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In a minute there is time for decisions and revisions which a minute will reverse.
-- T(homas) S(tearns) Eliot --
一瞬のうちに 一瞬が逆転する決断と修正の時間がある
― T・S・エリオット ―
■■ My other site ■■
White backgrounds don't work for me >.>
I had to use GIMP. Somewhat inspired by z the lego man's MOC.
From the movie SAW.
The only sculpting on this model was the padlock. It consists of: a helmet, 2 oxygen tubes, a stud, a Hoth visor, and one of those little clear zippy things.
The jaw actually goes up :D
Conductor Gilbert is guiding the reverse move to make the joint as they go about putting their train together in the yard.
A giant Sycamore Tree, believed to be in excess of 300 years old dominates the landscape at Walnut Hill, a remnant of the former Pawlings/Wetherill land holdings in the Valley Forge, Pennsylvania area. A large parcel of land bounded by the Schuylkill River and the Perkiomen Creek was owned by the Pawling family in the 18th century and in the 19th century by the Wetherill Family. In 1984 the area was purchased by the National Parks Service and is now part of Valley Forge National Historic Park.
The property is considered historic by the National Parks Service because the land is thought to have been used as a commissary and supply area by the Continental Army during George Washington's encampment of 1777-1778. According to a 1950s book by Edward Pinkowski, Ephraim Blaine, Assistant Commissary General of Purchases under Washington was said to have his offices located on the Pawling Farm. A bridge had been built to cross the Schuylkill River between the army's encampment area and the land occupied by the Pawling Farm which not only allowed access to the Commissary and its supplies but also an additional escape route over the river if the army should need it.
Technical details:
Toko Nikki II 4x5 wooden large format field camera.
90mm F8 Schneider Super Angulon lens in Copal shutter.
Arista EDU Ultra (Re-branded Fomapan) 200 ISO B&W film, shot at ISO 160.
6 seconds at F45.
Developed in Pyrocat HD at 1:1:100 dilution for 8 minutes @ 20 degrees Celsius in Jobo Multitank 5 with 2509N sheet film reels with drum placed on Unicolor Uniroller 352 auto-reversing rotary base.
Negative scanned with Epson 4990 on holders fitted with ANR glass.
Resulting image cropped to 16:9 ratio to match intended composition.
Etihad A380 has just been towed from the International Terminal at Sydney Airport and is seen being pushed back out of the way on a very hot Sydney morning.
Saturday 5th January 2019.
From the four mile trail looking west, you can see the reverse of the classic Tunnel View. On the right is El Cap, and Cathedral Rocks to the left
Or she could be just arriving, but I'm going to go with the former. Some grannies and grandads are on their way for a holiday in Minehead, by the look of it, at the old Marlborough Street bus station in Bristol. This is a Bristol LH6L with bodywork by Marshall in the fleet of Royal Blue, which was the coach service "brand" inherited by the Western National Omnibus Co Ltd. I regret not taking more photos of the part of the bus station we can't see here, i.e. the bays, newspaper stall and so on that lay behind the camera, but who knows what else will turn up as I work through my old slides? Saturday 28th May 1977.
And to warp up (since this is the only other good photo I got!), another view of the canopy, looking north this time. I'm really hoping the building itself was scheduled to receive some updates as well, and hope to be back by here soon for possible updates...
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Amoco, 1988-built (as Amoco), Elvis Presley Blvd. near Scaife Rd., Memphis
London Transport and its successors have always had an extreme aversion to reverse turns. Despite this, route G1 has one at Shaftesbury Estate in Battersea, as this was the only solution for turning the bus round.
Despite appearances to the contrary, the Shaftesbury Estate is a mid-Victorian housing project. You can see the backs of some of the houses behind the bus. The G1 passes through the estate to terminate just outside it.
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Reverse Rainbow over Alpe di Succiso group.
This may look like a colourful smile in the sky - but in fact it's an upside down rainbow caused by freak weather.
Normal rainbows are made when rays of sunlight penetrate raindrops and emerge from other side creating a prism of colours in an arc.
But if the sunlight strikes ice crystals high in the atmosphere at the right angle they are reflected back the way they came, creating a reverse rainbow.