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Students learned about the design principle of visual rhythm, then designed their own patterns, which were applied to a sheet of paper. The paper was then folded and glued into this three-dimensional, geometric form.

my fold of the fantastic and beautiful Dancing crane by Robert J. Lang! I'm very happy with this and I'm so glad I folded it with tracing paper cause it was a pleasure shaping it!

 

Folded from: 40 cm Tracing Paper. For the platform, I took a soap packet, and covered it with standard paper. And stuck a toothpick in it so that I can stand the crane. :D A very neat idea, I think. XD

Time to fold: 2-3 hours.

Difficulty: Complex. The legs are a pain in the ass!!

 

Hope you like it!

btw, I won't be uploading any photos until I fix my camera. ;-)

Designed and folded by Chad Killeen

folded from one uncut square of paper.

My first improvement was adding a pencil holder.

It serves also the purpose to prevent pressing too hard on the the lid when closed, breaking the folding wood part

 

This great idea is from Snijlab.

snijlab.nl/en/p/288/folding-wood-booklet

 

But this design was made for a laser cutting machine.

So I changed the design for a CNC machine and addes some improvements: A DIN A6 version, a pencil holder, improved clamp and changed the position of the rubber band slot.

 

SNIJLAB License: you are invited to build on this design

We've licenced this design under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

 

This means you are free to:

 

Share — copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format

Adapt — remix, transform, and build upon the material

for any purpose, even commercially.

 

Under the following terms:

 

Attribution — You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, andindicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.

ShareAlike — If you remix, transform, or build upon the material, you must distribute your contributions under the same license as the original.

No additional restrictions — You may not apply legal terms or technological measures that legally restrict others from doing anything the license permits.

*You must provide our name (Snijlab.nl), a license notice, and a link to this page.

 

Folding camera for roll film size 616 , made in USA from 1939-1948 . With various lens ans shutter combinations . The present camera has a Kodak No. 1 Diomatic shutter and a Kodak Anastigmat f/6.3 lens .

You will enjoy the convenience that a Brompton give you.

Folded by: Akira Nguyen

Designed by (box): Tomoko Fuse

Designed by (magic star): Yury and Katrin Shumakov

A time-lapse diorama short taken at the Citrus Classic Balloon Festival in Santa Paula, Ca. The ballooners were not able to launch due to the weather. So some decided that it was better to pack it up. I was able to sit down on the field and setup my Gorilla pod and used my Olympus E-P3 & Panny 14mm for the video. I set the camera to the Diorama filter for the time-lapse feel of the video. I want to say the total video time was like 10mins or so...

 

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about.me/edwardconde

elcuartooscuro.tumblr.com

digitalchemicals.blogspot.com

facebook.com/digitalchemicalsphotography

 

As displayed in OUSA 2010 by Kei Morisue

(Diagrammed in Tanteidan 17)

With support from UNFPA, the quality of services has improved in the area of maternal and newborn health with the introduction of standards of clinical care. The number of the birth-giving facilities in Turkmenistan providing comprehensive emergency obstetric care services has increased more than three-fold since 2010.

 

Photo credit: Turkmenistan_2015_Julie Pudlowski/UNFPA Turkmenistan

Looking like a benthic seed-pod.

Bullslaughter bay.

I've not processed these shots much as I wanted to keep the feeling of a hot, bright summers day ......which it was.

2048 x 2048 pixel image for the 3rd Generation iPad 2048 x 1536 pixel retina display.

The rocks at Dolaucothi lie on the boundary of the Ordovician and Silurian eras so they are around 440 million years old. They are made of marine black shales so are difficult to photograph unless in direct harsh sunlight. Above the two students you can see a tight overfold here that has broken into a thrust fault. The quartz veins containing gold often form as saddle reefs in the apex of such folds. Hence the cave here is hand dug into the fold axis possibly by Romans to try and find gold.

We were fascinated that the loo roll was magically folded between each use in the toilets

I haven't shot with this camera lately so I took a few images today (Camera image uploaded with these). This is the 2nd edition model with the silver struts. Stopped down it takes decent shots for a meniscus style lens. Cropped for effect. Taken on Kodak Verichrome Pan from Sept 1960. Developed in D76 10 minutes at room temperature.

Side view.

 

Designed and folded by Gen Hagiwara

  

St Nicholas, Rattlesden, Suffolk

 

The hills roll in from the west, and make gentle folds in the countryside between Stowmarket and Hadleigh. Some of the valleys are quite dramatic, and in one of the steepest sits the village of Rattlesden. Rattlesden is a large village in a wide parish, and in fact the parish contains several other settlements; one of them, Hightown Green, is bigger than many other Suffolk villages. But it is Rattlesden itself that contains the parish church, and what a dramatic setting! Half-timbered houses clamber the slopes either side of the splendidly named River Rat. On the south side they are particularly grand, and include a fine old pub. There is another pub on the north side.

 

The churchyard drops dramatically away to the south-east. A steep path descends from the road above the graveyard giving a grand view of the building, and it doesn't take much to see that St Nicholas is a little unusual. Although the assemblage of nave, clerestory, aisles and chancel are familiar 15th century rebuildings in this prosperous area, the tower is a little out of the ordinary. Uncastellated, but with a little wooden spire, it was remodelled by Sir Arthur Blomfield in the later years of the 19th century. Replacing an earlier spire which had fallen, but avoiding Richard Phipson's psychedelic fantasies at nearby Woolpit and Great Finborough, he produced something much more austere, although in its way just as singular. The shortness of the spire create an effect a bit like a hat on the thin tower. Two clasping pencil-like buttresses rise on the west side, and the tower appears to lean into them, but this is perhaps just an optical illusion.

