View allAll Photos Tagged Source
“Associated” is a site specific show in a severely damaged brownstone, currently with a Vacate Order, issued by the DOB. As you may recall, the huge fire on Nov 12th 2010 at the Associated Supermarket on 5th Avenue and 17th Street not only damaged the supermarket building including the Open Source Gallery, but also a brownstone next door. The 3 family house, the Gallery owners’ home, was also rendered uninhabitable by the blaze.
There is no exact date for the show. There will be a 2 week window when the Vacate Order will be dropped and the contractors will start their work. All participating artists are prepared to install their work any day within the next month.
opening up with the
OPEN SOURCE CARNIVAL
The Carnival involves a public celebration combining some elements of circus, performance, public fair and party. We encourage people to dress-up in costumes during the celebration and to bring a little bit of money for the future of OPEN SOURCE.
Participants
Sara Bouchard, Christian Brown, Reamonn Byrne, Wendy Chu, Ethan Crenson, Hubert Dobler, Peter Feigenbaum, Pirmin Hagen, Fumie Ishii, Der Kommissar, Stefanie Koseff, James Leonard, Loadingdock5, Katerina Marcelja, Amanda C. Mathis, Patrick May, Nolan McKew, Annelise E. Ream, Jason Reppert, Raphaela Riepl, Evan Robarts, Frank Scheiderbauer, Allison Read Smith, Miho Suzuki, Kathleen Vance, Letizia Werth, Lily White, Monika Wuhrer
The Source Theater 14th Street, NW, Washington, DC, photo taken at night
PEASE CLICK ABOVE TO VIEW LARGE ON BLACK, BEST VIEWED LARGE ON BLACK
Taken with the iPhone 4 camera with and Art on the iPad
Join ITS Tactical as we take an in-depth look at Source Hydration systems and London Bridge Trading Insulated Hydration Pouches. Check out ITS Tactical for a full written review and detailed photos! itstac.tc/qPDUP5
Source Images:
testc2007skb.JPG (Av: F0.0; Tv: 1/1 sec.; ISO: 0; FL: 0.0 mm)
testc2007sk.jpg (Av: F0.0; Tv: 1/1 sec.; ISO: 0; FL: 0.0 mm)
Processing:
Fusion F.1 (HDR; Mode 1)
Join ITS Tactical as we take an in-depth look at Source Hydration systems and London Bridge Trading Insulated Hydration Pouches. Check out ITS Tactical for a full written review and detailed photos! itstac.tc/qPDUP5
Source: www.prewarcar.com/the-founding-of-the-pac-in-pictures
www.pionierautomobielenclub.nl/
On 12 May 1956, the Pioneer Automobile Club of the Netherlands was founded after more than 20 applicants had gathered in Utrecht following a nationwide appeal. The club was open to all cars built before 1930. As a result, and on the same day, Model A Ford owners met elsewhere to form their own club. Nowadays the PAC is open to all cars built before 1940.
Bought a new pack. There's three rows of PALS webbing inside the main compartment, so now I just need a MOLLE bag for three lenses!.
This is another brook that just boils up out of the soil beside the creek - we drank from this stream. There's nothing that tastes as clean as a fast-flowing mountain brook.
Source: livinghistories.newcastle.edu.au/nodes/view/37182
This photograph was taken by Brian R Andrews of Killingworth NSW. Brian worked for 20 years as a Draftsman for Coal and Allied Industries Limited. This photograph is part of Brian's private collection. Brian has kindly given Cultural Collections at the University of Newcastle, NSW, Australia, access to his collection and allowed us to publish the images.
Please contact Cultural Collections at the University of Newcastle, NSW, Australia, if you are the subject of the image, or know the subject of the image, and have cultural or other reservations about the image being displayed on this website and would like to discuss this with us.
If you would like to comment on the photograph, please contact Cultural Collections .
Join ITS Tactical as we take an in-depth look at Source Hydration systems and London Bridge Trading Insulated Hydration Pouches. Check out ITS Tactical for a full written review and detailed photos! itstac.tc/qPDUP5
With the winter we have had here in Kent, not as wet as some I admit, it seems that today would be a good day to go on a tour of the Nailbourne.
The Nailbourne, is a winterbourne, a river or stream that only flows in winter or wet weather, mostly of chalk downlands, and sometimes can flow through the chalk rather than on it.
The Nailbourne rises in Lyminge, under St Mary, the parish church, and once a Saxon monastery and probably a Roman site before then.
The stream springs from the ground, in the lea of the wall besde the road, meanders across the plating field then goes through the village.
-------------------------------------------
The Little Stour is one of the tributaries of the River Stour in the English county of Kent. The upper reaches of the river are better known as the Nailbourne, whilst the lower reaches were once known as the Seaton Navigation.
The intermittent source of the river is at Lyminge, and in its early reaches from Lyminge to Littlebourne it forms a chalk stream and winterbourne that is normally known as the Nailbourne. Below Littlebourne the river is better known as the Little Stour, and it joins with the Great Stour at Plucks Gutter near East Stourmouth.
The Nailbourne flows from Lyminge, through the Elham Valley until it becomes known as the Little Stour at Littlebourne.
The Nailbourne bubbles up beneath St Ethelburga's Well in Tayne Field in the centre of Lyminge. Whilst the stream often holds a plentiful supply of water from Lyminge to Elham throughout the year, it rarely holds any water from Elham to Bishopsbourne even in the winter months. However, in wet years the normally dry ditch can turn into a fast flowing torrent, flooding roads, fields and houses. An example of this was in 2001 when there was extensive flooding throughout the Elham Valley.
