View allAll Photos Tagged Substrate
Substrate: Quercus robur, on fallen trunk.
Määraja / Identified By Irja Saar.
Vinni, Lääne-Virumaa.
Just created # 24 in the limited edition for the Pikes Peak Art Festival this weekend in Colorado Springs! If you are in the area, come buy and see my work. I love making new art! This is a 24x36 - This image was captured in Greece, printed in my home studio on my large format printer on a museum grade, archival canvas, varnished, trimmed, mounted to a rigid substrate, then framed in a walnut frame with a gold fillet....whew! Lots of work, but clearly worth it! See more of my work, and my schedule, on my website ift.tt/1xjDz8H ift.tt/1mmkMXV
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Since the OSHW logo printed well on cloth, I took the next step and printed a jointed, finger on a cloth substrate.
The honeydew secreted by the crawlers is a substrate for sooty molds growing on the fruit surface. Figure 8 in NYS IPM fact sheet Comstock Mealybug (Pseudococcus comstocki (Kuwana)), in eCommons, Cornell University at ecommons.cornell.edu/handle/1813/43087. Photo by NYSAES, Cornell University. More information is on nysipm.cornell.edu/agriculture/fruits and Cornell Fruit Resources fruit.cornell.edu.
Substrate: Populus tremula.
Määraja / Identified By Kadri Runnel.
Eesti punase nimestiku liik, ohustatud (EN).
Lüganuse vald, Ida-Virumaa.
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Direct to substrate color LED UV printing on cosmetics ensures outstanding and vivid print even on transparent packaging such as transparent lip gloss plastic container.
Multiple pieces of lip gloss tubes can be printed within minutes.
Discover the cosmetics printing ideas with artisJet >> www.youtube.com/watch?v=tl4NYxELnuY&t=25s
Details and support by info@artisjet.com
Photos from substrate placement at the Fort Wayne reef restoration site on the Detroit River, 2018. Photo credit: Joseph G. Bailey Great Lakes Dock and Materials; L.L.C.
Substrate: Quercus robur, on fallen trunk.
Määraja / Identified By Irja Saar.
Vinni, Lääne-Virumaa.
Norfolk Park, Sheffield. The blueish-green-grey colour and the pink gills, as well as the dead wood substrate are clues.
Substrate: Quercus robur, on fallen trunk.
Eesti punase nimestiku liik, ohulähedane (NT).
Soodla, Harjumaa.
The pillow measures about 10' x 12' x 3'. I've inserted some wire loops on the corners to affix some tassles after the mosaic is completed.
substrate is filled into bags before sterilisation, black bags are used but a few transparent bags are used for monitoring progress or as a sample bag.
Sample kitchen door. Grey slate in colour, very shiny but with a textured finish. Had to sand out where I was going to glue. Forgot about the borders. Client requested all glass. Will have to use solid colours or heavily opaque.
Substrate: Phellinus tremulae, Populus tremula.
Eesti punase nimestiku liik, ohualdis (VU). LK III.
Kantküla, Lääne-Virumaa.
Since the OSHW logo printed well on cloth, I took the next step and printed a jointed, finger on a cloth substrate.
Apart from IP, a combination of electrospraying technique and hot-pressing posttreatment as mentioned earlier was also proposed to fabricate TFNC NF membranes for anionic dye separation. As shown in Fig. 14.13, chitosan-polyethylene oxide-polytriethylene glycol dimethacrylate (CS-PEO-PTEGDMA) hydrophilic nanobeads were the first electrospray on electrospun a PAN nanofibrous substrate and then the top layer was acidic moist-cured followed by hot pressing to form an integrated barrier on the support. Last, an integrated CS-PEO-PTEGDMA layer was formed by UV curing. Notably, the CS polymer chains can be physically crosslinked by the semi-interpenetrating polymer networks among barrier layers without sacrificing the amino (imino) and hydroxyl groups of CS. The optimized TFNC membrane showed excellent NF performance for anionic dye removal with high permeate flux (117.5 L/m2h) and high rejection (99.9%) for Direct Red 80 solution at low feed pressure (0.2 MPa), due to an adsorption-assisted NF process.
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Give thanks for Thanksgiving Day through party treat candy boxes. With artis 5000U LED UV printer you can customize metal / plastic / cardboard / wood boxes with a print height of up to 10 cm.
