View allAll Photos Tagged Slides
Found Kodachrome slide dated January 1963m, manually labelled with one word that looks like "Linerbaugh's".
Carl Broemel plays slide guitar during the My Morning Jacket Concert in St. Augustine.
April 2010
Taken with my Nikon D60
The tradition of me buying a new tool for every DIY project continues.
This is a sliding bevel. It is very useful in copying angles without measuring it. Measuring anything in order to copy is a common source of error (when transcribing measurements lazy humans like me tend to round it off, measure incorrectly, etc)
A nice slide rule I got at a tag sale. It still had a tag and receipt from the Yale book store from the 60's. I have since sent it to a friend in Sweden who collects such things
Found slide in unbranded cardboard mount showing a young man in a check shirt. Like Found Slide - 1832, this has horizontal lines of damage to the celuloid suggesting a problem with the original camera.
Attached to the lid of the box the slides were in, is a Customs Declaration stating that they were imported into Australia from Thailand, and it is dated February 1965. Of course there is no guarantee that this picture was part of the original slides in that box.
Actually makes sense: In the former post distribution centre there are slides that have served as gigantic mail-slides. So, seeing them now, you think to yourself: I want to slide down!
Here we go: In the u19 – CREATE YOUR WORLD area you can glide down a slide!
Credit: vog.photo
Slide 8 of a presentation, 'Integrated crop-livestock systems:A key to sustainable intensification in Africa', by Shirley Tarawali, Alan Duncan, Peter Thorne, Diego Valbuena,Katrien Descheemaker and Sabine Homann-KeeTui, presented at the 22nd International Grasslands Congress, Sydney, Australia, 15-19 Sep 2013 (image credit: ILRI).
Replica Timer from the TV show Sliders.
The Timer would allow the user to transport to a parallel universe.
Magic lantern slide, 8.25 cm (3 ¼") square in mahogany frame 17.6 cm x 11.3 cm (7" x 4 ½") c. 1870, branded L D Brooke, depicts The Court of the Lions fountain in The Alhambra.
www.alhambra-patronato.es/index.php/The-Court-of-the-Lion...
" In Great Britain around 1870, the manufacturer J. Barnard &
Son industrially produced the first really successful decal
transparencies in full color. The decals were printed in enameled inks that were subsequently cooked once the illustrations had been transferred to the glass. The pieces of glass were circular, and mounted in mahogany frames measuring 7 (17.78 cm) x 4 (10.16 cm) inches, covered by protective glass that was in turn held in place by a metal ring.
After 1885, when magic lantern slides measuring 8.25 cm
long flooded the market, a size that had become a kind of
“standard” for the chassis of the projector, the popularity of
decal slides for magic lanterns rose sharply."
When Zachary heard that for…
Daily Dog Challenge "534. Pet Owners Independence Day"
… he would get to go to work in place of Daddy, he sprinted off to get his…
Our Daily Challenge - April 17, 2013 - "Classic"
… Slide Rule and other items he felt were appropriate for the job.
Zachary - just hold old do you think we are???
And no, not even Engineers are geeky enough to wear antenna balls to work.
At least not on Wednesday's.
Stop on by Zachary and Henry's blog: bzdogs.com
A FEW OF MY FAVORITE THINGS
a selection from a side show created of about two hundred images lasting about a minute......