View allAll Photos Tagged deconstruction
Nikon F90x
Nikon AF NIKKOR 50mm 1:1.4 D
Novaline Spectra 200-24, expired 09-2006
Tetenal Colortec C-41, 4:00 minutes @ 38℃
20201117_01_018-1
Epson Perfection V850 Pro
Adobe Photoshop Elements 2019
An old iPhone 3G I had kicking around... It is no longer working, unless of course I can get it back together!!!
STROBIST
SB-700 infant of camera looking as down as possible beauty dish 24mm 1/2power
SB-700 camera right looking down softbox 24mm 1/4power
The remains of Lathbury House, Liverpool. This concrete stair structure would have been the first element to be built (around 1964) and now it is the last to be demolished.
COPYRIGHT © Towner Images
Partway through the process. The combs in the foreground have been removed, & the right end of the next one has been vacuumed free of bees. It shows capped and uncapped worker brood cells (pupae and larvae, respectively -- the pupae are sealed in, while the larvae are still being fed), with some larger drone brood cells at the right end.
Last summer my mother noticed honeybees swarming around the shed in her backyard, so she called a beekeeper. They turned out to be nesting in the neighbor's shed, and the beekeeper said he could collect them but it would have to wait until spring so the colony would be strong enough to survive. This weekend he came with his girlfriend/assistant and extracted the colony. They marked out the colony location with an IR camera, sawed out that section of 3/4" plywood floor with a circular saw, lifted it out, and turned it upside down on a folding table. Then they disassembled it, comb by comb. The bees they vacuumed up, collecting them in a shopvac-head bucket for later return to the new hive. The honeycomb they harvested. The brood comb they placed in empty beehive frames, holding the pieces in place with rubber bands. They proceeded slowly, looking for the queen the whole time. Just when they were ready to give up, they found her in a remnant of comb back in the shed. The bees were amazingly docile, at least compared to what I had expected. Queen, bees, and comb were reunited in their new digs, a double-decker hive, and are off to a new life in the countryside. The floor was screwed back down, with the exit from the sub-floor airspace to the outside blocked by sprayfoam.
Mixed media painting in progress. The work has been cooking for some time...think it is going to try to finish up sometime soon! Each panel will hang on its own...not sure how much space to have between them. They are now propped up on wooden boards so i can work it. Not a lot of space in loft so I have to kind of keep them where they are. Looking forward to them being a bit more apart in show in July.
by Diane M Kramer
aka She Wolf
Allen Ginsberg's FBI files downloaded from Internet Archive, imported into GIMP, all white space removed from first 89 pages, leaving the 90th page as the background layer.
Shot with a Minox 35 GT-E
Minox Color-Minotar 35mm f/2.8 lens
Kodak Vision3 500T film
Shot at EI 500
Developed by the Atlanta Film Co. (ECN-2 process)
Scanned on a Super Coolscan 5000ED
Available now @ Mainstore
GEO present's our Deconstruction Boot
The Deconstruction Boot is compatible with Jake Belleza, Signature Gianni, Legacy M & F, Slink HG, Freya, and Maitreya mesh bodies. Unrigged and Resizable included as well.
Purchase the fatpack for 4 fatpack exclusive colorways.
Alway's remember to try a demo before making a final purchase!
A large, red plastic colander lovingly holds a plate with the remains of its smaller sibling that had come to an untimely end when, after having been relieved of boiling hot pasta, it had been placed on an empty saucepan standing on the hob above a carelessly burning low flame. An hour later, complete deconstruction of the smaller colander had occurred resulting in said remains assembled here, with the generous support afforded by the still grieving larger survivor, as a warning never to trust thoughtless humans when you are a red plastic colander.