View allAll Photos Tagged TimeMachine

The Barnacle Twin Presents - The Time Traveling Film Creep and The Timid Critic - King Kong Skull Island - A Brecht newspaper cartoon without the paper - comic comics Theater Theaters Theatre Movie Film Movies Films - New York City - Brechtbug - Gadfly - NYC 2017 comix ape gorilla gorillas cartoons Beware the Cinema Creeps segue segway timemachine time machine

A productive afternoon at Pataphysical Studios, brainstorming with the first model of the Time Machine, then getting the Pataphysical Slot Machine back in shape for its next exhibit. A good time was had by all.

 

Making art with friends is why we keep coming back to the Pataphysical Studios every week. Our conversations are always interesting and the birds all around us treat us with melodious tweets.

 

Learn more about Pataphysical Studios: pataphysics.us/

 

Here is the original puzzle: www.flickr.com/photos/jahdakinebrah/4922951261/ which was a long-exposure shot of this. Space Ghost: Music by AstroPilot

Amid a glare of media interest, the first De Lorean cars left the Northern Ireland factory in December 1980. Sales in America were disappointingly low and the company collapsed.

 

The car consisted of a backbone chassis, stainless steel and plastic bodywork, gullwing doors and a V-6 engine in the rear. There was a choice of five speed manual or three speed automatic gearbox. The car featured many electrically operated fittings.

 

This examples is a faithful recreation of the car that starred in the 1985 Hollywood blockbuster film Back to the Future.

 

Cylinders: V-6

Capacity: 2850cc

Maximum Speed: 130mph

Valves: Overhead

Power Output: 130bhp @ 5500rpm

Price New: £12500 (in U.S.A)

 

Manufacturer: De Lorean Motor Cars Limited, Dunmurry, N. Ireland

Owner: Mr C Priest

Dedicato a Vittorio, perchè mi ha insegnato che le cose belle sono semplici.

 

In questo video la deformazione temporale di un video usando una mappa di spostamento.

 

Video originale non deformato tratto da www.simonnelli.com

Asisi Panorama. Berlin, januari 2013

The original car from Back to the Future.

I betcha she's wondering when the paparazzi is going to move out of her house. photo by the fancy.

EBT roundhouse Rockhill Furnace Pa

The DeLorean from Back To The Future II. You can see the Mr. Fusion on the back, which is how you know it's from II and not I or III.

Toybox Time Machine: "A Catalog Of The Coolest Toys Never Made" HC Book - Marty Baumann (IDW Publishing) 2017

 

*Aloha Bitsy Bongo Party

Our Maker Art class created a Time Machine this year, inviting you to travel through time from the age of dinosaurs to the 50th century.

 

Our 4th and 5th graders at the Lycée Français designed their own scenes from the past, present or future, and brought them to life with motion, lights and sounds. They also worked in teams to build interactive features like illuminated keypads, spinners and doors, using the popular Arduino platform.

 

In our after-school classes, we combine art, technology and storytelling to help children create their own magical worlds. They learn to design their ideas, build them with a variety of tools, animate them with electronics and tell their stories. This unique multimedia course helps them develop their creativity, collaboration and problem-solving skills -- and builds their confidence that they can help change the world.

 

This year, we had a really good group of 9 students, ages 8 to 11 -- many of whom had taken our Maker Art classes before. They were very creative and engaged, and did a great job presenting their work at the Lycée Français -- and at Marinovators at the College of Marin on April 22.

 

This Maker Art class was taught by Fabrice Florin and Edward Janne at the Lycée Français in Sausalito in winter 2017. We met every week for 12 workshops of 90 minutes each, Thursdays at 3:30pm, from January 5 to March 30, 2017. Our teachers are part of the Tam Makers learning community and we prepared materials for this project in our state-of-the-art makerspace at the nearby Tam High School.

 

View more photos about this Maker Art class at the Lycée:

bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-photos

 

Learn more about our Time Machine class:

bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-2017

 

Learn more about our Maker Art classes:

fabriceflorin.com/2016/02/14/teaching-maker-art/

 

Learn more about Tam Makers:

www.tammakers.org/

 

#arduino #makers #makerart #makered #techedu #timemachine

 

New Stuff in the Winter '96 Sub Pop Catalog. Remember Velocity Girl? Remember the Spinanes? DO YOU REMEMBER THE AFGHAN WHIGS?? And what about that "fresh new band from Issaquah, Wa." called Modest Mouse?

