View allAll Photos Tagged Scalability

The crease pattern for my scaled wyvern. Veiw large to see all the creases better.

 

UPDATE: I uploaded the most recent version of the crease pattern.

Scaled close to the height of minifigures.

Called also Fig wax scale, in this image on a Frangipani leaf. What you see is the heavy waxy cover of a female that remains a "grub" (juvenile form) without obvious legs, eyes or antennae that stays protected and lays eggs. A simple life. Found occasionally locally on Frangipani leaves (pictured), and on the leaves of coconut palms. I have not yet seen a male: a 1-2 mm tiny winged insect that does not feed and lives a day or two.

For Our Daily Challenge: SCALE is the Topic for 28 November 2010

 

OK, I know when the bark starts to come off the tree these things are called scales, right? It comes off in scaly sections? I need you to agree with me because the dictionary is not being helpful! Anyway, here is my interpretation for "scales"! Voila!

I have found these metal scale models on several occasions here in Poland. This is in the south eastern part of the courtyard, Stare Miasto here in Poznan. They are pretty well detailed and replicate the courtyard exactly....I wasn't exactly looking for this, but I did end up backing into it and almost falling over while trying to take a photo.

I've been sitting on these test shots for a while anticipating I'd have finished the sticker job. Looks like it'll be a little while longer before it's done, so here are a few more views of this build for now.

 

1/24-ish "Speed Champions"-plus scale. 10s x 24s. Full modular design: monocoque chassis with separate mono-turbo, hot-side-up diesel V6 driveline and removable body panels.

5. Paint your stones and soil.

 

I painted the stones first, let them dry, then painted the soil. I went back and softened the darker gray areas on these after adding the trees.

Two-pan beam balance scale

a common weigh scale to recheck the weight of your items before leaving

Scaled siding on a building in the Pearl District of Portland Oregon.

A heavy yet extremely durable, heat and fire proof shield, absorbs fire damage as well.

this very scale originates from a endangered sub species of a kanohi dragon, often found near lava or deep in its silver mine as its nest.

 

The Dragon Warrior model of a advanced engineered torch that creates a blade of Fire. The mobile variant offers great performance thats easy to master, requiring less energy from its own source and its user, making it very economical friendly. Its precision focus a perfect and sharp beam of only fire. Strong, Light and Fast. Reaching melting temperatures.

Compared to the Dragon Elder, Tahu's beastly class torch, burns hotter and requires more hard training to master and is incredibly more taxing.

 

Toa Hotaru

Kanohi: Aki Hau

Younger Brother: Flaris

Element: Blaze

Class: Elite Samurai

Abilities: advanced fire bending and shaping his flames into a katana

 

Hotaru & Flaris were two young brotherly matoran, starting as low level knights in training in hopes one day they would become Toa. Hotaru was the oldest and a bit more skilled, sharping his and flaris abilities. The two trained, fought and hunted together for years. While most Ta-matoran took work in making masks all day, the brothers were busy earning their place. Hotaru took lessons with the very few that wanted to challenge the makuta. Flaris invested his time into researching armor and weapons and caught up on lessons passed to him from his best friend. The matorans courage & hard work would pay off when the day came for them to begin their future as Toa. Hotaru was the first to evolve into one and quickly joined a team, he said his good byes and took off. Flaris would also evolve into knighthood in the near future

 

The Kanohi Aki Hau

made by Forge of the Mask Makers - KhingK

83/366 pictures in 2016

85 - Measuring instrument, for 116 pictures in 2016

My dad was an electrical engineer, and this was his scale ruler. I don't know how old it is.

Taken for Our Daily Challenge (Topic: Scale)

 

I might still play around with the edit on this. But it I try my best and it was fun to do :)

I got the idea of having a big me and a little me randomly. I thought I could do it, so I whipped out my camera and decided to stand on the bathroom scale for good measure :) I ended up looking more frightened of myself than I intended, but its okay. I believe my oddly shaped feet and toes are enough to frighten anyone ;)

 

Hoping everyone is having a superb day! I can't believe my birthday is tomorrow. It doesn't feel real...

 

PS- My hair is pulled up into a bun. I just now realized that it looks a little odd..

A frosty morning at the river Hull

 

I wrote a blog on Hull's popular photography locations. Please check it out, it may be useful! www.neilnicklinphotography.co.uk/blog/2015/5/photography-...

@woodland park zoo

This week's FlickrFriday theme is: #Scales

Le thème de ce FlickrFriday est: #Écailles

O tema desta FlickrFriday é: #Escamas

本次 FlickrFriday 主題: #秤

FlickrFriday-Thema der Woche: #Waage

El tema de FlickrFriday es: #Escamas

 

Multiple Composite project set by the college.

 

I was inspired heavily by FiddleOak for this image who you can find here: www.flickr.com/photos/fiddleoak/

 

He has some fantastic work, and I enjoyed playing with this style.

 

Model: Megan Rainey

This week 8 Sept. - 14 Sept.. our theme is:

~~~~~ Unexpected ~~~~~

www.flickr.com/groups/temporaryexhibitionsartgallery/

Art Week Gallery Theme ~ Unexpected ~

~

AI/GIMP/PIXLR

 

large view worth it: On Black

Rovinj, Croatia 2006

Skógafoss is huge. My tall 6'11"; friend is, for once, tiny. And drenched.

The water plunges from a height of a 14 storey building (60m) to a deafening roar. My phone was getting sprayed with mist a hundred feet away.

I shot this in 2016, but never posted it. After transforming this image with the Prisma app, I used many of the tools provided by Snapseed Photo Share to fix it up. The two historic airplanes are also change banks, one from Shell Oil and the other from Texaco. The plastic car was a gift from my grandson, Jackson. It came with a set of scale tools which I keep in the trunk. It’s a Chrysler convertible from the 1950s, I believe. The ruler I used for years when I was a graphic designer. It came from a type shop in Detroit.

 

*Just a few items from my collections

Edited in Prisma app with Porthole

I have a diecast model of a 1946 Ambulance that would work well in a scene, but there wasn't a stretcher included with the model. Hmmmm, why not make one, I thought.

In my "parts" box I found some left over brass window frames that had potential for the stretcher's base. And then there was the trusty aluminum tubing that could stand in for the detailing.

It was a plan.

About 10 hours later, there was a little stretcher on my work mat.

Gotta love the web for photo references!

 

The Complete Beginner's Guide To Model Trains

 

Discover all the “Closely Guarded” model railroading tips and tricks you need to plan & build your dream model railroad. This guide starts with a clear understanding that building a model railway is not just setting up a simple model train set around the Christmas tree. You are creating an entire scaled model railway which includes hills, rivers, fields, buildings, houses, roads, cars, people and whatever else your imagination dreams up. modeltrains.best-online-solution.com

 

Salvaged from Clydeside Model Railway Club's "Russ Junction" layout when it was dismantled in 1969.

11th June 2023

Palazzo zona prati Roma

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