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It's Alive! Action wind sock item #72101 from New Creative Enterprises inc. A new shaking, screaming, glowing wind sock that is activated by any loud noise or just a clap of the hands. Tow yes the box says tow AA batteries required 23 inches long ( not including string) To assemble thread cord through hole in top of nylon figure pull up thriugh hole positioning of figure 1991 made in china also visit actionwingsock.blogspot.com for info. and group shots of this great little halloween decoration

Fashions from the Prairie Rebellion Refashion show.

 

Designs from The Junk Punk Tower

  

Work in progress:

New doll assembled - DVF 'Taiga' #04/25. Waiting for wigs!

 

'Dea Vivente' website

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BR large logo 56098 propels BR Blue 37003 [D6703] towards 37218, the former DRS loco will join the assemble for the short trip to the maintenance shed.

West window by Hugh Easton 1955, representing Christ in Glory seated upon the globe and surrounded by significant figures from ecclesiastical history. Perhap's Easton's finest work, the overall effect is very much a mid 20th century version of a Last Judgement, which aptly is reflected by the recently uncovered medieval interpretation of the subject in the mural painted at the opposite end of the nave.

 

Holy Trinity would have been the star attraction in any other town or city, it is a majestic cruciform 15th century Perpendicular church with a tapering central tower and spire, the second of Coventry's famous 'Three Spires'. However it has always been overshadowed by larger neighbours, having been encircled by no less than three separate cathedrals through it's history, a unique distinction! Holy Trinity was founded by the monks of the adjoining priory to act as a parish church for it's lay tenants, thus it is ironic that it has long outlived the parent building.

 

The earliest part is the north porch, which dates from the 13th century, but the majority of the building dates from a more ambitious phase in 15th century Perpendicular style. The 15th century rebuilding has given us the present cruciform arrangement with small transepts and extra chapels on the north side giving an overall roughly rectangular footprint. These chapels were some of many in the church that served the city's separate guilds in medieval times.

 

The church has gone through much restoration, most notably the rebuilding of it's spire after it was blown down in a storm in 1665. The east end of the chancel was extended in 1786 (in sympathetic style) and much of the exterior was refaced in the early 19th century in then fashionable Bath stone (which clashes with the original red sandstone).

 

The church luckily escaped major damage during the Coventry Blitz in 1940, largely thanks to the vigilance of Canon Clitheroe and his team of firewatchers who spent a perilous night on the roof tackling incendaries. The main loss was the Victorian stained glass in the east and west windows, which were replaced with much more fetching glass in the postwar restoration.

 

The most recent restoration involved the uncovering of the 15th century Doom painting over the chancel arch in 2004. Hidden under blackened varnish since it's rediscovery in the early Victorian period, it has now been revealed to be one of the most complete and important medieval Last Judgement murals in the country. There is further painting contemporary with this on the exquisite nave ceiling, painted a beautiful dusty blue with large kneeling angels flanking passion shields on every rafter.

 

There are only a handful of monuments and most of the furnishings date from G.G.Scott's 1850s restoration (as does the magnificent vaulted ceiling high above the crossing) but there are some notable medieval survivals in the rare stone pulpit and the brass eagle lectern, both 15th century, along with a fine set of misericords originating from the former Whitefriars monastery church. Just a few fragments of medieval glass survive in the north west chapel.

 

The church is happily normally open and welcoming to visitors every day.

 

For more detail on this church see it's entry on the Warwickshire Churches website below:-

warwickshirechurches.weebly.com/coventry---holy-trinity.html

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Castillo - a Firework-Castle!

 

Coheteros/ Firework castle makers are assembling a 40 foot high "castle" in the atrium of Ajijic's Paroquia. It will be ignited/lit at 11pm.... a wheel spinning, fire spewing firecracker monster called "el Castillo".

 

Rocketeers-Firework-Castle maker is an important, difficult and dangerous profession here in Mexico. These "Coheteros" assemble, right on location, custom designed "firework castles", the highlight of any village's fiesta.

 

The Castillo is a construction of individual large bamboo wheels, tied together and connected to a tall pole. It is assembled lying on the ground and erected once it has been wired up with firecrackers. When ignited "the castle” becomes an explosion of noise and color - a spinning and whistling fire shooting “castle”. Boys, holding cardboards over their heads for protection, will run through the rain of fire sparks..... and only crazy individuals like me will stand underneath to photograph it (((;

for Il Trovatore

_MG_2512

a perfectly lovely place to spend quality time pottling www.assembleshop.com

rambled

 

The finished hanger ready for installation. The Campagnolo adjuster was a bit of a sloppy fit with a Shimano cable end ferrule so I machined a stainless piece to alleviate this issue.

