View allAll Photos Tagged improvisation
Passer's by (mainly children) co-operatively created something from small stones and found objects. At the Woodford Folk Festival, New Year's Eve 2010.
The handle of my washer broke off, leaving a short section of threaded rod remaining. To give a new handle something to grab on to, I extended the threaded rod with a long coupling nut. Two small jam nuts keep the new handle from turning out of the coupling nut. The new "T" handle is a section of welding rod welded to a bolt. It's ugly, but it works and hasn't failed since I put it in.
After the first week, all the jazz combos had their presentations and every student had the chance to improvise on stage.
Photo by Tina Pastore
"Weapons of ass destruction" (SMJZ 2006). Thurston Moore, Jim O´Rourke, Mats Gustafsson. Cover: Kim Hiorthøy.
Using power lines as an improvised clothesline - is this safe? Must be some kind of hook-ended pole used to retrieve them (which seems even more dangerous, as this pole is probably metallic).
Chicken and red peppers in a red wine sauce with rice. Fresh spinach salad with olive oil and a balsamic vinager reduction.
Sauce: liberal amount of red wine with salt, pepper, brown sugar, paprika, minced garlic and some corn starch for a thicker consistency.
To load heavy wheelbarrows of broken concrete into a truck, just make a ramp. And cross your fingers.
The reddish colour is because of ruby port wine.
...And as I always do, drizzle over fresh creammmmm.....mmmm... :)))
Here we find our talented crew gaffer taping a DSLR to a tea trolley.
Most of these takes were -of course- completely unusable. But with a little post production magic we got a nice result from one of them at least.
Pfc. Daulton Baumerts, an infantryman with 3rd Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division, looks over the firing target of Indian army Pvt. Dayal Khetwal a rifleman with the 6th Battalion of the Kumaon Regiment, during Yudh Abhyas 15 at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash., Sept. 12. During this event both armies had the opportunity to fire each other’s weapons and share firing techniques. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Sinthia Rosario, 5th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment/Released)
Max uses his binoculars as an improvised zoom lens for his point and shoot camera. Not as accurate, but surprisingly effective. You can see the photo he was taking here.