View allAll Photos Tagged Playing
sweet things to come once i have > 10 minutes.
Play by Spinifex Group at Vivid Sydney.
The 2013 Opera House Sails projection, spearheading this years Vivid light festival, will be appropriately titled “PLAY”.
The 15 minute show begins with a Play button, that launches into a restless journey through various style and genre’s as it moves seamlessly from one scene to the next, exploring a distinctive mix of iconic and striking scenes, blended with vibrant and graceful movement. This energetic, daring, and delightful play between art and architecture will hopefully touch the hearts of Sydney Siders and reflect what Vivid is all about.
The projection creators, Australia’s own Spinifex Group, intended the piece to move beyond just art, and become a head turning show. In order to title the piece “PLAY” the focus was on entertaining first. “We’d love to earn the respect of the audience and give Vivid a story to tell. Our evolving journey approach will hopefully evoke the audience’s thoughts and opinions. Perhaps they will have a favourite section, perhaps Sydney will have a favourite section? We look forward to the public reaction” Richard Lindsay, Creative Director at the Spinifex Group “Sydney has a diverse and vibrant creative culture, but it’s important to see the lighter side of life – that’s why we love Sydney. This is a fun piece, and the Spinifex team had a lot of fun creating it”.
Nov 2019: I took this jigsaw to do at the BCD meeting of Nov19, with theme Children at Play. The meeting was very busy with photography, the Dave Cooper auction and the show & tell session,and it was as difficult as I remembered it to be, so only limited progress was made. David took pity on the visitors who joined me in the session whilst I was away from the table and gave them this photo - I hope it hasn't put them off line-cut jigsaws for good!
David Shearer said he thought that there was a good chance that the jigsaw was cut by Ian Pedley as I suspected, on stylistic grounds. The spiral feature appears in a friend's jigsaw Yoga, and his Pedley Owl puzzle seen at the last meeting has a complete 'mushroom edge'. Even figurals have appeared in some of the Pedley jigsaws he's encounted. Of course we'll never know for sure and I'll keep a look out for examples of similar cuts in case another unknown cutter appears!
Jan 2014: First Time Assembled
Bought Sept 2013, ebay £21+pp. A splendid second-hand puzzle, extensively line-cut, with lots of tricky features and a few whimsies. The edges have a couple of divided corners, and quite a lot of 'u-shaped' pieces that are effectively divided knobs. The spiral that covers the hair is a very distinctive feature. Line cutting around the soap bubbles and almost all areas of the striped jumper, bow etc make it very difficult for its piece count. The girl's features have been carefully preserved. 14x19.5in
Presumably made as a Christmas present in 1992 by 'P' for some lucky person.
I am hoping an enthusiast might recognise the writing or the style of cutting as I would dearly love to know who cut the puzzle. I will submit it to the BCD / Jigasaurus to see if anyone there has any idea.
Play Slope Unblocked slopegame.co #slopegame #Slope_Game #Slope_game_unblocked #Slope_unblocked #Slope
Siblings, aged four and one play with split peas and nesting cups which have an interesting texture which keep kids busy for ages.
Raven is never happier than when Larry takes time out to play with her. She will follow him all over the property with that ball in her mouth, dropping it at his feet and looking up at him expectantly. Larry used to say that he was too busy to play with the dog, but I pointed out that if he tossed that ball for her, for about 10 minutes, she'd be too pooped and go take a nap! Sure enough! They played for a few minutes and then Rav's went in the house and passed out on the couch!!!
Folsom Street Fair 2011
a local said to me " you'll have something to tell your kids"
folsomstreetfair.org/fair-info.php
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folsom_Street_Fair
San Francisco
USA
DSC_0118
This wallet comes complete with a standard deck of playing cards, spiral notebook and scoring pencil. This is perfect for travel or carrying in your backpack or purse. You'll be ready to play cards whenever and wherever you want!
Also available with crayons!
If you see a wallet you would like with a the crayons or cards switched, just let me know in 'notes to seller' or in an email and I'll switch them for you.
