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Original abstract artwork

 

18x24 in.

 

Charcoal, oil stick, oil pastel on Canson sketch paper

 

Original work for sale by contacting ajeffries101958@yahoo.com

 

Prints, etc. are available at www.redbubble.com/people/atj1958

 

Thanks for taking the time to look at my work.

 

EUROPA LEAGUE QUALIFYING PLAY OFF

1st October 2020

2-1 Rangers

Rangers Goalscorers, Scott Arfield (52), James Tavernier (59)

Galatasaray Goalscorer, Marcao do Nascimento Teixeira (87)

Closed Doors Fixture

 

The Rangers Team

Allan McGregor, James Tavernier, Borna Barisic, Connor Goldson, Filip Helander, Glen Kamara, Steven Davis, Scott Arfield,

Ianis Hagi, Ryan Kent, Alfredo Morelos

Substitutes Used, Ryan Jack, Cedric Itten

 

The Galatasaray Team

Ozturk, Elabdellaoui, Luyindama, M do Nascimento, Linnes, Antalyali, Feghouli, Kilinc, Belhanda, Babel, Falcao

Substitutes Used, Bayram, Etebo, Diagne

 

Played at Ibrox Stadium

  

Olean, NY. August 2018.

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If you would like to use THIS picture in any sort of media elsewhere (such as newspaper or article), please send me a Flickrmail or send me an email at natehenderson6@gmail.com

Contributed by John McCarthy, 12/20/07

This is a piece I just finished, called Life Fixture. It is a terrarium inside a test tube inside an aquarium inside a light bulb. I made it for a show on the theme of WATER, and out of my current passion for creating contained little living worlds.

More of this kind of work: albertotem.blogspot.com

This is how you hold the fork fixture in your repair stand.

if the string attached to the light in your bathroom is too short you can lengthen the string and throw a gun on the end

This fixture has been installed on the coast for about 1.5 years and has developed a beautiful patina.

Pentax MX-1

 

For the Pentax Forums Single in August Challenge

Cleckheaton take an orthodox approach to batting during a JCT600 Bradford Cricket League clash with fellow Division One high-flyers Hanging Heaton. Unfortunately, the fixture at Moorend was washed out by a thunderstorm that arrived in the final quarter.

 

Match statistics: Cleckheaton 235-9 off 50 overs (Mally Nicholson 97, Andrew Gorrod 40, John Wood 38, David Stiff 4-51, Ben Elvidge 3-41) 8pts, Hanging Heaton 125-1 off 29.2 overs (Ian Philliskirk 45no, Nick Connolly 43no, Gary Fellows 31) 8pts. Match abandoned owing to rain. Hanging Heaton won the toss and elected to field. Admission: £3 (including 20-page programme). Attendance: 92. Tea: £5.50 (homemade meat & potato pie, new potatoes, mushy peas, gravy; Victoria sponge with strawberries; mug of tea).

 

Cleckheaton Cricket Club began life in 1864 as the workshops team of Hunsworth Mills. They have played at Moorend since their first season. The site, once semi-rural but now surrounded by industrial units and adjacent to Junction 26 of the M62, is shared with bowls and rugby union. In 1885, Cleckheaton was adopted as the club's official name. The Moorend pitch was relaid nine years later. Around the turn of the century, the present red-brick, two-storey pavilion was built on the west side of the ground. Cleckheaton were admitted to the Yorkshire Cricket Council in 1903. A major development took place in 1932 when the club bought, at auction, the Moorend ground. The Savile family, saddled with huge death duties, had to sell the Hunsworth estate and Cleckheaton secured the land for £750. In 1937, the club joined the new Central Yorkshire League and within two years had won their first trophy, the Heavy Woollen Cup. A move to the Bradford League followed in 1976. Promotion to Division One was earned four years later. A long spell as a yo-yo club followed before Cleckheaton won back-to-back top-flight titles in 2013 and 2014, their first since joining the Bradford League. The Priestley Cup also found its way to Moorend in 2014.

Three 5/16-18 screws and double pinned.

Black and white photo of a circular light fixture in a brick wall.

A fixture since the late 1950s, a sad end to Waikiki's funky market place. It's being torn down as this photo is taken.

Orion technicians at the Operations and Checkout Facility at the Kennedy Space Center move the Orion Exploration Flight Test 1 Crew Module from the clean room into the Birdcage fixture. The fixture is designed to enable precise pre-launch processing of the Orion spacecraft.