Printer model: artisjet.com/index.php/en/en-products/en-led-uv-printers/...
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Pietra dura or pietre dure (see below), called parchin kari in South Asia, is a term for the inlay technique of using cut and fitted, highly polished colored stones to create images. It is considered a decorative art. The stonework, after the work is assembled loosely, is glued stone-by-stone to a substrate after having previously been "sliced and cut in different shape sections; and then assembled together so precisely that the contact between each section was practically invisible". Stability was achieved by grooving the undersides of the stones so that they interlocked, rather like a jigsaw puzzle, with everything held tautly in place by an encircling 'frame'. Many different colored stones, particularly marbles, were used, along with semiprecious, and even precious stones. It first appeared in Rome in the 16th century, reaching its full maturity in Florence. Pietra dura items are generally crafted on green, white or black marble base stones. Typically the resulting panel is completely flat, but some examples where the image is in low relief were made, taking the work more into the area of hardstone carving.
RELATED ARTS AND TERMS
Pietre dure is an Italian plural meaning "hard rocks" or hardstones; the singular pietra dura is also encountered in Italian. In Italian, but not in English, the term embraces all gem engraving and hardstone carving, which is the artistic carving of three-dimensional objects in semi-precious stone, normally from a single piece, for example in Chinese jade. The traditional convention in English has been to use the singular pietra dura just to denote multi-colored inlay work. However, in recent years there has been a trend to use pietre dure as a term for the same thing, but not for all of the techniques it covers, in Italian. But the title of a 2008 exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Art of the Royal Court: Treasures in Pietre Dure from the Palaces of Europe used the full Italian sense of the term, probably because they thought that it had greater brand recognition. The material on the website speaks of objects such as a vase in lapis lazuli as being examples of "hardstone carving (pietre dure)" The Victoria & Albert Museum in London uses both versions on its website, but uses pietra dura ("A method of inlaying coloured marbles or semi-precious stones into a stone base, often in geometric or flower patterns....") in its "Glossary", which was evidently not consulted by the author of another page, where the reader is told: "Pietre dure (from the Italian 'hard stone') is made from finely sliced coloured stones, precisely matched, to create a pictorial scene or regular design". The English term "Florentine mosaic" is sometimes also encountered, probably developed by the tourist industry. Giovanni Montelatici (1864-1930) was an Italian Florentine artist whose brilliant work has been distributed across the world by tourists and collectors.
It is distinct from mosaic in that the component stones are mostly much larger and cut to a shape suiting their place in the image, not all of roughly equal size and shape as in mosaic. In pietra dura, the stones are not cemented together with grout, and works in pietra dura are often portable. Nor should it be confused with micromosaics, a form of mosaic using very small tesserae of the same size to create images rather than decorative patterns, for Byzantine icons, and later for panels for setting into furniture and the like.
For fixed inlay work on walls, ceilings, and pavements that do not meet the definition for mosaic, the terms intarsia or cosmati work/cosmatesque are better used. Similarly, for works that use larger pieces of stone (or tile), opus sectile may be used. Pietre dure is essentially stone marquetry. As a high expression of lapidary art, it is closely related to the jewelers art. It can also be seen as a branch of sculpture as three-dimensionality can be achieved, as with a bas relief
HISTORY
Pietra dura developed from the Ancient Roman opus sectile, which at least in terms of surviving examples, was architectural, used on floors and walls, with both geometric and figurative designs. In the Middle Ages cosmatesque floors and small columns etc. on tombs and altars continued to use inlays of different colours in geometric patterns. Byzantine art continued with inlaid floors, but also produced some small religious figures in hardstone inlays, for example in the Pala d'Oro in San Marco, Venice (though this mainly uses enamel). In the Italian Renaissance this technique again was used for images. The Florentines, who most fully developed the form, however, regarded it as 'painting in stone'.
As it developed in Florence, the technique was initially called opere di commessi (approximately, "Fitted together works"). Medici Grand Duke Ferdinando I of Tuscany founded the Galleria di'Lavori in 1588, now the Opificio delle pietre dure, for the purpose of developing this and other decorative forms.
