View allAll Photos Tagged SCROLLS
Scroll of bass for Soutyh Africa Tour. I don't believe the neck and Scroll were original to bass body. Looked like from another bass to me.
Poetography... a weekly inspiration. This week's word is "Friendship" ..
In the language of Roses Yellow is for friendship...
To view other postings in The Theme GO HERE !!
Public Domain Book: Stand Scroll Book
Standard scroll book
Published 1876 by J. Haney & co. in New York .
Written in English.
A pair of Kutani-yaki (Kutani ware) fūchin (hanging-scroll weights) decorated with kirin (Chinese unicorns), which are mythological beasts that resemble deer, with the scales of a dragon, and the long flowing tail of an ox.
Cakes iced and decorated in SMBC. Monogram made of fondant. A full picture of the cake is in my photostream....It's interesting to see how lighting changes the color of a cake.
Nicola Pisano with assistants Andrea Pisano, Arnolfo di Cambio, Lapo di Ricevuto, Pulpit, 1265–68, Carrara marble with green marble, porphyry, and granite columns, 460 cm high (Siena Cathedral)
A re-shoot from the excellent workshop given by Greg Locke www.straylight.ca. For me the funniest part was when Greg asked if this was my son's idea. I sheepishly admitted that it was indeed my juvenile idea. That's me; the sophistication of a 12 year old!
A big thanks to my son. This was not easy to pose for and he endured two reshoots after the original one. Does he smile look a little pained?
Arduino Yun with adafruit alphanumeric display. Connects to web service via WIFI and gets local weather information and displays (scrolling) on alphanumeric display. Sort of an IOT project because it uses a Web Service to get data and displays it locally.
Captured droplets of water from an antique scroll design of a fountain base located in a city park in Binondo, Manila, Philippines.
The Guild of Infamous Stabbings will be coming to The Elder Scrolls Online as DLC in the near future.
More stories at: antoinegady.tumblr.com
Genetic Engineering... :)
Follow this link and scroll down to see the guys that created these paintings:
Just a little scroll sketch I´ll try to transfer to a leather craft strap project.. working on some ideas for both a Harley gas tank bib and a guitar strap.. it remains to see if it´s too small for my skills tho :-)
My violin, a Caspar da Salo. Passed down to me from my maternal grandmother.
Strobist: Canon Speedlite 540EZ camera left 1/32 power through umbrella.
Wedding invitation scroll with pale pink ribbon, single clear diamante (genuine swarovski) and a plaque with names in calligraphy.
Vegemite released a 'Blend 17' for Christmas... but don't worry it's black, tarry and salty like the original. So I made cheesymite scrolls with my posh Vegemite... with added spelt all washed down with cold beer... with or without listening to the cricket. www.thelonebaker.com/journal/2017/12/29/posh-vegemite-and.... or Join me on Facebook www.facebook.com/thelonebaker/
If you aspire to stab literally every guard in Tamriel, then the Dark Brotherhood expansion is probably for you.
I decided to make myself one of these Leyland scroll badges for a project.
My other 3d printer couldn't make this as the design was too big but my new one can and did!
Courtesy of the Israel Antiquities Authority / Library of Congress (http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/scrolls/scr1.html)
This impressive scroll is a collection of psalms and hymns, comprising parts of forty-one biblical psalms (chiefly form chapters 101-50), in non-canonical sequence and with variations in detail. It also presents previously unknown hymns, as well as a prose passage about the psalms composed by King David.
One of the longer texts to be found at Qumran, the manuscript was found in 1956 in Cave 11 and unrolled in 1961. Its surface is the thickest of any of the scrolls--it may be of calfskin rather than sheepskin, which was the more common writing material at Qumran. The script is on the grain side of the skin. The scroll contains twenty-eight incomplete columns of text, six of which are displayed here (cols. 14-19). Each of the preserved columns contains fourteen to seventeen lines; it is clear that six to seven lines are lacking at the bottom of each column.
The scroll's script is of fine quality, with the letters carefully drawn in the Jewish book-hand style of the Herodian period. The Tetragrammaton (the four-letter divine name), however, is written in the paleo-Hebrew script.
Reference:
Sanders, J. A. The Psalms Scroll of Qumran Cave 11 (11QPs[superscript]a). Discoveries in the Judaean Desert, IV. Oxford, 1965.