View allAll Photos Tagged Triangle
Photo taken at the Jacksonville, Florida, International Airport. This is part of a giant ceiling mobile. I've enhanced the colors quite a bit. JAX is a vibrant little airport with lots of art & music throughout!
The Golden Triangle (Burmese: Shwe-Tri gan; Chinese: 金三角; pinyin: jīn sān jiǎo; Thai: สามเหลี่ยมทองคำ; Vietnamese: Tam giác Vàng) is one of Asia's two main illicit opium-producing areas. It is an area of around 950,000 km2 that overlaps the mountains of four countries of Southeast Asia: Myanmar (Burma), Vietnam, Laos, and Thailand. Along with Afghanistan in the Golden Crescent and Pakistan, it has been one of the most extensive opium-producing areas of Asia and of the world since the 1920s. Most of the world's heroin came from the Golden Triangle until the early 21st century when Afghanistan became the world's largest producer.[1]
The Golden Triangle also designates the confluence of the Ruak River and the Mekong river, since the term has been appropriated by the Thai tourist industry to describe the nearby junction of Thailand, Laos, and Myanmar.
The assignment for this fortnight in Studio 26 is triangles in composition. Part of that is analysis of photos we've already taken, or take for the assignment.
The original post for each of these assessments is linked in the comments, with all photos also in the set.
A picture showing a Triangle submission in a BJJ Competition.
Image available via creative commerce, please credit www.attacktheback.com if you are using this image. Many thanks!
1) I swore I wouldn't start any new projects until I finished the old ones.
2) I swore I'd never do half-square-triangles again.
3) So how is it that I just spent several hours cutting all these half-rectangle triangles? Do I not listen to myself?
Pattern: Shetland Triangle Shawl by Evelyn C. Clark in Wrap Style
Yarn: 2 skeins of Hand Maiden Silk Maiden in the Lily Pond colorway
(I ran out of yarn with about a dozen stitches left to bind off, so i purchased Louisa Harding Grace to finish binding off)
This is a great lace pattern. It's very easy to memorize and I think it works out wonderfully for varegated yarns or semisolid yarns. I think I wear this shawl more than any of my other handknits.
This drawing is a way to create a pattern with the geometrical forms. The green background makes the triangles stand out.
The Golden Triangle is one of Asia's two main illicit opium-producing areas. It is an area of around 950,000 square kilometres that overlaps the mountains of four countries of Southeast Asia: Myanmar (Burma), Vietnam, Laos, and Thailand. (Other interpretations of the Golden Triangle also include a section of Yunnan Province, China.) Along with Afghanistan in the Golden Crescent and Pakistan, it has been one of the most extensive opium-producing areas of Asia and of the world since the 1920s. The Golden Triangle also designates the confluence of the Ruak River and the Mekong river, since the term has been appropriated by the Thai tourist industry to describe the nearby junction of Thailand, Laos, and Myanmar.
source: wikipedia
Triangle, Va. (April 28, 2019) – The Marine Corps Heritage Foundations 38TH Annual Awards Ceremony holds their annual awards dinner. Photo by Larry Levin and Johnny Bivera
The Golden Triangle is one of Asia's two main illicit opium-producing areas. It is an area of around 950,000 square kilometres that overlaps the mountains of four countries of Southeast Asia: Myanmar (Burma), Vietnam, Laos, and Thailand. (Other interpretations of the Golden Triangle also include a section of Yunnan Province, China.) Along with Afghanistan in the Golden Crescent and Pakistan, it has been one of the most extensive opium-producing areas of Asia and of the world since the 1920s. The Golden Triangle also designates the confluence of the Ruak River and the Mekong river, since the term has been appropriated by the Thai tourist industry to describe the nearby junction of Thailand, Laos, and Myanmar.
source: wikipedia
It may look nice, but I had to work on it a large parte of the evening ans even in the morging to go and fly again. Over the year the kite had become less stable. So I decided to shorten the yellow flaps. You can se at the top that de yellow plps left and right of the spar are bended by the wind. So I shortened them. This is the only kite of my beehive family that has 2 mm carbon spars in every seam. That wasn't a bad idea 10 to fifteen years ago. Today (16 november) y flew better ten ever before. Y put it that hight that it was to high to take pictures.