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My mom making a wish on a LED Dandelion at Celebration In The Oaks, City Park, New Orleans, Louisiana.
Kairos; The Overseer. The deity of time. A being whose sole purpose is to make beings of other worlds interact. To create small pocket universes that house copied species and persons from other worlds into his own. He starts by creating a standard world filled with lush green environments, then gazing upon a lists of planets, star systems, universe, choosing what he deems to be the most interesting. If he finds a person of interest or a species, he copies that being from that exact moment to prevent altering timelines. He creates an exact copy, without the copy realizing it, and puts them on his planet. Dozens, hundreds, thousands, he keeps adding until the planet can no longer sustain itself or he gets bored with his progress. If the fate of the world becomes the latter, he descends down to a lower plain of existence to personally exterminate what he had created with is massive hammers. The hammers are used to create his worlds and are used for their destruction, as well.
His personality is a patient one. He takes his time searching through worlds to see what can make his own more interesting. Like a chef rummaging his cupboards for the right spice or ingredient. When the selected being is copied, they perceive the copy as an otherworldly event that knocks them out, to then be awaken in the new world, without question. Kairos chose those who would be friendly at first, then adds conflict to his world to watch it crumbles. His goal is to study interactions of other beings, and report back to his commander, Lady Void. Kairos is seen as more-or-less an outcast among his kind. He acts like a god for the powers he possesses and gives him an ego that is unfitting for his race. Due to his dimension-hopping, he is hard to pinpoint, making his actions under the radar and dangerous to Lady Void. The Migrator is currently in pursuit of this being, and will be put to death once found.
Check out my YouTube for more MOCs like this!
goo.gl/1axFRH
How I make shoes for my 1/6 scale dolls.
-1 White glue, white teflon/plumbers tape , saran wrap.
-2 cover the doll's feet with saran wrap.
-3 wrap them with teflon tape
-4 start adding glue layers ( i usually need 4 or 5)
-5 I usually pour the glue directly from the bottle, don't try to make the layers too thick or the glue will drip down. Wait until the glue is completely dry before adding new layers.
-6 remove the shoes from the doll's feet. If you're making boots insert small scissors between the glue and the saran wrap and cut a slit in the back.
Congratulations, now you have clear doll socks :P
-7 draw glue "sheets" on a smooth surface, when dry, glue them to the bottom of the shoes and cut away the excess to create the soles. Do the same with smaller bits for the heels. Stack as many glue sheets as you need, depending on how thick you want the soles/heels to be.
-8 paint the exterior of the shoes with acrilic paint, let it dry, and cover the paint with a thin layer of glue, especially the parts that will come in contact with your doll's legs.
Wishes as seen from the top of the Contemporary Resort at the California Grill.
Please View On Black. Thanks!
WEEK 16 – Barnes & Noble Ole Miss: Reunionited and It Feels So Good (II)
So, let’s recap: we entered the store through its lower level entrance, exited through its main upper level entrance, and just saw that there’s a second upper level entrance immediately adjacent to the main one. You’d think three entrances would be plenty, but from the image above, clearly you can see where I’m headed with this: there’s one more entrance to go! This picture of the fourth (!!) entrance and exit point pulls double-duty in that it also shows us that main upper level register area that I’ve been alluding to in several of the prior descriptions. The window walls make for good displays for window shopping, too, with lots of attention-grabbing Ole Miss merchandise trying to draw shoppers in. It looks like the area off to the right, specifically, was the drinkware department – all I see are mugs, tumblers, bottles, koozies, even wine and shot glasses…
(c) 2021 Retail Retell
These places are public so these photos are too, but just as I tell where they came from, I'd appreciate if you'd say who :)
After a new vehicle drought Arriva Yorkshire is transforming the single deck fleet with brand new and second hand enviro 200s from all manner of sources. Perhaps "ducks in a row" but time will tell. Here brand new Enviro 200 No 3008 is photographed between Hambleton and Monk Fryston operating the Selby to Leeds service. Generally these brand new e200s are being used on the Pontefract / Castleford - Leeds routes but a by-product of that is the Selby service interworks with some of those diagrams, result is a nice new bus where you might not expect one. The bus was running around 20 minutes late here, simply because of traffic congestion. This has a significant knock on effect on routes like this as the bus works a 140 from Leeds to Pontefract on arrival at Leeds. Needless to say that didn't operate, the bus having to run empty to near the end of the route to try catch up. In some countries that incident alone would make the local press front pages, but then again they have transport authorities who are switched on to the everyday problems operators face.
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MAKE ____ NOT WAR.