There are a number of minor tributaries that flow into the Nailbourne throughout the Elham Valley. Most are nameless although Ordnance Survey maps do mark a stream known as the East Brooke which runs from Etchinghill and joins the Nailbourne at Lyminge.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Stour
------------------------------------------
Æthelburh of Kent (born 601,[1] sometimes spelled Æthelburg, Ethelburga, Æthelburga; Old English: Æþelburh, Æðelburh, Æðilburh, also known as Tate or Tata),[2][3] was an early Anglo-Saxon queen consort of Northumbria, the second wife of King Edwin. As she was a Christian from Kent, their marriage triggered the initial phase of the conversion of the pagan north of England to Christianity.
Æthelburh would have been born in the late 6th century, as the daughter of King Æthelberht of Kent (sometimes spelled Aethelberht) and his queen Bertha, and sister of Eadbald. In 625, she married Edwin of Northumbria as his second wife. A condition of their marriage was Edwin's conversion to Christianity and the acceptance of Paulinus's mission to convert the Northumbrians.[4][5]
Æthelburh’s children with Edwin were: Eanflæd, Ethelhun, Wuscfrea and Edwen.
Her daughter Eanflæd grew up under the protection of her uncle, King Eadbald of Kent. Bede, Ecclesiastical History (2.20) states that Æthelburh did not trust her brother, or Edwin's sainted successor Oswald, with the lives of Edwin's male descendants whom she sent to the court of King Dagobert I (her mother's cousin).
King Edwin’s conversion was due to his marriage to Æthelburh, who brought her bishop Paulinus with her. Both Æthelburh and her mother, Bertha, received letters from popes Gregory and Boniface respectively, urging them to do their Christian duty by converting their pagan husbands.Their daughter Eanflaed was one of the first to be baptized in Northumbria.[6] After King Edwin was wounded, Æthelburh's alarm caused an early onset of childbirth. Both the mother, as well as the infant, appeared to be in danger. The prayers of Paulinus were offered for the queen and child. After they recovered, 12 of the royal households, as well as the baby, were baptized by Edwin’s permission and request.[7]
According to the Kentish Royal Legend, after Edwin's death at the Battle of Hatfield Chase in 633, she returned to Kent. She then established one of the first Benedictine nunneries in England, at Lyminge, near Folkestone, which she led until her death in 647, and where her remains were later venerated.[5]
Modern research has shown that the buildings at Lyminge were designed to contain a convent of monks as well as of nuns. The church is built from Roman masonry, and was possibly built out of the fragments of a villa, which was customary practice by Anglo-Saxons, or it may have been a Roman basilica
pattern: Ram's Horn
yarn: Trekking XXL
color: #91 & #93
needles: #2.5mm DPN
pattern source: Simply Socks/Fancy Feet by Anna Zilboorg
First Minister Nicola Sturgeon met with representatives from the agricultural industry this morning to hear first-hand about the challenges they currently face and what actions would most help. A key issue was how to increase Scottish sourcing at home and abroad.
Source: Scan of an original item.
Set: GRA02-14.
Date: c. 1910.
Postmark: unposted.
Photographer/publisher: William Hooper.
HOOPER COLLECTION ©P.A. WI LLIAMS.
Repository: From the collection of Mr & Mrs Grace.
Local Studies at Swindon Central Library.
{"source":"editor","total_effects_time":0,"total_draw_time":0,"total_effects_actions":0,"uid":"2A4D509B-0DF7-4D7C-9CD2-BF3159FC8D50_1467340892130","tools_used":{"crop":0,"perspective":0,"shape_crop":0,"stretch":0,"free_crop":0,"resize":0,"adjust":0,"clone":0,"selection":0,"flip_rotate":0,"tilt_shift":0,"enhance":0,"curves":0,"motion":0},"layers_used":0,"effects_tried":0,"sources":[],"brushes_used":0,"subsource":"done_button","photos_added":1,"effects_applied":0,"total_draw_actions":0,"height":1773,"total_editor_time":26182,"width":2364,"origin":"gallery","total_editor_actions":{"text":0,"shape_mask":0,"border":0,"square_fit":0,"lensflare":0,"clipart":0,"frame":0,"callout":0,"mask":0}}
Fermilab Antiproton Source
The antiproton is the antiparticle of the proton. Antiprotons are stable, but they are typically short-lived since any collision with a proton will cause both particles to be annihilated in a burst of energy.
The existence of the antiproton with −1 electric charge, opposite to the +1 electric charge of the proton, was predicted by Paul Dirac in his 1933 Nobel Prize lecture. Dirac received the Nobel Prize for his previous 1928 publication of his Dirac Equation that predicted the existence of positive and negative solutions to the Energy Equation (E = mc^2) of Einstein and the existence of the positron, the antimatter analog to the electron, with positive charge and opposite spin.
The antiproton was experimentally confirmed in 1955 by University of California, Berkeley physicists Emilio Segrè and Owen Chamberlain, for which they were awarded the 1959 Nobel Prize in Physics. An antiproton consists of two up antiquark and one down antiquark (uud). The properties of the antiproton that have been measured all match the corresponding properties of the proton, with the exception that the antiproton has opposite electric charge and magnetic moment than the proton. The question of how matter is different from antimatter remains an open problem, in order to explain how our universe survived the Big Bang and why so little antimatter exists today.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antiproton
Fermilab Antiproton Source Department
Picture taken by Michael Kappel at Fermilab
View the high resolution image on my photo website
Join ITS Tactical as we take an in-depth look at Source Hydration systems and London Bridge Trading Insulated Hydration Pouches. Check out ITS Tactical for a full written review and detailed photos! itstac.tc/qPDUP5
source: lifehacker.com/5504465/how-to-transform-your-windows-desk...
wallpaper by: interfacelift.com/