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After the premiere of The Revival we went for the Nai building in Rotterdam for a fixed gear trick sesh. We had fun. Rotterdam, November 27th 2009.
These were all shot with a Leica M3 with Summicron 50mm lens. Used film, Fuji Neopan 1600. Epson Perfection V500.
Sorry for the bad photo Z. I've fixed the hammer problem and made it more vertical, Hope it looks better!
The Fixie Project is finished
Frame:
Old Dawes Super Tube - Hand Built in England - Restored and painted in gargoyle grey
Handlebars and Stem:
Stock Stem with Engraved Dawes Handlebars
Fork and Headset:
Stock
Front wheel:
Velocity Deep V 36H + Formula Hubs + Schwalbe Electric Blue Tires
Rear wheel:
Velocity Deep V 36H + Formula Hubs + Schwalbe Electric Blue Tires
Crankset and Bottom bracket:
Bricklane Bikes Import (cheap and cheerful) Upgrades soon
Saddle and Seat Post:
FI'ZI:K Aliante Saddle on Cheap Seat Post 26.42mm
Pedals and Chain:
Stock
Cog/Gearing et cetera:
46T - 16T
Notes:
My first fixy......Cant believe what ive been missing out on!!! :-)
WRAHW OK!
On the first day of arriving at Eurobike, we dropped Oscar and the rest of the crew at the skatepark. This is where the trick comp was to be held later that week. We met up with them later that day after wondering where they had been for so long... Amongst the photographs that Rip Zinger had on his Ricoh was this perfectly tweaked table pulled by Oscar Khan.
This cover shot is part of the WRAHW interview we conducted with Torey Thornton, read the interview in issue #9 out this month (September 2011)
© Fixed Mag
Photograph - © Rip Zinger
(Not mine photo)
Fixed version by me - original photo by ~Prescott (see belove).
I found original photo from Fix my pic group.
What I made:
- using curve for contrast etc.
- sharpeninng net part with unsharp mask
- redraw weak (and some missing ) part of net. that was most difficult part of fixing because they must look same as original net.
fixed term sale on calculator. Please feel free to use this image that I've created on your website or blog. If you do, I'd greatly appreciate a link back to my blog as the source: CreditDebitPro.com
Example: Photo by creditdebitpro
Thanks!
Mike Lawrence
Project Team: Dominic Balmforth
Project Summary:
FIXED AND FREE is a destination for residents of New York City to deposit obsolete electronics. The bin ensures that electronics can enter a carefully managed system. Items previously considered waste will have new life and extended use. The bin will facilitate the storage, retrieval, and transportation of electronics and their entrance into a greater recycling initiative.
Upon Internet registration, users approach a bin in the city with available space. A card swipe releases a size-coordinated door within the fixed steel frame. Used electronics are inserted, recognized and registered. The user’s account is credited with redeemable points as an incentive to actively and regularly recycle.
Harbored to the robust steel frame, a mobile non-pvc plastic unit accepts appliances and components of various sizes and shapes. The unit is released when full and stacks for easy transport to processing facilities.
This new bin in New York City manages used electronic resources, not waste, closing the loop from raw material to manufacturer to consumer. Electronic appliances, when designed as an assembly of components, become valuable technical nutrients for re-use.
The bin and recycling system will prolong and redirect the lifecycle of electronics. The bin is not the final destination for obsolete electronics. Instead, it is the point of entry into a loop of manufacture, use and recycle. Appliances have new lives.
Incentives:
FIXED AND FREE is a catalyst in the electronics industry. Production, consumption and waste management no longer follow parallel and independent paths. Instead, a closed loop cycle connects consumers, recycling industries, and electronic manufacturers. The bin physically links these parties; it receives and releases a new object for new trade. As electronics become both appliance and resource, new symbiotic relations are forged between user and industry.
Upon deposit, obsolete electronics are safely stored, managed and retrieved. Users are rewarded with public transportation coupons, donation vouchers for charity or credit to purchase refurbished electronics. Recycling becomes a promoted and rewarded activity.
New York City residents supply the valuable raw-material or technical nutrients to create next-generation appliances. The recycling industry dismantles and refurbishes obsolete electronics. Salvaged components, exchanged within the industry, stimulate new collaborations and offer new supply to meet new demand.
FIXED AND FREE accents New York’s cityscape. On the street, the bin is canvas for public art or ad-space to generate revenue. In the park or at the schoolyard, the bin is over-grown with green and flowers.
Fixing The Problems
It was our turn today! All completed and better than it was before. This was done for us by the Town Of Ithaca workers, they needed a place to dump the gravel and we needed some TLC for our driveway that was washed out during the rains last month! A win win!
A Good Friday photo, taken on Palm Sunday - it was very windy, so only a few stayed to fix the cross on Knowl Hill.
A cross-section (sorry!) of Churches Together in North West Rochdale.
Do have a blessed Easter whatever your faith - or none.
8bar-bikes.com/blog/8bar-crit-is-back-in-2021/
The 8bar Crit 2021 is a fixed gear bike race, which takes place on a fast course of about 1km length. All participants must ride a fixed gear bike without brakes.
Photo: Pino Moreno
Cosplay : Cereza
Cosplayer: Esther Delgado ( Panda Killer)
Serie: Saber Marionette
Fotographer : ????
Evento: Expo Cosplay Mazatlan
Tech guy goes through the specs. I' so psyched that something actually got fixed this week that I'm literally posting the first thing I shot.
The main mirror doesn't move. There is a submirror behind it for phase autofocus which does move out of the way.
In RS mode when you press the shutter button halfway it focuses, meters, drops the sub-mirror out of the way, stops down the aperture and is then ready to shoot by simply opening the double-shutter (double shutter is required to keep from exposing the film since the mirror is always 'up'). Since almost everything is already done when you half-press the shutter, it is simply a 6ms lag to open the shutter compared to most cameras which still need to left their mirror/submirror assemblies, close down the aperture and finally open the shutter which takes 40ms on the 1D.