 

It's hopelessly dorky, I know, but there were a couple catalogs that possibly changed my life a little bit. One was Burning Airlines, which had t-shirts for every band on the planet (as far as I was aware), and the other was the Sub Pop catalog. Although the back of this catalog tells us to consider placing an "order over the internet" because it's "safe," "fun," and "easy," I wasn't online yet, and I was in suburban Florida, and I didn't know that there were other people like me (aside from a few of my friends, of course) who would walk into Sam Goody and get pissed off that we couldn't find what we were looking for because a.) we weren't entirely sure what it sounded like and b.) even if we knew, Sam Goody wouldn't have it. So I used catalogs and magazines and read interviews with bands I loved to learn about what else was there and how big and old (and new) the world was, and it changed me and changed the music in my head.

 

Oh, and the catalog is on top of my beloved dictionary, the one I used to take along on vacations.

  

Our journey began at the Firestone station as the steam locomotive departed, with full steam, on a tour of the village. We took the scenic route by foot, and had the pleasure of watching the train steam away.

I bought a car. A very large, expensive car that broke down on the way home from the garage. I spent hundreds of pounds fixing the car and asked my friend (time engineer Chris Edwards www.flickr.com/photos/unyon/) to make me a flux capacitor to go in the cockpit (as you do) but before the time manipulator could be completed I lost my license to a magistrate. So now it sits on my mantelpiece, a static reminder of my inability to get to 88MPH and put right what once went wrong.

  

Merry Christmas Tunnelweasel.

 

It is, however, pretty awesome.

My buddy's 1981 Delorean. Has the fuel lid on the hood. Flux Capacitor was optional.

We presented our Time Machine at Marinovators 2017, an annual showcase for young makers in Marin County.

 

Our Time Machine was created by the Maker Art class taught by Fabrice Florin and Edward Janne at the Lycée Français in Sausalito in winter 2017. Our 4th and 5th graders designed and built their own scenes from the past, present and future -- from the age of dinosaurs to the 50th century. This interactive art exhibit combines art, technology and storytelling -- using Arduino, motions, lights and sounds.

 

Many of our students and their parents were on hand to demonstrate this innovative after-school project to dozens of visitors of all ages. Everyone seemed to enjoy their experience, and it was a great opportunity for the kids to get the recognition they deserve. This innovative after-school project helps children develop their creative and collaborative skills -- and the confidence that they can help change the world.

 

We hosted this exhibit with Tam Makers, our makerspace in Mill Valley, where many of the artifacts for the Time Machine were fabricated, based on the children’s designs. We also invited visitors to make their own Tam Makers badges with LEDs, laser cut shapes, and color markers. They created some ingenious badges, and wore them proudly at the show.

 

It was a great way to celebrate art and science and encourage children to build a better world.

 

Marinovators took place on Saturday, April 22, from 10am to 3pm, at the College of Marin in Kentfield. Our Tam Makers booth was in Room #245 in the new Academic Center.

 

Learn more about our Time Machine: bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-2017

 

Learn more about our Maker Art classes: fabriceflorin.com/2016/02/14/teaching-maker-art/

 

Learn more about Tam Makers: www.tammakers.org/

 

Learn more about Marinovators: marinovators.org/

Our Maker Art class created a Time Machine this year, inviting you to travel through time from the age of dinosaurs to the 50th century.

 

Our 4th and 5th graders at the Lycée Français designed their own scenes from the past, present or future, and brought them to life with motion, lights and sounds. They also worked in teams to build interactive features like illuminated keypads, spinners and doors, using the popular Arduino platform.

 

In our after-school classes, we combine art, technology and storytelling to help children create their own magical worlds. They learn to design their ideas, build them with a variety of tools, animate them with electronics and tell their stories. This unique multimedia course helps them develop their creativity, collaboration and problem-solving skills -- and builds their confidence that they can help change the world.

