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People In My Neighborhood-
Growing up I lived in a close knit neighborhood. The moms got together for coffee at each others homes. We had taffy pulls, pretend country fairs in the field, swimming at the pond, ice skating on the pond, went bowling, played kick ball in the street...milk was delivered in glass bottles and lefy in a milkbox on the front steps.
I remember when our neighbors, the Bulette's, got a color tv. We all gathered at their house to watch "the Wizard of Oz" in color! Fun Times!
On the screen...I may have to do more pages related to this..I had so many shows I loved as a kid and going to the movies was special, may have to add a page about that...
journalling says: There were so many shows I liked to watch as a kid...here are just a few. We had a black and white t.v. for the longest time...wish I could remember when we got a color 1.
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.
Quick and easy today as it's too beautiful outside to be in here.
All older products except the lace butterfly.
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!)
I went to my flickr faves today and found this little gem:
www.flickr.com/photos/24965055@N05/4047259665/
by TamiV2008!
So I used that as my inspiration for "Socks on the Hands"- go ahead, sing it to yourself. It sounds really good to "pants on the ground". lol
I so wish I could find these rub on's in typewriter font again.. so if anyone knows where- message me!!!! they're so useful!
This is a page for my honeymoon album. I am getting pages done because of load. This is Hawaii volcanoes National park
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!)
Graffiti artists commissioned by the Royal Albert Hall, in partnership with the young urban collective and creative pioneers Daydream Network, transformed the walls of the Hall's Loading Bay, usually used for getting in over 350 shows a year, into a gallery of street art and graffiti artwork.
HEAVY LOAD 2 Another shot showing the draw bar to the front of the carrier. Carrier has 160 Tyres on the road and with 4 Prime Movers each with 10 tyres means that total tyres is 200.
This loading chute is a fixture on a farm I recently visited. I am somewhat enamoured of older structures, and this one caught my fancy when I saw it the other day.
By the look of it, I am pretty sure it has not been used for a while.
1954 view shows new overpass allowing the Gulf Freeway's braided streets to conform to the Downtown Houston one-way grid.
Photo from page 151 of Erik Slotboom's free ebook on the history of Houston's freeways
Just a simple layout featuring our house. Journaling says: "In 2007, we put our blood, sweat, and tears in building this house. With the help of our family, this truly is a house that love built."
Papers are from Crystal Wilkerson's 09 Nov pack via jessicasprague.com. This is my first really enlarged photo layout... just a little outside my comfort zone. TFL!
A rough layout but I'm happy with the way it turned out. Something that needed to be put down on paper for sure.