Playing Card Boots
Made by Abraham Rios of Mercedes TX
courtesy and (c) Larry Jennings and Linne S Miller
photo Blair Clark
playing with my canon 60D for the first time, took a pic of my best friend wearing his fave mask. did some editing using photoshop CS4.
Oldy one, scanning in lots and lots old negatives with my new scanning unit. This is stuff from when I first holded a camera.
This film however only got developed last week =P
Bruce Minnich playing basketball in the yard of the family's Newbury Park home, n.d. Donated by Hope Minich. Conejo Through the Lens, Thousand Oaks Library Special Collections . Photo ID # CTLmin03
There are no known U.S. copyright restrictions on this image. The Thousand Oaks Library requests that, when possible, the credit statement should read: "Image courtesy of Conejo Through the Lens, Thousand Oaks Library."
Haven't taken that many photos recently so I thought I play around with textures on an older shot. Hope you like it.
Texture provided by ***diAnNa***: www.flickr.com/photos/diannaalseptphotography/4778571470/...
Off to Prague at the end of the week and will hopefully come back with plenty of great shots. And then I will of course try to catch up with all my Flickr friends. Sorry I haven't commented in a while.
Have a nice week everyone! :)
Picture taken during filming of the BBC drama Playing the Field, Series 5, Episode 5. Picture shows Ricky Tomlinson, who played the character Jim Pratt. First aired 3rd February 2001
The Carl Sandburg College Humanities and Fine Arts Department presents its fall play, “Clue,” from Nov. 4-6 in the Fine Arts Theater (Room F118) on Sandburg’s Main Campus in Galesburg, 2400 Tom L. Wilson Blvd.
Written by Sandy Rustin and based on the classic board game of the same name, “Clue” is a hilarious farce-meets-murder mystery that includes multiple alternate endings. The tale begins at a remote mansion, where six mysterious guests assemble for an unusual dinner party where murder and blackmail are on the menu. When their host turns up dead, the guests suddenly turn into suspects.
Led by Wadsworth — the butler (played by Quinton Rakestraw) — Miss Scarlett (Samantha-Rose Brody), Professor Plum (Azaria Foshay), Mrs. White (Kaitlyn Pleshko), Mr. Green (Andrew Dortch), Mrs. Peacock (Erin Darling) and Colonel Mustard (Adam Chasteen) race to find the killer as the body count stacks up.
A free preview for students, faculty and staff with a Sandburg ID will take place at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 3. Show times for public performances are 7:30 p.m. Nov. 4-5 and 2 p.m. Nov. 6. Tickets are $5 each and are available at the door starting 30 minutes prior to each show.
For more information, contact Sandburg theater instructor Robert Thompson at 309.341.5287 or rthompson@sandburg.edu.
“CLUE” CAST
Wadsworth — Quinton Rakestraw
Yvette — Khloe Trulson
Miss Scarlet — Samantha-Rose Brody
Mrs. Peacock — Erin Darling
Mrs. White — Kaitlyn Pleshko
Colonel Mustard — Adam Chasteen
Professor Plum — Azaria Foshay
Mr. Green — Andrew Dortch
The Cook — Kassidy Bartels
The Singing Telegram — Nayana Foshay
Mr. Boddy — Micah Rodeffer
The Motorist — Jeff Korir
Ben LeGate — Police Chief
The Unexpected Cop — Geoffrey Paris
Backup Cop — Ashley Valentina Cruz Lopez
PRODUCTION STAFF
Director/lighting designer/set designer — Robert Thompson
Stage manager — JoyLinn Reynolds
Costume designer — Gary Mustain
Sound designer/soundboard operator — Aidan Nolan
Props master — April Newman
Costume assistant — Courtney Howard
Lighting assistant — Seth Austin
Lightboard operator — Dieter Horton
Props assistant/run crew — Bethanie Ricketts
Props assistant — Emma Smith
Run crew — Adithya Vinod
Run crew — Pietro Alfano