View allAll Photos Tagged backside
4. The rejected plex lens for my landing light was used for the blank mold. First I waxed the inside, placed the layup in and used some heavy duty foil to make the inside smooth. I used a playing card to make all parts lay smooth together.
King's Harbour is rapidly growing, its development closely following the as of yet unpublished plans by Captain Jonathan Cooke, Military Governor of the naval base.
55x60''
Moda fabrics : 'Puttin' on the Ritz Layer Cake in grey and cream
Hello Betty Jelly Roll by Chloe's Closet
These are the blades that cut paper so they can be rolled into reels.
I used a flash to fill in the yellow rail and a little of the backs of the blades. The rest of the light was supplied by the florescent lights behind the paper.
This is the way it really looks in real life. The combonation of daylight and the florescents give the paper a really cool blueish/green hue.
Not sure which peak this is, it's near Glengyle peak and may be the back side of it, but I can't find my topo from that trek! Either way, beautiful rocky peaks in the Matukituki Valley in New Zealand.
After climbing up the cliff to get the angle, I snapped this photograph of Alfie blasting out a backside at the Bluewater spot.
-Craving full frame sensor badly
I combined 11 photos into this 360* panorama of Shark Harbor. I'm not entirely happy with it now, and I'll probably go back and redo it sometime in the future.
I posted a higher resolution version of this panorama at s25.photobucket.com/albums/c67/geekyrocketguy/?action=vie.... I don't mind if you repost the photo, just ask me first. However, if you repost it without asking me, I will track you down and break your kneecaps with a baseball bat.... :-)
The backside of the bookjacket with the rubberstring. The pattern is upside down hiere for ist was more important to show it in the right direction on the frontside.
The castle Schloss Ringelheim is in bad repair, but the local populace was in ability some years ago , to avert the pulling down. It´s a shame to see, how depreciated our cultural heritage sometimes...