 

The exterior took its present form in four stages. Firstly, the original nave was built in the 13th century, probably replacing a Saxon or Norman building. A hundred years later, the tower was added. Next, the dramatic remodelling occured in the 15th century, when the little church was transformed by the addition of Perpendicular aisles and a clerestory. The clerestory is a beautiful one, and above its windows, between the battlements, is a sequence of holy symbols. They are for the Blessed Virgin and most of the disciples, but also include St Edmund of East Anglia and St Etheldreda of Ely, a reminder that the Priory there was one of the patrons of the living here. The pinnacles finish it all off a treat.

 

You step in through the south porch into a wide, urban interior. Apart from some medieval benches in the south aisle, the pews were all replaced with modern chairs, which always looks good and is always a blessing to anyone who actually has to sit on the things.

 

What makes St Nicholas remarkable is that it contains one of the most complete and precise reconstructions of a rood system in England. It was constructed between 1909 and 1916 to the designs of George Fellowes Prynne. It is based on a medieval fragment surviving at the west end. One of the reasons it is so good is that it does not try to recreate a medieval effect, but rather serves to demonstrate the actual mechanics of how the whole thing worked. If you are lucky enough to be allowed through the locked grill, the original roodloft stair in the south aisle takes you up into the loft of the parclose screen as at Dennington, and then up a ladder and through an opening in the south arcade across into the roodloft itself. This crosses to the north arcade, beneath the elegant arch. The rood is a grand thing; however, I suspect that the original rood here may have been even bigger, hence the backlighting from the triple lancet window in the east wall of the nave. The other little opening may have been designed to enclose a sanctus bell, which would have been rung from the rood loft.

 

The doors in the rood screen are very heavy, effectively separating the chancel from the nave, and the chancel itself is fitted as a choir, which must have been the very thing at the turn of the 20th century. Above all this, this vision of the medieval is completed by the angel roof installed in the 1880s. Imagine all this wood ablaze with colour, and you'll begin to get a feel for what this place must have been like when it was first in its current form towards the end of the 15th century.

 

The chancel is grand without being overstated, although the art nouveau lamps either side of the sanctuary are something special. Looking back towards the nave and the tower arch, you'll see that it is, unusually, raised up a step, as if to improve the view. The railings dividing it off are actually the former communion rails removed from nearby Kettlebaston at the time of its Anglo-catholic makeover. Within the tower arch a quaint wrought iron staircase spirals into the belfry.

 

St Nicholas has plenty of good modern glass, especially that in the south aisle chapel by William Aikman of 1936, which contains a hauntingly beautiful Madonna and child. He's also responsible for two of the other earlier windows in this aisle, including the noteworthy Parish Children window. Up in the chancel, also his, is the slightly bizarre rendition of St Nicholas with the face of the Vicar of the time, which is a touch eerie. On the left, Thomas Rattlesden meets Henry VII outside the gates of Bury Abbey, while the figure on the right is St Edmund.

 

Back in the nave are several reminders of the connections between this parish and the United States. The Kimball family came from here, and their ancestors have installed a plaque in the north aisle as well as paying for the bringing together of fragments of medieval glass in a north aisle window. The north aisle chapel remembers the presence of the USAAF on Rattlesden airfield during WWII. The 'K' on the prayer desk recalls not only the Kimballs, but also that it was the operation letter for planes flying from the base.

Finally had an excuse (like I needed one) to wear my new skirt from Reiss!

 

gifted necklace

Sweet Pea blouse

Reiss skirt

Report Signature shoes

Chanel purse

 

More here: www.districtofchic.com/2009/02/folded.html

"In June 2009, Camille was diagnosed with an Intracranial Ependymoma situated in the fourth ventricle between the cerebellum and the brain stem at the base of the brain. The tumour is currently pressing against the cerebellum and brain stem making surgery too dangerous. The treatment plan is to offer chemotherapy to shrink the tumour away from these two areas so surgery can take place. Chemotherapy started on 23rd July 2009 and is planned to last for 12 months or more."

 

Camille's mum belongs to an online community that I've been a part of for a long time. We've all been through a lot of things together, births, marriages, break ups, make ups, but I don't think anything has touched us quite as much as Camille's story.

 

A group of us also belong to the flickr community and wondered if there was anything we could do here to help raise awareness. Can I please, please ask you to take a look at this group and become a member and invite your contacts. It would also be great if some of the pictures reached explore so if you could comment or fave (preferably both) this would really give the appeal a boost.

 

Can I also ask you to look at Camille's website and read Martin's (Camille's dad) blog. What Camille's family are going through is truly heartbreaking. Please, please do what you can.

 

Thank you for reading.

Folder feito para a 3ª Feira de Negócios (administração) da FACAMP.

Folded for a facebook challenge.

 

This is supposed to be a slipper but id din't turn out that well.

Isabel folds the shirt for her tie dye design

Created and folded by redpaper (seo won seon)

one uncut square. 35cm x35mc

 

well you just know that any visit to New York simply has to have some pictures of iconic symbols....

:-)

Print - cut - then fold as in here (thanks for the crease pattern Oschene!)

 

The top row shown here gives a nice visual for what the thing should look like.

Seen on Jennens Road opposite BOA.

 

Brompton Bike Hire.

 

Moor Street Queensway, New Street and Colmore Row.

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