 1965, he became the first person to step out of a spacecraft and walk in space. In 1975, he commanded the Soyuz spacecraft that took part in the first rendezvous between a Soviet and United States spacecraft.
Andrei Sokolov (1931-2007), Russia's foremost space artist, had his artwork carried into orbit in March 1971 aboard Soyuz 11. The paintings were gouache on nonfolding cardboard, measured 47 centimeters by 36 centimeters, and weighed 130 grams each. They were transferred to the orbiting space laboratory Salyut, to become the first orbiting art exhibition in history.
Retina was the name of a long-running series of German-built Kodak 35mm cameras. Retinas were manufactured in Stuttgart by Nagel Kamerawerk, which Kodak had acquired in 1931, and sold under the Kodak nameplate. Retinas were noted for their compact size, quality, and low cost compared to their competitors and retain a strong following today. The original Retina was introduced in 1934. The Retina line continued until 1969 with a variety of folding and nonfolding models, including the Retina Reflex SLR.
Retina was the name of a long-running series of German-built Kodak cameras. Retinas were manufactured in Stuttgart by Nagel Camerawerk, which Kodak had acquired in 1931, and sold under the Kodak nameplate. Retinas were noted for their compact size, quality, and low cost compared to their competitors and retain a strong following today. The original Retina, introduced in 1934, was notable for being the first camera to use the modern 135 film cartridge. The Retina line continued through the 1960s with a variety of folding and nonfolding models, including the Retina Reflex SLR. Retina IIa (1951-1954)
Retina was the name of a long-running series of German-built Kodak 35mm cameras. Retinas were manufactured in Stuttgart by Nagel Kamerawerk, which Kodak had acquired in 1931, and sold under the Kodak nameplate. Retinas were noted for their compact size, quality, and low cost compared to their competitors and retain a strong following today. The original Retina was introduced in 1934. The Retina line continued until 1969 with a variety of folding and nonfolding models, including the Retina Reflex SLR.
Kodak camera from 1958. The non-folding Retinette II, with fast Reomar 45mm f/2.8 lens and Compur Rapid shutter. Note the little red tabs, which are sliding depth of field indicators. It had no aperture scale but an LV (light value) scale instead.
Modello 010 della Retina (I) monta uno splendido Schneider Kreuznach Xenar 50mm f3,5 RED. Ottimamente conservata.
Retina was the name of a long-running series of German-built Kodak 35mm cameras. Retinas were manufactured in Stuttgart by Nagel Kamerawerk, which Kodak had acquired in 1931, and sold under the Kodak nameplate. Retinas were noted for their compact size, quality, and low cost compared to their competitors and retain a strong following today. The original Retina, was introduced in 1934. The Retina line continued until 1969 with a variety of folding and nonfolding models, including the Retina Reflex SLR.
Kodak also sold a companion line of less-expensive Retinette cameras.
The first Retina, a compact folding camera which pioneered the 135 version of the 35mm film, was followed by two new models in 1936. The Retina I, which was the more popular of the two, was essentially the same as the previous model. The Retina I was most commonly equipped with a 50 mm f/3.5 Schneider Kreuznach Retina-Xenar lens and Compur or Compur-Rapid shutter, though other lenses and shutters were available.
Kodak camera from 1958. The non-folding Retinette II, with fast Reomar 45mm f/2.8 lens and Compur Rapid shutter. Note the little red tabs, which are sliding depth of field indicators. It had no aperture scale but an LV (light value) scale instead.
today is a work day... i'm not feeling up to it, but i have some information design spreads due tomorrow for critique.
*the polaroid was developed in the fridge which gave it a soft purple color... interesting!
Fits GMC Sierra 2500 HD Door Mirror 2007-2014 Manual, Non-Heated Non-Folding🔥
✅OEM Part Number:20862095
✅Partlinks Number : GM1320337
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Fits GMC Sierra 2500 HD Door Mirror 2007-2014 Manual, Non-Heated Non-Folding🔥
✅OEM Part Number:20862095
✅Partlinks Number : GM1320337
✅Exact fit to original equipment manufacturer
✅All of our items are SAE certified
Shop now🔥
📌https://bit.ly/3IY9Gr0
#karparts360 #GMCSierra2500HD #DoorMirror
#karparts60OEMReplacementParts
#karparts360AutomotiveParts
#karparts360RepairParts #Manual
#karparts360MaintenanceParts
#karparts360AllVehicleParts
#AutoBodyparts #NonHeated #NonFolding
#AutoRepairParts #GM1320337
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For Hyundai Sonata 2006-2010 Door Mirror Driver Side | Power Heated Non-Folding
Partslink # HY1320149
OEM # 876100A000
Amazon Link:https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08CKH2TKV?th=1
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Unlock better visibility and savings with our PROMOTIONAL DOOR MIRRORS for DODGE DAKOTA 2005-2010 Driver Side Mirror | Power Non-Heated | Textured Black | Non-Folding🔥
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✅Partslink:CH1320220
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For Nissan Altima 2013-2018 Door Mirror Driver Side | Power | Non-Folding Sedan
Partslink # NI1320314
OEM # 963023TH1A, 963743TH0A
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WW1 Entrenching Tool Leather Cover
The standard German entrenching tool was the Schanzzeug which was a spade with a solid non folding wood handle. There was a folding entrenching tool introduced during the war but because of its high cost the schanzzeug, non folding, E tool was used right through the war from the beginning to the end.
This high quality replica leather entrenching tool carrier is for the schanzzeug non folding entrenching tool.
This has all the features of the original like
Two belt loops.
Leather strap to wrap around the entrenching tool.
Grey metal roller buckle on the strap.
Brown leather.
White stitching.
This is made in Europe using high quality leather which has a good finish that will not crack like cheaper covers.
Unlock better visibility and savings with our PROMOTIONAL DOOR MIRRORS for DODGE DAKOTA 2005-2010 Driver Side Mirror | Power Non-Heated | Textured Black | Non-Folding🔥
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📌https://bit.ly/3Xy1x2O
✅Partslink:CH1320220
✅OEM Part Number:55077623AD
✅Expertly crafted from premium materials
✅Designed to match rigorous quality standards
✅High quality at a budget-friendly price
#karparts360 #karparts60OEMReplacementParts #karparts360AutomotiveParts #karparts360RepairParts #PROMOTION #DOORMIRRORS #DODGEDAKOTA
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The standard German entrenching tool was the Schanzzeug which was a spade with a solid non folding wood handle. There was a folding entrenching tool introduced during the war but because of its high cost the schanzzeug, non folding, E tool was used right through the war from the beginning to the end.
This high quality replica leather entrenching tool carrier is for the schanzzeug non folding entrenching tool.
This has all the features of the original like
Two belt loops.
Leather strap to wrap around the entrenching tool.
Grey metal roller buckle on the strap.
Black leather.
White stitching.
This is made in Europe using high quality leather which has a good finish that will not crack like cheaper covers.