 

This year, we had a really good group of 9 students, ages 8 to 11 -- many of whom had taken our Maker Art classes before. They were very creative and engaged, and did a great job presenting their work at the Lycée Français -- and at Marinovators at the College of Marin on April 22.

 

This Maker Art class was taught by Fabrice Florin and Edward Janne at the Lycée Français in Sausalito in winter 2017. We met every week for 12 workshops of 90 minutes each, Thursdays at 3:30pm, from January 5 to March 30, 2017. Our teachers are part of the Tam Makers learning community and we prepared materials for this project in our state-of-the-art makerspace at the nearby Tam High School.

 

View more photos about this Maker Art class at the Lycée:

bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-photos

 

Learn more about our Time Machine class:

bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-2017

 

Learn more about our Maker Art classes:

fabriceflorin.com/2016/02/14/teaching-maker-art/

 

Learn more about Tam Makers:

www.tammakers.org/

 

#arduino #makers #makerart #makered #techedu #timemachine

Our Maker Art class created a Time Machine this year, inviting you to travel through time from the age of dinosaurs to the 50th century.

 

Our 4th and 5th graders at the Lycée Français designed their own scenes from the past, present or future, and brought them to life with motion, lights and sounds. They also worked in teams to build interactive features like illuminated keypads, spinners and doors, using the popular Arduino platform.

 

In our after-school classes, we combine art, technology and storytelling to help children create their own magical worlds. They learn to design their ideas, build them with a variety of tools, animate them with electronics and tell their stories. This unique multimedia course helps them develop their creativity, collaboration and problem-solving skills -- and builds their confidence that they can help change the world.

 

This year, we had a really good group of 9 students, ages 8 to 11 -- many of whom had taken our Maker Art classes before. They were very creative and engaged, and did a great job presenting their work at the Lycée Français -- and at Marinovators at the College of Marin on April 22.

 

This Maker Art class was taught by Fabrice Florin and Edward Janne at the Lycée Français in Sausalito in winter 2017. We met every week for 12 workshops of 90 minutes each, Thursdays at 3:30pm, from January 5 to March 30, 2017. Our teachers are part of the Tam Makers learning community and we prepared materials for this project in our state-of-the-art makerspace at the nearby Tam High School.

 

View more photos about this Maker Art class at the Lycée:

bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-photos

 

Learn more about our Time Machine class:

bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-2017

 

Learn more about our Maker Art classes:

fabriceflorin.com/2016/02/14/teaching-maker-art/

 

Learn more about Tam Makers: www.tammakers.org/

 

#arduino #makers #makerart #makered #techedu #timemachine

Here's a great pre-made sitting room that might work for your time machine (you do have one, right?). Touch the door for the secret mad scientist lab.

Our Maker Art class created a Time Machine this year, inviting you to travel through time from the age of dinosaurs to the 50th century.

 

Our 4th and 5th graders at the Lycée Français designed their own scenes from the past, present or future, and brought them to life with motion, lights and sounds. They also worked in teams to build interactive features like illuminated keypads, spinners and doors, using the popular Arduino platform.

 

In our after-school classes, we combine art, technology and storytelling to help children create their own magical worlds. They learn to design their ideas, build them with a variety of tools, animate them with electronics and tell their stories. This unique multimedia course helps them develop their creativity, collaboration and problem-solving skills -- and builds their confidence that they can help change the world.

 

This year, we had a really good group of 9 students, ages 8 to 11 -- many of whom had taken our Maker Art classes before. They were very creative and engaged, and did a great job presenting their work at the Lycée Français -- and at Marinovators at the College of Marin on April 22.

 

This Maker Art class was taught by Fabrice Florin and Edward Janne at the Lycée Français in Sausalito in winter 2017. We met every week for 12 workshops of 90 minutes each, Thursdays at 3:30pm, from January 5 to March 30, 2017. Our teachers are part of the Tam Makers learning community and we prepared materials for this project in our state-of-the-art makerspace at the nearby Tam High School.

 

View more photos about this Maker Art class at the Lycée:

bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-photos

 

Learn more about our Time Machine class:

bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-2017

 

Learn more about our Maker Art classes:

fabriceflorin.com/2016/02/14/teaching-maker-art/

 

Learn more about Tam Makers:

www.tammakers.org/

 

#arduino #makers #makerart #makered #techedu #timemachine

Our Maker Art class created a Time Machine this year, inviting you to travel through time from the age of dinosaurs to the 50th century.

