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Não sei porque demorei tanto para usar esse esmalte. E também não sei porque demorei tanto para posta-lo aqui no flickr!! Usei o Hacker em julho, acha?!
O que importa é que já usei, amei, e fotografei. Eis que chegou seu dia de ser mostrado aqui rsrs
Ele faz parte da coleção Ópticos 3D da 5Cinco. Mas de óptico não vi nada, vi foi o lindo acabamento glass flecked que tanto adoro!
A primeira camada mancha bastante, mas é nela que a gente define a cor do Hacker: fundo grafite com glass flecks roxos!
Ele não dá trabalho para limpar, seca rapidinho, mas sua textura é áspera. Nas fotos está sem top coat, mas depois eu passei pra deixar tudo bem lisinho!
Os vidrilhos roxos também são mais roxos do que aparecem na foto!! Eu devia ter tirado fotos depois de passar o top coat rsrs
Esse esmalte é muito amor ♥
Lindão, né? :)
My version of a lazy-leg light stand conversion. I designed the clamp in Google Sketchup and since I don't have access to a machine shop so I used an online 3D printing service to turn the model into a solid object. Ain't the internet sweet?
Not only is this late-16th century tool built by someone named "Hacker," its seems to have been invented to break locks and intrude into buildings.
Hackness Grange, a nineteenth century Grade II listed Georgian mansion, five miles northwest of Scarborough. It is now a country house hotel, owned and run by a former Hong Kong police officer.
Newest Addition to the Geekgasm Station: Hackers Poster (ft. my beloved Angelina "acidburn" Jolie & Johnny Lee "crashoverride/zerocool" Miller)
A sampling of custom trucks we've built at Hack Shack. Some dropped to the ground, and some lifted to the sky.
These are cool notebooks but there's nowhere to put a pen. I cut up an old plastic folder so that it can hook into the pouch at the back.
Hacking Arts (October 3-5), an annual student-run festival and hackathon hosted at the MIT Media Lab, marked the launch of MIT STARTUP. Hacking Arts features talks by entrepreneurs in the creative industries, tech-enabled live performances and art pieces, and demos by emergent start-ups. This year’s kick-off party at Microsoft’s Nerd Center featured a performance by Grammy-nominated artist Ryan Leslie and an ideation session by Kiran Gandhi, the drummer of MIA.
The following day, participants attended panels on Film, Music, Design, Virtual Reality, Fashion, Gaming, Performing Arts and Visual Arts, hearing from speakers such as Benji Rogers (CEO, Pledgemusic), Kevin Cunningham (Executive Artistic Director, 3-Legged Dog Productions) and Laird Malamed (COO, Oculus VR). Afterward, participants put their ideas into action during the high-voltage hackathon.
The 2014 Hackathon winners were LuxLoop (VHX Prize in Film, TV & VR), Harlequin (Most Creative), CUE (Most Disruptive) and Tomorrow Is Another Day (Best Overall Hack). A common thread among the winning hacks was how technology was used to promote human interaction or create analogue output. LuxLoop and Harlequin both used human motion to affect digital output. CUE, one of the finalists in the Pitch phase of the competition, designed a modular theatrical system consisting of wearable audiovisual hardware and a smartphone app to sequence, control and play user-programmed sound and light effects to enhance public theater. Tomorrow Is Another Day touted the idea “Turn your nothing into something,” as their project used a person’s daily “swipes” on touch-screen devices to transform daily online activities into abstract ink drawings.
Photo by Andrew Kubica
www.stayfocusedphotography.net/
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