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After we finished cleaning up the wood kiln, we noticed all the guys working on loading an old kiln into Steve's trailer.
If you look closely you'll see the two boards on the bed of the truck for the marble to sit on. The woman center's the load.
Here's another lo from Archiver's. I don't have pictures with me for this. Plus I'm literally doing this in the car driving (husband is driving) on his iPhone. That's what happens when you combine dedication and technology!
I keep a gratitude journal and this was todays entry.
journaling reads cool crisp, autumn days* the first wood fires* warm hugs from little boys*soup simmering on the stove top*cold clear nights with stars that look like you can reach out and touch them*my husband’s hand in mine*the crunch of a crisp apple*crackling leaves under foot*Amazing colors that only God could paint*My family all around me*
Motor placed over front floor area this way around nothing touches the connections, and saves space on the boot area.I leave the lifter connected, ready to use straight away when I need to unload it. This Scooter lives in the car for ready use when needed. There is enough room in the back of the Daewoo to hold Two of these scooters. Still leaving room for luggage. The padded shopping bags can be placed on top of the scooter parts, to travel home. This scooter was supplied with the larger battery pack which weighs 16.5 kg. I obtained the smaller size battery pack with 12 Amp/hr Batteries, weighing 10.02 kg, which have been quite sufficient for normal shopping trips using the car as a base to return to, to unload the shopping. The earlier photos of the scooter show the larger battery pack, which is a bit of over kill as this is not a scooter you would ride into town on solid tires make the joins in the concrete paths very uncomfortable to travel over. In hot weather you need to be travelling more than 6-8 kl/hr. when riding into town otherwise you feel the heat coming up from the paths and roads. Even travelling at 9.68 kl/hr. on the Celebrity X the road heat is noticeable, but bearable. On a hot day the Auriga is the way to go into town as it can sit on 12.4 kl/hr. on the long stretches of bike track, even with a full load of shopping on board. At this speed the heat from the roads and paths is barely noticeable.
A trip we took to Napa Valley a in 2002 ( i am so behind in my scrapbook life). I still remember the grapes on the vine and the wine in the air. The aromas blended together beautifully. I will write about the trip in detail in the journaling fold out on the right side of the layout. I created my own vines with grapes using stickles.
Planner divider for May. David got a ball at the Cubs game. OMG.
PP Target, Stickers ki, Lily Bee, Ribbon AC, Brad BoBunny
Loading at Kiel Nordhafen HaGe Silo (inside Kiel Canal) 2011/05/12
La Prora, Napoli, Italy
*1996 Varna Shipyard, Bulgaria
GT: 7,617 TDW: 9,412mt
LOAD Festival,
Presented by the Daydream Network,
Royal Albert Hall,
15/6/2009
Artists: Ben Slow, Eyesaw, Dan K, Snik, Blam, Grafter, Babel, Finbarr Dac, DBO.
(Long long over due photos from aw nice exhibition!)
It's been a great LOAD and I really enjoyed myself. Thanks to all for the encouraging comments on my layouts. It really helped keep me going. And all the amazing layouts I saw in the gallery sparked my creativity. Hope to see you all at the next one!
Yeah, I'll bet. Almost made me feel bad I didn't bring my laundry with me. I could have sat in there watching it spin or tumble dry or something exciting.
You load the film just the same as you do with any 120 camera. The roll of film sits very neatly in the round chamber on the right, and I use two nickels on each end just to center the roll in the camera. It also assures me that the camera is worth at least twenty cents. I used to use a piece of folded plastic on the right side to keep the roll pretty tight, but I found that it didn't make much difference. A red window also has to be made in the door. You can drill a hole right through the whole door, once you've estimated where it needs to go. At first, I made the hole in the center of the door that gets 12 6x6 cm frames, but this camera's frames are more like 6x7, so they overlap and you lose a little bit of each frame, but you still get 12 frames around 6x5cm. There's no set of numbers on 120 film that works for the camera's spacing, which could ideally get 10 frames, but it's really hard to space them right. I ended up making a hole for the top numbers, which get 16 smaller frames, and I skip from 1 to 3 to 5, etc and get a good, reliable 8 frames per roll. I got fancy with my windows and cut out the red plastic to be an exact fit inside the holes and glued them in place with super glue. You could also just tape the plastic over the hole. I would do it on the outisde so it doesn't get in the way of the film going by. My red plastic is from the lid of a tub of sandwich meat.
Since I am doing nothing but scrapbooking our fun vacation, fot today's prompt I purposefully went a bit deeper with my journaling.
Process Video can be found here: youtu.be/pjTTVKCq8Ts