View allAll Photos Tagged improvisations,
This quickie set was thrown together using some anywhere doors and stairs I found in my inventory. I only spent L$99 on marketplace for the lights & switch. The set is based on a real location. The entire set with four Anypose stands uses 42 prims.
An HDR inside view of the old saw mill where happened last sunday's shooting. Most of the shots were done at the back and inside the mill's garage.
Aside that day being a bit coldish, it was all good fun.
Because of an arrangement made with the owner, this location won't be mapped. Thanks for understanding.
Else, feel free to share.
Photographer: Fred H. Politinsky
Subject: Outside the Box Photography
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charcoal stick, acrylic, ink, brushpen, nero lead
65x50cm 250g/m2 paper
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Downloaded off my DeviantArt as I am leaving the site due to the widely unpopular (and quite frankly, cumbersom) eclipse release. Photos are not be in the original upload order.
Note: Uploads with this note contain a fantasy known as natural body magic, or NBM, all uploads with the NBM tag contain some aspect of this fantasy. While not possible in the real world, characters with this tag are alive and well within the realm of NBM
On Thursday, May 26, Alumni Ben Sarat ’14 and Oliver Demers ’14 returned to campus for an improvisation masterclass with theatre students.
This is one of my improvised grinding blocks, made of scrap rectangular piece of aluminum and 3M SandBlaster abrasive film. The abrasive film is mounted using thin 3M double-sided sticky tape for carpets. I prefer film over cloth-backed or paper-backed sheets because it's thinner and less prone to displacement than cloth and way more long-lasting and durable than paper.
It requires a fair amount of water to prevent clogging. When a film gets worn out, it's easy to peel it off.
On a long run (in production), this method is more expensive than having full- or half-thickness abrasive stones, but if you need a full scale of grits, large area (75x170mm in this case), and near-perfect flatness, this method can save you hundreds of dollars and a lot of storage space. Full kit of grits for a one-time job will cost less than $50, while the cheapest (thinnest) single stone (like Shapton ceramic with glass base) of the same quality and with a similar working area will cost about $55.
Another evening activity, to give the chefs a night off, involved the students, soldiers and veterans working out a meal for everyone from available ingredients and cooking it on improvised facilities built from materials lying around in the Training Area. Here Lee and Leicester undergrad Bethan work on the ammo box oven, and Kaz continues her pyromaniac ways, under the watchful eyes of Jocky and (2nd L) Bruce who trains Army chefs. The resulting food was really good!