View allAll Photos Tagged Props
HEAD: Lelutka Kaya
BODY: Maitrey Lara
SHAPE: Modified Maitreya
EYES: LOTUS. Fresh Eyes Fatpack Kinky 69
SKIN - Head: KOONZ Eva (Brownie)
SKIN - Body: VELOUR Venus (Brownie)
HAIR: Analog Dog - Alicia - Alt - Happy Weekend
EYESHADOW: StunnerOriginals Darling
LIPS: MILANI Cosmetics "Gloria" Lips (FATPACK) MIIX
NAILS: .:Avanti:. Arionne Nails Saturday Sale
DRESS: erratic / caroline - maxi dress / floral white Fifty Linden Friday
SHOES: Ingenue :: Auralie Heels :: FLF Mix (SPRING) Fifty Linden Friday
NECKLACE: EarthStones Solitaire Necklace - Amethyst
RINGS - Left: Kibitz - Hailey Rings (Gold)
RINGS - Right: .: Avanti:. Arionne Rings Silver Saturday Sale
EARRINGS: e.marie // Angelica Earrings - Hoops Golds PACK
BELLY RING: ~~YsoraL~~.:Luxe Belly Piercing Cira :.
PROP: :::ChicChica::: AppleMartini Saturday Sale
POSE 1: Serendipity: luisa...
LOCATION: Pour Up Winery
A timber prop truck on the rails near the winch shed. Props would be loaded onto the trucks at the top of the hill the lowered down the track into the mine by thick cable. The props would be used to sure up the newly dug areas of the mine. State Coal Mine, Wonthaggi, South Gippsland, Victoria, Australia.
Props are additional objects you can add into your scene.
They can consist of almost anything from nature, tools, vehicles, and personal props like angel wings .
Some props can be posed (like opening doors, or adjusting wings) as well as being postioned in the scene.
Some props may have interiors like this starship.
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Mid century furnishings wait to be used in the next period piece at the Warner Bros. prop department.
All rights reserved. Protected with PIXSY.
A little reading and some coffee....good props for the start of the day.
When I signed up for this class, I was determined to be involved each week. Somehow, the weeks have come and gone, life has happened in between, and here I am, feeling desperately behind and out of touch. I know there's no pressure or guilt here, but nonetheless, I am disappointed in myself. I know there are still many weeks to come, so I hope to be able to get back in the swing of things! I do miss you all!
52 of YOU: props
A prop, formally known as (theatrical) property, is an object used on stage or on screen by actors during a performance or screen production. The earliest known use of the term "properties" in English to refer to stage accessories is in the 1425 CE Morality play, The Castle of Perseverance. The Oxford English Dictionary finds the first usage of "props" in 1841, while the singular form of "prop" appeared in 1911. During the Renaissance in Europe, small acting troupes functioned as cooperatives, pooling resources and dividing any income. Many performers provided their own costumes, but special items—stage weapons, furniture or other hand-held devices—were considered "company property"; hence the term "property." Some experts, however, seem to think that the term comes from the idea that stage or screen objects "belong" to whoever uses them on stage. — wiki
For We're Here — Word Collectors.
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I FINALLY got this shot! I've not had a little one yet that I thought would even let me try this one, but this little guy just naturally wanted to prop on his folded arms, so I thought I'd give it a shot. It worked! Had grandma lend me a "finger" for a couple of shots, but then had her take it away and he held this pose until I moved him!!! *Sigh* I love newborns :)
blogged:
My brother-in-law and I made a trip to the Evergreen Aviation Museum in McMinnville, OR. I've been several times so this time I tried to focus on the parts of the planes that made interesting patterns and such.
Me. Maybe my new icon.
This “modified Sterling” is really nice, and with a few modifications I’ll be ready to join the empire. Removing the orange ring, weathering and replacing the grips with accurate longer ones should be easy. The scope is mounted a bit far back, but I don’t think I have the skills for that one. I’d also like to find a real Hengstler Counter as this on is hollow plastic. All in all, really nice piece.
The neg of this didn't turn out when scanned so here's the print!
Nikon FM2, Arista 400 pushed to 1600
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Available for The Liaison Collaborative's December round, the Presents set features five poses using the included props. The ribbons on the box are
At the UCSF Decoding the Brain Academy last night, Dr. Tomasz Nowakowski plotted the progress of neurons sequenced over time, including the project planned for 2025. It has been following a Moore’s Law-like exponential curve for a decade now. So, we should have a sequence of every one of the 86 billion neurons in a human brain by 2032, and maybe all the glial cells too.
Why sequence every cell? The genetic makeup varies, as does the methylation. On the left, you can see clustering analysis of 121 different cell types in the thalamus alone. Out neurons are very different, and they vary over time. I was reminded of an amazing discovery Ed Boyden of MIT shared with me — they found HIV-like encodings being expressed in human neurons. This might be a transposon-like viral vector for horizontal gene transfer in the brain. This is a controversial finding, partially because it is difficult to detect the signal from the noise of the delta from the human reference genome, which is still Craig Venter. I asked Ed how many neuron types does he suspect we’ll find? “An infinite number. They are all different.”
When we asked Nowakowski about the compute capacity of a neuron, he lit up with excitement. By analogy to our machine learning neural nets with back prop, we now know that our neurons don’t just adjust weights at the synapse. Firing-feedback adjusts the weights in all of the ~1000 inputs embedded in the dendrite of each neuron. This is called synaptic tagging, and it serves as an overlay to the relaxation back to a nominal rate of firing, a process that is not fully understood.
From the other speakers on stage, left to right:
• Shawn Hervey-Jumper: in 50 years of neurosurgery advances, we have added just 4 months to expected lifespan
• Mercedes Paredes: in the pre-natal and infant brain (up to 6 months), neurons migrate great distances (1-10cm) by sending out an axon and pulling the neuron cell body along, a sequence of push and pulls. For a sense of scale, if the neuron was a car, it is like driving across America. How do they navigate over these distances?
• Christine Liu: We can keep brain tissues alive for weeks now (for glass probe insertion into neural cell bodies). Learning how to juggle can increase cortical thickness by 3%.