View allAll Photos Tagged clockwork
For Halloween this year I was Alex from A Clockwork Orange; although, I do look more like Dim because of my hair. Oh well.
Drooge Outfit (male and female): Inorite subscribo, $0L
Those outfits were inspired by Clockwork Orange, made for The Kubrick Rooms, an amazing place... make sure u pay a visit!
Ps Last pic taken @ The Kubrick Rooms
LINKS @ MY BLOG: newcomershell.blogspot.com/
Rise before the gleaming coils of the Clockwork Serpent—an engineered marvel born from gears, pistons, and precision. Each metallic scale ticks like a living mechanism, whispering secrets of time and power. Its hood unfurls with intricate cogs that shimmer under soft light, creating a hypnotic rhythm as it watches with emotionless, mechanical poise. Forged in secrecy by an ancient machinist order, this serpent exists as both guardian and enigma—a fusion of artistry and danger, poised eternally between creation and destruction.
Greetings from the Clockwork Garden.
Although I primarily make jewelry, I love just doing some raw creative work. This little sculpture was made for this photo - using real Jewel Beetle wings and some lovely little clock and pocket watch parts.
I'm hoping to post up a few steampunk photos every Tuesday. Come say hello on Twitter.com/clockworkzero
i ask that you please respect this image and not use it. thanks!
Replica of the costume worn by Malcolm McDowell in "A Clockwork Orange."
The sword/cane is the original prop.
Los Angeles County Museum Of Art
Los Angeles, California
Same white cosmos with shield bug as in former photo in my photostream. Can you see the bug looking up at me and thinking: 'Are you looking at me!??'
Turret Clock Movement
by William Smith
London, c1750
Two train weight-driven clock movement, with a wrought-iron frame, anchor escapement and count-wheel striking. Now fitted with electronic winding.
Smith worked in Moorfields between c1750 to c1778. When John 'Longitude' Harrison designed a new escapement for a turret clock for the Foundling Hospital in 1755, Smith was commissioned to make it. He made several similar clocks in later years.
[Science Museum]
A Merlin Mk3 from 846 Naval Air Squadron, Commando Helicopter Force (CHF) on deployment during Exercise Clockwork at Royal Norwegian Air Force base Bardufoss, Norway.
Date: 5/03/2015
Photographer: Simon Galloway/Staff.
Copyright: Local World
Glasgow, Scotland. 2006
Clockwork Orange is the nickname given to Glasgow's metro thanks to its hideously bright orange colour and the fact that all trains run in one giant circular loop around the city. I think the dark grainy film, the voyeuristic window and the jarring, asymmetrical framing add a gritty “Glasgow” edge to this picture.
Turret Clock Movement
by William Smith
London, c1750
Two train weight-driven clock movement, with a wrought-iron frame, anchor escapement and count-wheel striking. Now fitted with electronic winding.
Smith worked in Moorfields between c1750 to c1778. When John 'Longitude' Harrison designed a new escapement for a turret clock for the Foundling Hospital in 1755, Smith was commissioned to make it. He made several similar clocks in later years.
[Science Museum]
Taken at the Pacific Science Center in Seattle, Washington.
Photo licensed Creative Commons, please use for any purpose, just provide credit.
Photo by Ryan Somma of ideonexus.com.