A multitude of varied objects were created. Table tops were particularly prized, and these tend to be the largest specimens. Smaller items in the form of medallions, cameos, wall plaques, panels inserted into doors or onto cabinets, bowls, jardinieres, garden ornaments, fountains, benches, etc. are all found. A popular form was to copy an existing painting, often of a human figure, as illustrated by the image of Pope Clement VIII, above. Examples are found in many museums. The medium was transported to other European centers of court art and remained popular into the 19th century. In particular, Naples became a noted center of the craft. By the 20th century, the medium was in decline, in part by the assault of modernism, and the craft had been reduced to mainly restoration work. In recent decades, however, the form has been revived, and receives state-funded sponsorship. Modern examples range from tourist-oriented kitsch including syrupy reproductions of 19th century style religious subjects (especially in Florence and Naples), to works copying or based on older designs used for luxurious decorative contexts, to works in a genuinely contemporary artistic idiom.
PARCHIN KARI
By the early part of the 17th century, smaller objects produced by the Opificio were widely diffused throughout Europe, and as far East to the court of the Mughals in India, where the form was imitated and reinterpreted in a native style; its most sumptuous expression is found in the Taj Mahal. In Mughal India, pietra dura was known as Parchin kari, literally 'inlay' or 'driven-in' work.
Due to the Taj Mahal being one of the major tourist attractions, there is a flourishing industry of Pietra Dura artifacts in Agra ranging from tabletops, medallions, elephants and other animal forms, jewellery boxes and other decorative items. This art form is fully alive and thriving in Agra, India though the patterns in the designs are more Persian than Roman or Medician.
WIKIPEDIA
A lichen is a composite organism that arises from algae or cyanobacteria (or both) living among filaments of a fungus in a symbiotic relationship. The combined life form has properties that are very different from the properties of its component organisms. Lichens come in many colors, sizes, and forms. The properties are sometimes plant-like, but lichens are not plants. Lichens may have tiny, leafless branches (fruticose), flat leaf-like structures (foliose), flakes that lie on the surface like peeling paint (crustose), or other growth forms. A macrolichen is a lichen that is either bush-like or leafy; all other lichens are termed microlichens. Here, "macro" and "micro" do not refer to size, but to the growth form. Common names for lichens may contain the word "moss" (e.g., "Reindeer moss", "Iceland moss"), and lichens may superficially look like and grow with mosses, but lichens are not related to mosses or any plant. Lichens do not have roots that absorb water and nutrients as plants do but like plants they produce their own food by photosynthesis using sunlight energy, from carbon dioxide, water and minerals in their environment. When they grow on plants, they do not live as parasites and only use the plants as a substrate.
Green polyester tape is a green high-temperature tape with a PET film as the substrate and a layer of silicone adhesive applied uniformly on one side of the substrate. Green polyester tape produced by our factory has excellent temperature resistance and acid and alkali resistance. PET polyester film tape is mainly used for the shielding protection of paint spray plating and high temperature protection of other electronic components, also known as static electricity. Spraying tape, high temperature spraying masking tape.
Green Polyester Tape
Green Polyester Tape-TDS
BackingPET
Coefficient of the tapeSilicone
ColorGreen
Thickness mm0.06 /0.08/0.09
Length5-750m/Customized
TensileStrength≥120N/25mm
Elongation %≥70
Breakdown strength≥150N/25mm
Withstand VoltageKV4
Adhesion (N/25mm )7/8/9
Temperature Resistance℃230℃ 30mins
Core size(mm)25.4/38/76
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computer case, cabinet and other metal surface treatment high temperature powder without spraying, baking paint shielding protection;
shielding protection and insulation during high-temperature spraying of electronic products, automotive industry, painting and other products;
Printed circuit boards, electronic parts, resistance capacitors are fixed during production and the PCB board is impregnated to shield the gold finger part and prevent the plating solution from being immersed and contaminated. The printed circuit board is gold-plated for shielding and protection;
Industries such as household appliances, machinery, electronics, etc. need high-temperature paint spraying protection, high-temperature binding fixation.
release paper joint (also known as: Splicing Tapes)
Features Of Green Polyester Tape
High insulation, high temperature resistance and no residual glue
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For high-power, surface-mount RF applications, the Vishay Dale RCP series of thick film chip resistors on AlN substrates features power ratings up to 11 W with active temperature control in the compact 1206 case size.
on black cottonwood (not uncommon substrate - wonder why)
Clarks Creek Park
my lichen photos by genus - www.flickr.com/photos/29750062@N06/collections/7215762439...
my photos arranged by subject, e.g. mountains - www.flickr.com/photos/29750062@N06/collections