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In Shades of yellow, this hand needle felted clutch embodies the sun.
Named solar Flare for obvious reasons, this clutch is sure to brighten up your day.
Viewing the total solar eclipse on Aug. 21, 2017, at Garden of the Gods in the Shawnee National Forest.
Today we are facing an energy consumption society; and electricity, coal, oil etc. such energy resource is becoming tenser and tenser. The entire world's energy which is in store, according to estimates of experts, is only able to be used for another 50 years, and now our country and the entire community has regarded the energy saving as the first-class event.
Conserving energy for future generations to apply to the human race development is really an emergency now. So under that demands, the use of solar energy has made the future a little brighter. We are happy to realize that solar power is the key to solve the problem of resource shortage.
Get more details from my blog.
Oct. 16, 2023: Solar Flare, a scarecrow by Tigg Morales, on display in Cambria, California, during the Cambria Scarecrow Festival. Photo taken with Bluristic App on iPhone.
Long story short - I developed two rolls of Ansco Memo 35mm found film that expired in 1949 in Diafine 5+5. In the same container, I also developed a roll of Verichrome Pan 127 that developed normally.
The two rolls of Ansco Memo film both contained images, seemingly at random, that either developed normally, exhibited solarization to some degree, or, extremely weirdly, just plain reversed itself into a positive image on the film. This also happened about 3 hours later with an old roll of 124 film that I shot in a Brownie box camera.
This was taken from the roof of one of the buildings we installed a solar powered lighting system in. You can see several of the other building in the picture with solar panels attached to the thatch roofs. You can also see the huge storm that we got stuck in not long after this picture was taken.
This lovely Victorian property in North Yorkshire has had a modern addition...
Hyundai all black solar panels.
A combined student/staff effort led to two new solar arrays being installed on EMU's campus. One is on University Commons, and another on Roselawn. Volunteers, along with EMU staff installed panels and cleared ballast.
Bold Nebraska and Pipeline Fighters installed solar panels in the path of the proposed Keystone XL pipeline, on Diana and "Stix" Steskal's Prairierose Farm near Atkinson, NE on Saturday, Sept. 16.
Donate $25 now to put solar in the path of KXL: bit.ly/solarxl
This second Solar XL project installation follows the first solar panels that were installed on the farm of Jim and Chris Carlson on the KXL pipeline route. Details for the 3rd Solar XL installation site announced soon!
The families partnered with Solar XL project sponsors Bold Nebraska, 350.org, Indigenous Environmental Network, CREDO, and Oil Change International to put renewable energy directly in the pipeline’s path. Solar XL underscores the need to center solutions to climate change while rejecting the Keystone XL pipeline and resisting the expansion of the fossil fuel industry.
DETAILS: boldnebraska.org/solarxl
Photos: Alex Matzke / Bold Nebraska
The Solar Gem Greenhouses are manufactured in Tacoma, Wash., and are designed for the unique climate of the Pacific Northwest. They’re the easiest greenhouses to use all year long. www.solargemgreenhouses.com
Photo by Erica Binns.