Here the two tiny pieces of cover cardboard are glued onto the cover paper, and the center spine piece is reinforced and two tiny pieces of string are glued on to reinforce the top and bottom of the spine when the cover paper is folded over.

 

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Scan 3 Vues Assemblées Film 120 Fuji Velvia Rvp 50 (Mamiya 7 + Sekor 65/4) avec Canon M50 + Micro Nikkor 55/3,5 Ai + bague Novoflex

I was going to ask some store employees to search for some collectable minifigures for me when I'll be in the city's centre doing some important things, but looking at pandemic statistics my thoughts were: in September - "it's not the time for such a trip", in October - "it's still not the time for such a trip", in late November - "damn, I had to go now, I can't postpone my plans anymore! what do you mean, the minifigures out of stock everywhere?!" So I suddenly realised I've almost missed the series, and I ordered the ones I need on Bricklink again.

 

T'Challa Star-Lord has a one-sided face, which disappointed me very much. Captain Carter is totally awesome, such a cool serious face, and the Union Jack to show some British pride, yaaay! :D Scarlet Witch is even more awesome, the best minifigure in the series! Winter Soldier is okay, I decided not to skip the new face in case I'll need it later.

Deadpool was surprisingly shy

This is a 13/5" x 17" mini quilt made with the help of 5 of my internet friends in a round robin.

 

blogged: www.shecanquilt.ca/2016/07/assemble-ta-da.html

a perfectly lovely place to spend quality time pottling www.assembleshop.com

 

rambled

 

Long out of production, I managed to pick up this part-assembled one recently. The body shell has suffered some stress and is bent in practically every dimension, but white metal is a soft and yielding material so a little persuasion should get it all straight again. The same goes for the floor, seats and wheels/axles, which also require tweaking to line up properly. That said, it is a model which captures the essential lines of the Viceroy coach and will in due course get the makeover it deserves.

All parts together in one glorious gigantic speargun

They're supposed to look like roses. This is only a 9-inch tart pan and it took 8 pieces of fruit. Wowie!

This is an ex Reesby Motors vehicle, with a Custom, Australia assembled body. A few E200s were sold in Australia, however I think this is the only one with a Custom assembled body that crossed the Tasman Sea.

(Before.)

 

The object in the background is a 16-faced polyhedron - I don't know the technical name - with 4 hexagons each surrounded and separated by pentagons. In the foreground is a truncated isocahedron, a small buckyball (and the shape of Buckminster fullerene and the Disney Epcot dome), which has 12 pentagons each surrounded and separated by hexagons. I've made duodecahedrons before -- they're all pentagons. Pentagons provide the curvature; hexagons the size.

 

You get kind of focused assembling objects of this size. I once made a set of Penrose tiles to play with, and to begin with it was hard to place them into an aperiodic tiling pattern without leaving holes. But after about 20 minutes, some new kind of aesthetic bubbled up in my head which, seriously, I have no way of turning into words. But at that point it became trivial to place the tiles: I could see easily three or four moves ahead, and positions which would later lead to holes became "ugly" somehow. But could I stop for dinner later and not look at the food on my plate as fitting into some kind of 5-fold symmetry? No, I could not.

Il est naturel que toutes les opinions s'y reflètent...

Palm Sunday is a Christian moveable feast that falls on the Sunday before Easter. The feast commemorates Jesus' triumphal entry into Jerusalem, an event mentioned in all four canonical Gospels.

In many Christian churches, Palm Sunday includes a procession of the assembled worshipers carrying palms, representing the palm branches the crowd scattered in front of Jesus as he rode into Jerusalem.

Palm Sunday, or the "Entry of the Lord into Jerusalem," as it is often called in some Orthodox Churches, is one of the Twelve Great Feasts of the liturgical year. The day before Palm Sunday, Lazarus Saturday, believers often prepare palm fronds by knotting them into crosses in preparation for the procession on Sunday. The hangings and vestments in the church are changed to a festive color - gold in the Greek tradition and green in the Slavic tradition.

