View allAll Photos Tagged Triangle
Blue Triangles dual door V3 operating on route X80.
Ensign run a Christmas special each year on this route using a variety of their own heritage vehicles & invited buses.
This view taken in December 2007
The rear triangles of a Bombadil, made by Rivendell Bicycle Works. When you include the rear axle as a triangle leg, you can count a total of nine triangles! This eleven-year-old bicycle was just re-painted by Rick Stefani, and rebuilt with many new parts by James at Rivendell. Beautiful!
This is made from a frosty plastic paper material that I was told is some sort of drafting paper. I cut out the shape: four equilateral triangles with side length equal to the width of the light box frame, all sharing a common vertex, plus a flange along the base of each, to tuck into light box frame. Fold and crease along triangle edges, and install.
We spent this past weekend in Montego Bay Jamaica celebrating our 10 year wedding anniversary. This triangle is in just the right spot. carsonvision.wordpress.com/2011/09/14/weekly-photo-challe...
design: Daniel Kwan
hexagon of bicolor kraft paper
very difficult to collapse, there are also triangle twists hidden on black side
Triangle Lake is an unincorporated community in Lane County, Oregon, United States. It is about 25 miles (40 km) west of Junction City on Oregon Route 36, on the southwest side of the lake of same name. Lake Creek, a tributary of the Siuslaw River, enters and exits the lake.[2] Triangle Lake is closely linked to the unincorporated community of Blachly, on the northeast side of the lake, and the two communities share the K-12 Triangle Lake School, the only school in Blachly School District.
The 293-acre (1.19 km2) lake has had various names over the years, including Loon Lake, Lake of the Woods, and Echo Lake, but the name Triangle Lake (after the lake's shape) became the official name in the early 1900s. Before Fern Ridge Reservoir was completed in 1941, the lake was the most popular local spot for water sports.
Amenities at Triangle Lake County Park include two picnic tables, a boat dock, and toilets. Activities at the lake include boating, swimming, and fishing.
Fish species in the lake, which reaches a depth of 90 feet (27 m), include largemouth bass, bluegill, yellow perch, brown bullhead, kokanee, and cutthroat trout. The kokanee, landlocked sockeye salmon, thrive in the deep water, while good bass habitat is found along the south and east shores.
This is a peyote stitched bracelet, using Miyuki Delica beads, sewn around a cuff form; black fabric lines the other side.
The peyote stitch is great for creating geometric patterns like this.
The Flyover ramp from US 1 North to Northbound Toll NC 540 goes under the Triangle Expressway before going over US 1.
..هــــــــذا أنـــــا
..جــــــــــيـــت وهـــــــذا صـــــــوتي
!! أنــــــا لـــلــــــــــمـــســـمــع الــــــبــارد جــــرس
(الــحمـــيدي الــثــقـفي)
The top is finished. Now I can think about the quilting. However, I do not t
hink that I can finish it before the QAL deadline.
One square sheet. Designed and folded by John Montroll.
New book: Origami & Geometry: Stars, Boxes, Troublewits, Chess, & More
www.amazon.com/Origami-Geometry-Stars-Boxes-Troublewits/d...
Photo by Yakntoro Udoumoh.
One of my personal favourites out of all my photos.
This was taken on our first morning at the Baan Boran hotel at Sop Ruak (I believe it's now called the Anantara). The river in the foreground is the Ruak, joining the Mekong; on the other side is Myanmar.
The original image was taken with an Eos 5, almost certainly on Kodachrome 200. I'm not sure about the subsequent processing (did I still have my rubbish cheapo slide scanner then?) but this was generated from a 96MB Photoshop file that I found lurking on an archive CD.
I've never managed to get a print that really does the image justice; we have a far-too-dark version in our living-room that I really must replace sometime.
Better view of the chevrons, the dirty big triangle on the insertion of my bicep, and the texture area along the top of my forearm.
My own submission for my new collaborative project: Transform A Triangle :)