View allAll Photos Tagged cleaver
I figured I'd have a little fun tonight so I set up and snapped about 20 different shots before I found the lighting and pose i liked. I then smeared ketchup on my shirt, got my hair and face wet. then gave the camera to my mother and we started snapping away. I didn't have any large chunks of bloody meat so potatoes were the star! after extensive Photoshop work you get this.
Strobist:
LumaPro LP120 full power through white umbrella camera left.
Nikon SB-25 1/4 Power Shot through 6 inch Snoot aimed at back of my head.
Well, Here she is! After just five days of work (Yes! FIVE!) it is now ready for the spotlight!
Last year, I built a pretty out there SHIP that may or may not actually be considered a "ship". This year I decided to leave the design process to the professionals and steal some art off Google images. Personally, I'm glad I did. This thing looks friggin' awesome! It all went together better and faster than I ever could have imagined.
Of course the build is only half the story. It all started off with this amazing concept by Timmon26.
I could only find the one piece of art, so I had to use my imagination for the back side.
She is exactly 100 and a half studs long and 58 studs wide.
I've put together a time-lapse video of the building process. It's over the seven minute restriction for Flickr, so you can find it here if you've got eleven minutes to kill.
I say this every year. SHIPtember is my favourite time of the year. When the calendar hits August, I start sorting, researching, and scheming away. By the time September comes around, I'm jonesing to put shit together, and I love every moment of it!
I guess what i'm saying is, thank you to everyone involved in organizing this beast of a month. Also, everyone that's building SHIPs and/or helping other builders perfect their SHIPs. Everyones encouragement and advice helped me make a SHIP that I can truly be proud of!
Thanks for following along!
30 second exposure down near the Plaza area. The American Century Building at the top of the street.
Mike D.
These things stick to your clothes and are the most awkward things to remove from woollen clothing. However, they look good.
Rare implement, gift from my daughter. Great for dicing herbs and other small stuff that you don't want to go scattering all over the place. Curved hollow in the cutting board matches the curve of the knife, keeping everything in place.
Cleavers (Galium aparine) are herbaceous annual plants of the family Rubiaceae, which are native to North America and Eurasia.
Cleavers creep along the ground and over the tops of other plants, attaching themselves with the small hooked hairs which grow out of the stems and leaves. The stems can reach up to three feet or longer, and are angular or square shaped.
The leaves are simple, narrowly oblanceolate to linear, and borne in whorls of six to eight.
Cleavers have tiny, star-shaped, white to greenish flowers, which emerge from early spring to summer. The flowers are clustered in groups of two or three, and are borne out of the leaf axils.
The globular fruits grow clustered 1-3 seeds together; and are covered with hooked hairs (a burr) which cling to animal fur, aiding in seed dispersal.
Galium aparine is edible. The leaves and stems of the plant can be cooked as a leaf vegetable, if gathered before the fruits appear. However, the numerous small hooks which cover the plant and give it its clinging nature, can make it less palatable if eaten raw. Geese also thoroughly enjoy eating G. aparine, hence one of its other common names, "goosegrass".
Cleavers are in the same family as coffee. The fruits of cleavers have often been dried and roasted, and then used as a coffee substitute (which contains a much lower amount of caffeine) (Wikipedia)
© 2014 Ursula Sander - All rights reserved.
An adult of the bug known as the 'ant bug'. Its nymph looks so like an ant that I just realised I posted it on iNat as an ant!
Photographed on Cleaver Heath nature reserve.
NMCB TAH MK LXXIII.3 "Cleaver.3" Multipurpose Construction Exoframe (pictured on left)
NMCB TAH MK LXXIII.2 "Cleaver.2" Multipurpose Construction Exoframe (pictured on right)
Cleavers were a series of multipurpose exoframes used by Seabees during the war. They could be outfitted with multiple weapons packages including Guardian Drones, depending on the mission.
The Cleaver.3 had several thrusters and a large booster which allowed it to hover for a short time.
Around 12,750 feet on Mount Rainier. Climbers ascend towards the summit after a rest break at the top of Disappointment Cleaver.
Cleaver on Mattel's part not to put Ula's pic on the back of the box....she is a vampire after all and she doesn't have a reflection.
Gassy and Gasserina playing go fish. Happy to just be together in their gross decaying pad...complete with toaster, fan, tv, and of course a crutch.
Cleavers is a very widely distributed plant, and grows in abundance. Can be eaten if cooked, when the plant is young.
The plant is covered in tiny hooks that stick to animal fur to aid distribution.
Cleavers (Galium aparine)
aka; catchweed, goosegrass, clivers, sticky willy and robin-run-the-hedge.
2025 Keith Jones All Rights Reserved
Excerpt from heritageburlington.ca:
A two-and-a-half storey Richardsonian Romanesque brick structure with Queen Ann elements. The round corner turret has aconical roof clad with the same arched wooden shingles as the large broken-pediment front gable. The high hipped roof is also set off by two tall side chimneys. The front entrance is recessed beneath a round arch, whose form is echoed by the arched window above. The slight projection between doorway and turret is pierced by two small windows: circular and diamond-shaped The slight projection of the offset gable has doubled small square windows in the gable, doubled segmental windows at the second level, and a large arched window at the first level. The bold patterns of form and fenestration are articulated with subtle brickwork patterns, linking arches and outlining windows; the turret has decorative panels of corrugated upright bricks alternating with squares of flat horizontal bricks.
The large grounds have a curved drive to the entrance. At the street is a low cobblestone wall which continues to Emerald Street. Mature evergreen and Maple trees partly conceal the building, but it is a familiar landmark.
Built in 1890 for Ellis Hughes Cleaver, the youngest son of James Cleaver of Lowville.
A tiny white flower of the climbing plant Cleavers, also known as Goosegrass, Sticky Weed or Sticky Willie (Galium aparine) creeping through a hedgerow close to the River Churnet at Consall, an RSPB reserve in Staffordshire
(Heart group 1)
This picture refers to the first group I play RPG Heart: The City Beneath.
My character is a female gnoll Cleaver named Hexia (meaning hex as in curse), her former pack called her that. Her original name was Anissa Wided (meaning something like heartfelt affection)
She made her way to the Heart in search of the Heart's song.
The image is created in Midjourney, using the character image from the rulebook and the darkest dungeon art style in the prompt as a base.
(96/365) A Japanese steel cleaver and 8" chef's knife shown with the tomatoes and onions they were used to dice. For 119 pictures in 2019 #64 "knives"
Well, Here she is! After just five days of work (Yes! FIVE!) it is now ready for the spotlight!
Last year, I built a pretty out there SHIP that may or may not actually be considered a "ship". This year I decided to leave the design process to the professionals and steal some art off Google images. Personally, I'm glad I did. This thing looks friggin' awesome! It all went together better and faster than I ever could have imagined.
Of course the build is only half the story. It all started off with this amazing concept by Timmon26.
I could only find the one piece of art, so I had to use my imagination for the back side.
She is exactly 100 and a half studs long and 58 studs wide.
I've put together a time-lapse video of the building process. It's over the seven minute restriction for Flickr, so you can find it here if you've got eleven minutes to kill.
I say this every year. SHIPtember is my favourite time of the year. When the calendar hits August, I start sorting, researching, and scheming away. By the time September comes around, I'm jonesing to put shit together, and I love every moment of it!
I guess what i'm saying is, thank you to everyone involved in organizing this beast of a month. Also, everyone that's building SHIPs and/or helping other builders perfect their SHIPs. Everyones encouragement and advice helped me make a SHIP that I can truly be proud of!
Thanks for following along!