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Steel Equilateral angle cad block, equilateral cross section autocad drawing
Steel Equilateral angle cad block, equilateral cross section autocad drawing
Steel Equilateral angle cad block, equilateral cross section autocad drawing
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www.tonythanh.com/architecture-acad-dwg-block/steel-equil...
For the Dutch Angle Shot assignment of the Digital Photography School, what better than a trial in Amsterdam ;) !
This tree looks much more imposing with that angle than with the picture taken straight. It makes me think of the tree from Sleepy Hollow from Tim Burton . Surely the black and white helps to set the atmosphere.
We sell all types of Angle Grinder in India and abroad. We are dealers and exporters of Angle Grinder in India. Quality Angle Grinder are available with us.
angled toy sleigh - Shot of a wicker sleigh full of toys on a red background.. To Download this image without watermarks for Free, visit: www.sourcepics.com/free-stock-photography/24724551-angled...
The greenhouse doorframe forms the outer border. Another attempt at the "what's my angle" challenge.
I liked the angle of this shot and decided BW was the best way to go for the best effect! I like the way this came out! It is simple with minimum photoshoping!
CSX 124 is "gettin' withit" after a crew climbs aboard to work the yard. The engineer must have hit the throttle as the unit scampered past in the blink of an eye. Too bad I wasn't recording.
Equipe VB "Voies et Bâtiments" de la SNCF en intervention à la "bifurcation", quartier de l'Aigle... Le panorama urbain décrit est aujourd'hui bien différent...
Réalisation : Nessé; 2009.
Dimensions : linéaire de 30 m X 4,50 m. .
Localisation: rue Camille Desmoulins, 38000 Grenoble / bus ligne 1, arrêt "l'Aigle".
The founders of Kentucky's Campbell County were extremely inconsiderate in where they decided to put the courthouse. Not only did they put it 15 miles from where most of Campbell County lived, they put it in a weird corner where it's almost impossible to take a picture of it. There's a strange curve in the road here, and then they wrapped it in trees and electrical wires and built a radio tower right next to it, so the only angles where you can see any of it are either so tight that the perspective's all distorted, or you need to make a wildly twisted panorama that never connects all the power lines right.
Getting historical information about a county courthouse off the internet is always a lot more difficult than you'd think. You'd think this is the type of thing history buffs would go nuts for. It turns out it's more like the histories of church buildings, where the information is all written down on some mimeographed sheet of yellow paper stuffed in a trunk in the closet of somebody's grandmother, and they haven't gotten their grandchildren to scan it into the internet yet, so you have to go to the county library and ask a librarian if you want to know anything. This is compounded in Campbell County by the fact that there are two courthouses, and all the information on the internet talks about the Newport courthouse, which wasn't even an official courthouse until 2010. I didn't feel like tracking down the Campbell County library -- I'm not sure if there is one, really, and Campbell County would just ban all the books anyway -- so all I know about this building is that it was built in 1840. I'm guessing that information is only good for the middle of it, though, and that the two wings came later.
Taken on the highway en route to Innsbruck, Austria. Obviously, I was in a car so I'm glad I managed to catch the angled lines properly.
The Northwest Angle, known simply as the Angle by locals, and coextensive with Angle Township, is a part of northern Lake of the Woods County, Minnesota. Except for minor surveying errors, it is the only place in the contiguous United States north of the 49th parallel, which forms the border between the U.S. and Canada from the Northwest Angle westward to the Strait of Georgia (between the state of Washington and the province of British Columbia). The land area of the Angle is separated from the rest of Minnesota by Lake of the Woods, but shares a land border with Canada. It is one of only six non-island locations in the 48 contiguous states that are practical exclaves of the U.S. It is the northernmost township in Minnesota and contains the northernmost point in the contiguous 48 states. The unincorporated community of Angle Inlet is in the Northwest Angle.
Seventy percent of the land of the Angle is held in trust by the Red Lake Indian Reservation (Ojibwa).
Although the Angle is listed as one of several distinct regions of Minnesota, its total population was 119 at the 2010 census. The area is mostly water and the land is mostly forest.
Angle Township was designated as territory of the United States because negotiators of the initial Canada–U.S. border misunderstood the geography of the area. Benjamin Franklin and British representatives relied on the Mitchell Map of colonial American geographer John Mitchell, which did not indicate the source of the Mississippi River—thought to lie some distance to the northwest—or the true shape of Lake of the Woods, which was instead shown as roughly oval. The 1783 Treaty of Paris thus stated that the boundary between U.S. territory and the British possessions to the north would run "...through the Lake of the Woods to the northwestern-most point thereof, and from thence on a due west course to the river Mississippi..."
But the source of the Mississippi River, Lake Itasca (then unknown to European explorers), lies almost due south of Lake of the Woods, rather than north and west of it. Additionally, the irregular actual shape of the lake made the identification of its northwest corner difficult. A survey team led by David Thompson in 1824 mapped the lake and found four possibilities, but did not conclusively declare one location. In 1825, a German astronomer in British service, Dr. Johann Ludwig Tiarks, surveyed the lake. Tiarks identified two possibilities for the northwesternmost point on the lake, based on Thompson's maps: the Angle Inlet and Rat Portage. To determine which point was the most northwestern, he drew a line from each point in the southwest-northeast direction. If the line intersected the lake at any point, it was not the most northwestern point. Tiarks determined that the only such line that did not intersect the lake was at the edge of a pond on the Angle Inlet.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northwest_Angle
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_Creative_Commons_...