 

Our 4th and 5th graders at the Lycée Français designed their own scenes from the past, present or future, and brought them to life with motion, lights and sounds. They also worked in teams to build interactive features like illuminated keypads, spinners and doors, using the popular Arduino platform.

 

In our after-school classes, we combine art, technology and storytelling to help children create their own magical worlds. They learn to design their ideas, build them with a variety of tools, animate them with electronics and tell their stories. This unique multimedia course helps them develop their creativity, collaboration and problem-solving skills -- and builds their confidence that they can help change the world.

 

This year, we had a really good group of 9 students, ages 8 to 11 -- many of whom had taken our Maker Art classes before. They were very creative and engaged, and did a great job presenting their work at the Lycée Français -- and at Marinovators at the College of Marin on April 22.

 

This Maker Art class was taught by Fabrice Florin and Edward Janne at the Lycée Français in Sausalito in winter 2017. We met every week for 12 workshops of 90 minutes each, Thursdays at 3:30pm, from January 5 to March 30, 2017. Our teachers are part of the Tam Makers learning community and we prepared materials for this project in our state-of-the-art makerspace at the nearby Tam High School.

 

View more photos about this Maker Art class at the Lycée:

bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-photos

 

Learn more about our Time Machine class:

bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-2017

 

Learn more about our Maker Art classes:

fabriceflorin.com/2016/02/14/teaching-maker-art/

 

Learn more about Tam Makers:

www.tammakers.org/

 

#arduino #makers #makerart #makered #techedu #timemachine

Technical diagram of the time machine in "12 Monkeys", drawn from memory, flim-flam and guff.

 

An instruction manual from Ikea on how to make a time machine out of a DeLorean (Djiloriann)

Our Maker Art class created a Time Machine this year, inviting you to travel through time from the age of dinosaurs to the 50th century.

 

Our 4th and 5th graders at the Lycée Français designed their own scenes from the past, present or future, and brought them to life with motion, lights and sounds. They also worked in teams to build interactive features like illuminated keypads, spinners and doors, using the popular Arduino platform.

 

In our after-school classes, we combine art, technology and storytelling to help children create their own magical worlds. They learn to design their ideas, build them with a variety of tools, animate them with electronics and tell their stories. This unique multimedia course helps them develop their creativity, collaboration and problem-solving skills -- and builds their confidence that they can help change the world.

 

This year, we had a really good group of 9 students, ages 8 to 11 -- many of whom had taken our Maker Art classes before. They were very creative and engaged, and did a great job presenting their work at the Lycée Français -- and at Marinovators at the College of Marin on April 22.

 

This Maker Art class was taught by Fabrice Florin and Edward Janne at the Lycée Français in Sausalito in winter 2017. We met every week for 12 workshops of 90 minutes each, Thursdays at 3:30pm, from January 5 to March 30, 2017. Our teachers are part of the Tam Makers learning community and we prepared materials for this project in our state-of-the-art makerspace at the nearby Tam High School.

 

View more photos about this Maker Art class at the Lycée:

bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-photos

 

Learn more about our Time Machine class:

bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-2017

 

Learn more about our Maker Art classes:

fabriceflorin.com/2016/02/14/teaching-maker-art/

 

Learn more about Tam Makers: www.tammakers.org/

 

#arduino #makers #makerart #makered #techedu #timemachine

Our Maker Art class created a Time Machine this year, inviting you to travel through time from the age of dinosaurs to the 50th century.

 

Our 4th and 5th graders at the Lycée Français designed their own scenes from the past, present or future, and brought them to life with motion, lights and sounds. They also worked in teams to build interactive features like illuminated keypads, spinners and doors, using the popular Arduino platform.

 

In our after-school classes, we combine art, technology and storytelling to help children create their own magical worlds. They learn to design their ideas, build them with a variety of tools, animate them with electronics and tell their stories. This unique multimedia course helps them develop their creativity, collaboration and problem-solving skills -- and builds their confidence that they can help change the world.

