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Playing with fiber optics, exposure and a multicolored flashlight. I'm going to have to revisit this on in the future

Roving from Tintagel Farm, Glenville, PA. "Seafoam" colourway. 58% Mohair, 42% Wool, Angelina.

fiber art bracelet, beaded

should have added this one last month for the "sea" theme

 

Found the description in the guide book:

Treasured Waters original by Barb Forrister, Austin, TX

Silk, cotton, sheers, lace, doilies, textiva, cheesecloth, plastics, beads, fibers, dyed/painted soft and hard sculpted sea plants, needle felted.

three person shopping trip

Additional close-up view of a vintage asbestos gasket material with manufacturer's labeling indicating "Garlock 900" and showing chrysotile asbestos fibers along the gasket's surface.

Allthough sold as carbon fiber sheet, this material is actually clear sticker vinyl over raw carbon fabric with adhesive backing stuck to the back of the raw fabric. This is not a carbon fiber sheet.

 

For real carbon fiber sheet visit www.sierracomposites.com

miscellaneous fibers, wool, ribbon, yarn

It's the Dust Fibers texture created in the Filter Forge plugin. It can be seamless tiled and rendered in any resolution without loosing details.

You can see the presets and download this texture for free on the Filter Forge site here — www.filterforge.com/filters/12674.html (created by raabix)

To use this texture download Filter Forge 30-day trial for free here — www.filterforge.com/download/

The Fiber Arts Crew at Warren Wilson started with two students who came from crafting families and a lot of help from friends of the College. Katherine Evans and Allison Hoyman-Browe had been hosting a craft night in Dorland, and they got the idea for a weaving crew from their experiences there. They envisioned a “textile traditions” crew that taught the community about fiber crafts.

 

In 2011, the crew continues and is supervised by Melanie Wilder. Their shop is in a house on the Fortune property.

The fiber optic cable trench is a little deeper than the existing pipes in the schoolyard. The trench is criss-crossed with other cables, most likely water pipes used to irrigate the grass. This trench is about 8 to 12 inches deeper than those water pipes.

GEDSC DIGITAL CAMERA

Kenya in her 1930's red dress!

Although fiber is advantageous in its bandwidth and ability to cover large distances its transmissive qualities can be damaged by sharp kinks or bends. In many installations a hard plastic duct is used for routing the fiber to different locations to protect it from damage.

A crocheted flower created for the Putting Down Roots community fiber arts project in support of native prairie plants and their environmental benefits.

"Meadow Maggots Hit The Road to Rhinebeck 2013" colourway, by Frabjous Fibers, exclusively for Susan's Fiber Shop. 55% Polwarth, 15% Black Diamond Bamboo, 15% Tussah Silk, 15% Tencel.

You can't live near Suttle Lake in the Cascades and not know about Sasquatch!

 

While making this monster 4 ¼ inch shuttle, Dave was inspired by the legends of Big Foot roaming the wilderness areas of the Pacific Northwest, so he named it the “Sasquatch”.

 

This shuttle is similar in size to the popular large plastic Tatsy shuttle, but it is made out of Oregon Myrtlewood. Dave has burn etched our Cascade Mountains logo on one side and a “Big Foot” print on the other.

A Nikon SB-28 (1/16) fired through the back end of the fibre optics and a red gelled SB-25 (1/32) came from the left. Triggered by ebay radiotriggers.

SoulRider.222 / Eric Rider © 2020

"Blue York" series, by cjkoho & Yarn Hollow. 40% Merino, 40% Superwash Merino, 20% Tussah Silk. Each braid is a different colourway.

Fiber Optic, faster than..light?!

Fiber Art by Tezuka Fumie,

  

Cables.com offers Fiber Optic HDMI cables provide unmatched signal performance and complete transparency over a very wide range of input resolutions with lengths up to 100 meters.

There is a lot of utility work going on in the neighborhood of my workplace. This photo shows new fiber optic conduit fed through a break in the concrete communication vault. I'm wondering how common it is to break the corner of the vault like this, allowing water and rodent penetration?? Maybe it will be blocked with putty later.

Not really a Frisbee (it's pretty light), but close.

The initial design was CNC'd out of a high density foam, a mold made out of fiberglass, then carbon fiber/epoxy vacuum bagged.

Made in a Rapid Prototyping Manufacturing class (RapidTech) over at Saddleback College in SoCal.

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