North entrance and small courtyard area of Bullock's Santa Ana

Buffalo, NY. July 2018.

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If you would like to use THIS picture in any sort of media elsewhere (such as newspaper or article), please send me a Flickrmail or send me an email at natehenderson6@gmail.com

Orion technicians at the Operations and Checkout Facility at the Kennedy Space Center move the Orion Exploration Flight Test 1 Crew Module from the clean room into the Birdcage fixture. The fixture is designed to enable precise pre-launch processing of the Orion spacecraft.

Painted Brick Walls. San Francisco, California. March 6, 2010. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell - all rights reserved.

 

Green and pink painted brick walls in San Francisco, California.

 

Several things catch my eye about this little scene: the contrast between the sharply defined monochromatic green bricks on the left and the wildly pink and badly painted bricks on the right, the old light fixture with its small shadow, the almost completely black line in the middle of the image where the two buildings don't quite meet, the sliver of blue sky near the top of this shadowed area, and the very stark and harsh light.

 

This photograph is not in the public domain and may not be used on websites, blogs, or in other media without advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.

 

G Dan Mitchell Photography | Twitter | Friendfeed | Facebook | Facebook Fan Page | Email

 

Technical Data:

Canon EOS 5D Mark II

Canon EF 50mm f/1.4 USM

ISO 200, f/11, 1/400 second

Olean, NY. June 2018.

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If you would like to use THIS picture in any sort of media elsewhere (such as newspaper or article), please send me a Flickrmail or send me an email at natehenderson6@gmail.com

Olean, NY. August 2018.

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If you would like to use THIS picture in any sort of media elsewhere (such as newspaper or article), please send me a Flickrmail or send me an email at natehenderson6@gmail.com

One of the ornate light fixtures in the foyer of the Paramount.

Orion technicians at the Operations and Checkout Facility at the Kennedy Space Center move the Orion Exploration Flight Test 1 Crew Module from the clean room into the Birdcage fixture. The fixture is designed to enable precise pre-launch processing of the Orion spacecraft.

Orion technicians at the Operations and Checkout Facility at the Kennedy Space Center move the Orion Exploration Flight Test 1 Crew Module from the clean room into the Birdcage fixture. The fixture is designed to enable precise pre-launch processing of the Orion spacecraft.

Something for the spa, perhaps

El Tovar Hotel Dining Room

Grand Canyon

I'm always pleased to see the Ghostbusters but I confess I've run out of ways to photograph them. As with the Stormtroopers, I'm mostly in the mode of "hang around and see if you can get a good shot of civilians interacting with them."

 

I'm being 90% serious when I say that my generation's community clubs are way, way cooler than the Elks, Bears, Masons, and Shriners that my grandparents' generation was involved with.

 

And if you think of it, they share many of the same characteristics: costumes, socializing, and community service.

 

I would buy tickets to a Costume Softball League tournament. There are certainly enough large fanbases to populate a league:

 

1) Star Trek (classic series)

2) Star Trek (Next Generation)

3) Star Trek (the Slow, Sad Decline Years)

4) Klingons

5) Ghostbusters

6) Stormtroopers

7) Jedi

8) Sith

9) Doctor Who

10) Marvel

11) DC

12) Gaming

13) Broadway (the pitcher throws her mitt to the ground and throws a fit when she hears a cellphone go off in the stands)

14) Columbo (every base hit becomes a home run, because every player on the field is wandering aimlessly and asking the umpires and spectators seemingly irrelevant questions. And yet the Columbo team always wins.)

 

On second thought: scratch the "Gaming" team, or restrict it to console gaming. The RPG'ers would probably delay the game by hours as they argue the rules.

 

("But I'm touching the ground which is, in turn, touching the base. Therefore, you should award me a home run for this base hit. No, I wasn't out when the outfielder caught the ball, because the rulebook uses a fuzzy definition of "caught" that we never agreed to...")

 

(On third thought: we'll use the RPG'ers as designated hitters. RPG'ers and DH's are both known for completely ruining the game...maybe the two things will cancel each other out or something.)

 

OK, clearly I stopped taking this seriously after the first eleven. But it's still a good idea. Normally, it takes several seasons for team rivalries to form. But with the Costume Softball League, you know that "Sith v. Klingons" would be the ticket to get.

A wall lamp in our motel room at Rumford, Maine.

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