 

This year, we had a really good group of 9 students, ages 8 to 11 -- many of whom had taken our Maker Art classes before. They were very creative and engaged, and did a great job presenting their work at the Lycée Français -- and at Marinovators at the College of Marin on April 22.

 

This Maker Art class was taught by Fabrice Florin and Edward Janne at the Lycée Français in Sausalito in winter 2017. We met every week for 12 workshops of 90 minutes each, Thursdays at 3:30pm, from January 5 to March 30, 2017. Our teachers are part of the Tam Makers learning community and we prepared materials for this project in our state-of-the-art makerspace at the nearby Tam High School.

 

View more photos about this Maker Art class at the Lycée:

bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-photos

 

Learn more about our Time Machine class:

bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-2017

 

Learn more about our Maker Art classes:

fabriceflorin.com/2016/02/14/teaching-maker-art/

 

Learn more about Tam Makers:

www.tammakers.org/

 

#arduino #makers #makerart #makered #techedu #timemachine

Our Maker Art class created a Time Machine this year, inviting you to travel through time from the age of dinosaurs to the 50th century.

 

Our 4th and 5th graders at the Lycée Français designed their own scenes from the past, present or future, and brought them to life with motion, lights and sounds. They also worked in teams to build interactive features like illuminated keypads, spinners and doors, using the popular Arduino platform.

 

In our after-school classes, we combine art, technology and storytelling to help children create their own magical worlds. They learn to design their ideas, build them with a variety of tools, animate them with electronics and tell their stories. This unique multimedia course helps them develop their creativity, collaboration and problem-solving skills -- and builds their confidence that they can help change the world.

 

This year, we had a really good group of 9 students, ages 8 to 11 -- many of whom had taken our Maker Art classes before. They were very creative and engaged, and did a great job presenting their work at the Lycée Français -- and at Marinovators at the College of Marin on April 22.

 

This Maker Art class was taught by Fabrice Florin and Edward Janne at the Lycée Français in Sausalito in winter 2017. We met every week for 12 workshops of 90 minutes each, Thursdays at 3:30pm, from January 5 to March 30, 2017. Our teachers are part of the Tam Makers learning community and we prepared materials for this project in our state-of-the-art makerspace at the nearby Tam High School.

 

View more photos about this Maker Art class at the Lycée:

bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-photos

 

Learn more about our Time Machine class:

bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-2017

 

Learn more about our Maker Art classes:

fabriceflorin.com/2016/02/14/teaching-maker-art/

 

Learn more about Tam Makers:

www.tammakers.org/

 

#arduino #makers #makerart #makered #techedu #timemachine

Our Maker Art class created a Time Machine this year, inviting you to travel through time from the age of dinosaurs to the 50th century.

 

Our 4th and 5th graders at the Lycée Français designed their own scenes from the past, present or future, and brought them to life with motion, lights and sounds. They also worked in teams to build interactive features like illuminated keypads, spinners and doors, using the popular Arduino platform.

 

In our after-school classes, we combine art, technology and storytelling to help children create their own magical worlds. They learn to design their ideas, build them with a variety of tools, animate them with electronics and tell their stories. This unique multimedia course helps them develop their creativity, collaboration and problem-solving skills -- and builds their confidence that they can help change the world.

 

This year, we had a really good group of 9 students, ages 8 to 11 -- many of whom had taken our Maker Art classes before. They were very creative and engaged, and did a great job presenting their work at the Lycée Français -- and at Marinovators at the College of Marin on April 22.

 

This Maker Art class was taught by Fabrice Florin and Edward Janne at the Lycée Français in Sausalito in winter 2017. We met every week for 12 workshops of 90 minutes each, Thursdays at 3:30pm, from January 5 to March 30, 2017. Our teachers are part of the Tam Makers learning community and we prepared materials for this project in our state-of-the-art makerspace at the nearby Tam High School.

 

View more photos about this Maker Art class at the Lycée:

bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-photos

 

Learn more about our Time Machine class:

bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-2017

 

Learn more about our Maker Art classes:

fabriceflorin.com/2016/02/14/teaching-maker-art/

 

Learn more about Tam Makers:

www.tammakers.org/

 

#arduino #makers #makerart #makered #techedu #timemachine

 

1 2 ••• 61 62 64 66 67 ••• 79 80