 

Palm Sunday, or the "Entry of the Lord into Jerusalem," as it is often called in some Orthodox Churches, is one of the Twelve Great Feasts of the liturgical year. The day before Palm Sunday, Lazarus Saturday, believers often prepare palm fronds by knotting them into crosses in preparation for the procession on Sunday. The hangings and vestments in the church are changed to a festive color - gold in the Greek tradition and green in the Slavic tradition.

In Romania Palm Sunday is known as Duminica Floriilor or simply Florii, translating Flowers' Sunday.

 

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Assemblée nationale - 7ème arrondissement de Paris

 

Website : www.fluidr.com/photos/pat21

 

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The reproduction, publication, modification, transmission or exploitation of any work contained here in for any use, personal or commercial, without my prior written permission is strictly prohibited. All rights reserved."

The Phantom V is a large, ultra-exclusive four-door saloon that was made by Rolls-Royce Motor Cars from 1959 to 1968. Based on the Silver Cloud II, it shared a V8 engine and General Motors Hydramatic automatic gearbox with its smaller sibling. Rolls-Royce assembled the cars' chassis and drivetrains with bodies made to standard designs by coachbuilders H. J. Mulliner, Park Ward, and James Young, former vendors absorbed by Rolls-Royce.

 

The engine was a 6,230 cc 90-degree V8 with twin SU carburetors, coupled to a 4-speed automatic transmission. The car had massive drum brakes and a wheelbase of 3,683 mm. Four speed automatic transmission and power assisted steering were standard.

 

From 1963 onward the Silver Cloud III's 7% more powerful engine and new front wings incorporating the latter's quad headlamps were fitted.

 

A total of 516 Phantom V's were made. Owners included Queen Elizabeth II and her mother, Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother. Those owned by Elizabeth II were official state cars, adapted for that purposed with a flag staff and illuminated heraldic shield above the windscreen. Having been retired from active service in 2002, both are now on public display: one in the royal motor museum at Sandringham, and the other in the special garage aboard HMY Britannia in Leith, Edinburgh.

 

The Governor of Hong Kong used a Rolls-Royce Phantom V for ceremonial occasions. It was removed from Hong Kong by the Royal Navy immediately following the handover to China on 1 July 1997.

 

Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the Shah of Iran, was another one of the people who owned an example of this car. Since his exile, the car has been kept in his royal residence in Tehran and is occasionally shown to the public among the other luxurious cars owned by the Shah, including a unique Rolls-Royce Phantom VI and a Phantom IV.

 

King Olav V of Norway owned a 1962 limousine as a state car. Yugoslav president Josip Broz Tito had Rolls-Royce Phantom V in presidential collection for representative purposes. The car is now displayed at the Museum of Yugoslavia, Belgrade.

 

Then Beatle John Lennon's Phantom V, a 1960s counter-culture icon, came from the factory finished in white, with Lennon commissioning the custom paint job atop it in the style of a Romany gypsy wagon (not "psychedelic" as often referenced).

 

The model shown here is the Phantom V Canberra Limousine by Park Ward. A total of three Canberra Limousines were built, all special order to the British Royal Family. The model here is the Canberra I, the official State Vehicle for HM Queen Elizabeth II. This particular car was retired in 2002 when the Royal Family turned to special coachbuilt Bentleys.

 

This Lego miniland-scale Rolls-Royce Phantom V Canberra Limousine has been created for Flickr LUGNuts 84th Build Challenge, our 7th birthday, to the theme - "LUGNuts Turns 7…or 49 in Dog Years", - where all the previous build challenges are available to build to, in this case, challenge 32, - "God Save the Queen", - for vehicles from the United Kingdom.

U.S. Air Force Senior Airman James Mullen from the New Jersey Air National Guard's 177th Fighter Wing assembles fins on a GBU-12 Paveway II mounted on an F-16C Fighting Falcon during day one of the annual load crew competition on Jan. 9 at Atlantic City Air National Guard Base, N.J. Mullen is an aircraft armament systems specialist assigned to the 177th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Tech. Sgt. Matt Hecht/Released)

Assemblée Nationale - Sight Seeing - Seine Cruise

 

Camera: Nikon D5000

Lens: AF-S DX NIKKOR 18-105mm f/3.5-5.6G ED VR

77 mechs, dozens of attachments, a couple of UAVs, knife missiles and some alien marines.

Learned this from Jana Roberts Benzon's dvd "Arabesque Canes".

not sure if we will paint or clear coat these. we have to move them to boston flat pack so no finishing until we get there.

 

held together with wood joinery only, made on a homebuilt cnc router

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