View allAll Photos Tagged dissection

"Now we just need to figure out how to fit a pilot into this thing."

 

Hi all! Here's a cut-in half view of the jet fighter I built a week ago. I pretty much just started from the back and used a lot of parts with studs on both sides to attach the plating to. It's one of the more complex things I've built, but airplanes are always a lot of fun. Anyways, I'm just trying to post until I can finally show some more WIPs for my Torumekian Armored Corvette. Thanks for viewing!

 

-MWBricks

Showing the integral parts of a cherry fruit.

© 2014 by Wil Wardle. Please do not use this or any of my images without my permission.

 

Please also find me Me on facebook, 500px , Ipernity and flickr:

 

www.facebook.com/pages/Wil-Wardle-Photography/13877641613...

 

www.500px.com/WilliamWardle

 

www.ipernity.com/home/328357

 

www.flickr.com/photos/psionicwill/

 

www.wilwardlephotography.co.uk

This gent was carefully preparing his slice of pie. Silver Efex Pro 2: Kodak Tri-X 400TX Pro with 70% Green filter

Had to make the scalpel and tweezers too.

Prototype of a project collaboration with artist Jason Freeny (2015)

230127_091909_iphoneSE_antwerpen

 

Plantin en Moretuslei

Zurenborg

Antwerpen

België

UKE Eppendorf Medizinhistorisches Museum/ Hamburg

Museum of Medical History /Hamburg

For more black & white photography, visit www.monochromeframes.com

UKE Eppendorf Medizinhistorisches Museum/ Hamburg

Museum of Medical History /Hamburg

Today we dissected frogs. A girl who sat behind me isn't very fond of the whole blood and guts thing, so I said I'd make her an alternative. Originally it was a joke, but then I got bored one evening and decided to actually make it.

Derelict Mental Hospital - The Dissection Room now in a state of disrepair with peeling paint & plaster coming off the walls

An image that makes me shiver.

Used Digital Manipulation to pull the room in and various lighting effects to give a feeling of being in the Twilight Zone of unreality

I never knew daffodils had seeds in the little pod that forms after the flower dies back - I always thought they only grew from bulbs. I saw a couple of shots similar to this in Macro Mondays this week and thought it would be a good idea for 'just a glimpse'.

 

117 pictures in 2017 (116) just a glimpse

For more black & white photography, visit www.monochromeframes.com

Anatomy Figures have been restocked! This is a collaboration project with artist Jason Freeny

220811_133210_iphoneSE_antwerpen

 

Oever

Scheldeken

Antwerpen

België

Hasselblad 500 C/M

Carl Zeiss Distagon 50mm f/4 C T*

Kodak Ektar 100

Bellini Foto C-41

Scan from negative film

Dissections: Yoko Ono

 

www.facebook.com/events/2896716340553918

  

«Dissections» est une série d’événements présentée dans le cadre de la programmation publique du Département de l’éducation et de l’engagement public de la Fondation Phi.

 

Avec «Dissections», nous souhaitons susciter un dialogue interdisciplinaire sur les expositions en cours et encourager un engagement renouvelé avec l’art contemporain.

  

«Dissections: Yoko Ono», présenté en partenariat avec Festival Quartiers Danses, propose un déambulatoire dansé au cœur de l’exposition «LIBERTÉ CONQUÉRANTE/GROWING FREEDOM» de Yoko Ono.

 

Cette performance sera offerte par un duo de la Beaver Dam Company / Edouard Hue (le danseur et chorégraphe Edouard Hue et la danseuse Yurié Tsugawa), le danseur Cai Glover, ainsi que la danseuse Janelle Hacault et la musicienne Coralie Gauthier.

 

La performance sera suivie d’une discussion entre Laure Barrachina, responsable de la médiation culturelle au Festival Quartiers Danses, Janelle Hacault et Edouard Hue, ainsi que d’une période d’échange entre le public et tous les artistes.

UKE Eppendorf Medizinhistorisches Museum/ Hamburg

Museum of Medical History /Hamburg

As background, you need to know that we had these decorated, decorative eggs. One of LG's sisters gave them to her a long time ago. We were never particularly attached to them, but they looked pretty in a bowl on our shelf for years. They were featherlight, and I always thought they were real eggshells that had been painted (albeit in a mass-production kinda way, not a hand-painted specialty item kinda way), and thus had always treated them with great care.

 

There were seven eggs, but pretend you don't know that yet. I did not remember it until later in my story; or perhaps I never knew it at all. Actually there could have been more than seven, but enough about that for now.

 

One day a few weeks ago we had some friends over for brunch. Two couples, each with a young kid. One of the kids was old enough to discover the eggs on our shelf and be interested in them, and the other was young enough that she had great fun playing hide-the-eggs with her very patient mom. The eggs got some rough-ish treatment from both kids, but we didn't care. (Ref. "never particularly attached".) In fact, the eggs came through it all completely unscathed, which got me to wondering about what they were really made of. But they were so light, they HAD to be delicate, real eggs, didn't they?

 

The boy (the older of the kids) had enjoyed the eggs so much (throwing them around, rolling them down the stairs, etc.) that when it was time for him to go home we offered them to him as a present. He was very thankful, and we packaged up all six[sic] of them in a ziploc bag.

 

The next day when I put on my shoes to go to work, there was an egg in one of them.

 

Will there be an eighth? Time will tell. None has surfaced yet.

 

Our friends live far enough across town, and we see them infrequently enough, that it didn't make sense to find a way to get this egg to them, and besides I was curious about their construction, so I proposed that we dissect it instead, and LG readily agreed. I struck up an email conversation with my dad about it. He lives far away, and we love conjecturing on life's little mysteries by email. We speculated for days while I procrastinated on actually cutting into the egg.

 

Through non-destructive observation of the egg I made several more discoveries, probably NOT remembered here in chronological order: 1) The egg was ever so slightly pliable; I could compress it slightly on the side, and it would spring back into shape. 2) And yet the egg seemed very firm, although I never really pressed quite THAT hard on it, because I did not want to dent the egg before its eventual dissection. 3) There was just a hint of an apparent seam around the middle of the egg. 4) The bottom of the egg (i.e. the fat end) had a little "nipple" like the bit of plastic you see on injection-molded plastic things.

 

As I made each new discovery, my dad and I had more enjoyable email conversation about what it must mean regarding the true composition and manufacture of the egg. He was at a disadvantage since not only did he not have the egg, but I didn't even get around to sending him any photos of it, so he only had my descriptions.

 

Finally today, with LG at hand, I dissected the egg.

 

But I will save that story for later.

 

Leica MP

Leica Summicron 35mm f/2 IV "King of Bokeh"

Kodak Color Plus 200

Tetenal Colortec C-41

Scan from negative film

Near London City Hall, London

Walking in the woods with a 35mm lens.

Designed and folded by me. Folded from one uncut square of Lama Li paper backed with some tissue paper. designed from around the middle of September/ beginning of October to the start of November. I've just been busy so I didn't have a lot of time to fold it :B

  

so thats the secret c: it has organs. The idea originated last year in my vertebrates class, where we got to dissect a pig XD

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