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Car: Peugeot 106 Aztec 1.5 D.
Date of first registration: 1st August 1995.
Registration region: Truro.
The 106 was manufactured between 1991 and 2003.
This is one of only 63 Aztec models still licensed in the UK.
Date taken: 4th January 2019.
Album: Street Spots
SDSU expansion and renovation project completed in 2022. LEED Platinum rating. Architect: SmithGroup.
Its a little known fact that around 1520 the Aztecs under Hector Houserts actually made an extra temple during their exploits of Europe before finding Spain. Proving that their chosen site would one day become a global hub of world transportation, the remains of one of their temples is still there to this day...
ok, ok, its actually a mound from the spoil of a disused gravel quarry and landfill site just past Heathrow Airport. Over the past 20 years or so, the local authorities have been letting the site mature with impressive flora and fauna as well as building a children''s play facilities, of which this Motte forms part.
Car: Peugeot 106 Aztec 1.5 D.
Date of first registration: 1st August 1995.
Registration region: Truro.
The 106 was manufactured between 1991 and 2003.
This is one of only 63 Aztec models still licensed in the UK.
Date taken: 4th January 2019.
Album: Street Spots
Royal Ascot took place in June 2022 and I was there to record some of the visiting coaches, buses and minibuses to this annual event.
An Aztec themed version of set 21305 Maze, built for An a-Maze-ing contest! on Eurobricks.
A video of it working is here.
Today there was an ethnic diversity fair heal at the local park. The Aztec dancers were a colorful subject for photography
You can see here where the trail must go. It's a straightforward hike with a little light scrambling. Probably not a good idea if heights bother you a lot.
Aztec Dancer (Argia nahuana)
F/13, 1/80th, ISO 640, 5DM2, Sigma 150mm f/2.8 + 1.4x ext with fill @ -1, cam bias -2 handheld in a prone position. Manual focus at my minimum inside range, moving back & forth slightly..
11:23am & mostly sunny.
The minifigs populating my Aztec Sacrifice MOC started with one of my earliest uploads, a collection of aztec-style minifigs,
who were mostly derived from the Aztec Warrior collectible minifig.
Since then, I've improved a bunch of the figs, and added several more. In particular, a bunch of recently released figs have added quite a bit more variety in available facepaints.
From left to right, we've got:
A couple hunters
An eagle guard, holding a sacrificial victim
A gate guard
A priest guard, wielding a dragon glaive
The high priest, holding a sacrifical dagger and the heart of a victim
A jaguar guard, with a spiked club
Another priest guard
Another gate guard, behind a hermit crab who has found a rather curious shell
Two more eagle guards, with another hunter behind them
The other sacrifical victim
And finally, an ordinary warrior
Aztec Dancer at 2024 Raritan Native American Heritage Celebration & PowWow held at Middlesex County Fair Grounds in East Brunswick, June 15-16, 2024.
Taken in 2004.
The Aztec Ruins National Monument in northwestern New Mexico. These are not ancient Aztec temples. Ancestral Pueblo people -- the Anasazi -- built this place. Scholars once thought the Aztecs migrated to Mexico from the southwestern U.S., causing early settlers to mistakenly call these 900-year-old ruins along the Animas River the "Aztec Ruins."
Something a little different, Aztec print leggings. I think they are funky. Worn with my flatform plimsolls.
The Aztec Motel, in Albuquerque, is located directly across from the Premiere Motel, which in May 2012 was being remodeled into apartments. The owner of the Premiere also owned the Aztec, and was planning to do the same with it.
The Aztec used to be the Aztec Auto Court, located at 3821 Central Avenue, NE in Albuquerque. Built in 1933, it was the first motel in operation on Central Avenue. Here's a link from the National Park Service: www.nps.gov/nr/travel/route66/aztec_auto_court_albuquerqu...
Well summers nearly hear again. Aztec print dress with strappy sandals.
Dress is from ChillTime and sandals are from NewLook, black belt is from M&S.
I finished up this quilt made for a colleague, who is expecting a baby girl in June.
* 40″ x 60″ finished size
* My original design (modified from my “Aztec-inspired medallion quilt” that I made last year)
* Front made of Kona cotton solids in Camellia, Cactus, Coal, Charcoal and Snow
For more see: slostudio.ca/post/120183443584/aztec-row-quilt-finish
This is a MOC I've been working on and off on for quite a while, and is finally finished. The general aesthetic is designed around the idea of an ancient crumbling temple.
Despite much of the temple having fallen into the sea, it is still being used for sacrifices.
The origin of this MOC can be traced back to one of my earliest uploads, a collection of aztec-style minifigs,
who were mostly derived from the Aztec Warrior collectible minifig.
Since then, I've improved a bunch of the figs, and added several more. In particular, a bunch of recently released figs have added quite a bit more variety in available facepaints.
I've had the main island built for several years at this point, but I was having some trouble with what to connect the bridge to.
I eventually decided to incorporate what was previously a seperate project - a statue of a Bionicle Matoran Head