“In the confusion we stay with each other, happy to be together, speaking without uttering a single word.” – Walt Whitman
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#nowar #makelovenotwar #firenze #florence #italy #italia #italie #antiwar #protestday #burritolove #maketacosnotwar
(+) a 15-year expat Journey: www.flickr.com/photos/midea_foto/albums
Skaftafell. Grand, diverse, gorgeous, and so much fun. It’s actually quite hard to describe.
The closest glacier outlet to the Skaftafell entrance is a 15 minute walk. Every minute I walked, the air felt just a bit colder until the sun no longer warmed skin. Layers, they came in handy.
At the base of this outlet glacier, I found rocks, carved and crushed out of the mountains by Vatnajökull and time. It’s hard to imagine the mountains are multiple active volcanoes, and it continues to be hard to imagine an ice cap formed above the mountains. It’s impossible to comprehend how this vast expanse of ice slowly slid down rock and left an earthy scar the size of city blocks in its wake.
Mixed in with the rocks, I found writing on the sandy shore of this outlet’s glacial melt. I found stones, left like offerings, before this awesome sight. These stones were positioned to the delight of their authors. They were positioned to remind each other and the world: we were here too.
Luxury lipstick appliers made for GENUS heads. Fits all styles.
can be found here:
marketplace.secondlife.com/p/HoneyPot-Lips-Party-Girl-Fat...
I am soooo pleased with my latest MAC make over I think they have really captured the woman within, just look at the way the eyeliner has been applied!
Those girls are just amazing at transforming a dull woman into a princess.
Now were did I put my tablets?
The Wigwam Motels, also known as the "Wigwam Villages," is a motel chain in the United States built during the 1930s and 1940s. The rooms are built in the form of tipis, mistakenly referred to as wigwams. It originally had seven different locations: two locations in Kentucky and one each in Alabama, Florida, Arizona, Louisiana, and California.
They are very distinctive historic landmarks. Two of the three surviving motels are located on historic U.S. Route 66: in Holbrook, Arizona, and in San Bernardino, California. All three of the surviving motels are listed on the National Register of Historic Places: the Wigwam Motel in Cave City, Kentucky, was listed in 1988 under the official designation of Wigwam Village #2; the Wigwam Motel in Arizona was listed as Wigwam Village #6 in 2002; and the Wigwam Motel in California was listed in 2012 as Wigwam Village #7.
Frank A. Redford developed the Village after adding tipi-shaped motel units around a museum-shop he had built to house his collection of Native American artifacts. He applied for a patent on the ornamental design of the buildings on December 17, 1935, and was granted Design Patent 98,617 on February 18, 1936. The original drawing includes the swastika, at the time a symbol associated with Native Americans or often worn as a good-luck charm.
Seven Wigwam Villages were built between 1933 and 1949.
Village #6: Holbrook, Arizona
Arizona motel owner Chester E. Lewis built this Wigwam Village in 1950. It is located on the historic Route 66, at 811 West Hopi Drive in Holbrook, Arizona. Nearby places of interest include Petrified Forest National Park, Meteor Crater (Barringer Crater), and the Grand Canyon.
The plans for this motel were based on the original of Frank A. Redford. Lewis first became aware of the distinctive wigwam designs when passing through Cave City in 1938. He purchased the rights to Redford's design, as well as the right to use the name "Wigwam Village," in a novel royalty agreement: coin-operated radios would be installed in Lewis's Wigwam Village, and every dime inserted for 30 minutes of play would be sent to Redford as payment.
The motel is arranged as a square, with 15 concrete and steel wigwams on three sides and the main office on the fourth, flanked by two smaller sized wigwams; there was also originally a gas station on the complex. The individual units are called "wigwams," not "rooms" or "tepees" or "cabins." The units are numbered from 1 to 16, (there is no 13). The base diameter is 14 feet (4.3 m), with each unit 32 feet (9.8 m) in height. Behind the main room of each unit is a small bathroom with sink, toilet and shower. Current rooms contain the original restored hickory furniture, two double beds, satellite TV and a window-mounted air conditioner. In keeping with the authenticity of the restoration, there are no telephones or ice machine. Vintage restored automobiles from the 1960s and earlier are located throughout the parking area. Small green metal benches etched with the words "Wigwam Village #6" are scattered throughout the complex as well.
Lewis operated the motel until closing it in 1974 when Interstate 40 bypassed downtown Holbrook. Two years after his death in 1986, sons Clifton and Paul Lewis and daughter Elinor renovated the motel before reopening it in 1988.
The Lewis family continues to run and maintain Wigwam Village #6. Near the registration desk is a small room that contains much of Chester Lewis's memorabilia, including a collection of petrified wood.
Wigwam Village #6 has been listed in the National Register of Historic Places since May 2, 2002.
The motels and their imitators have been parodied many times. Rockstar's 2004 Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas game contains a Tee Pee Motel. In the 2006 Pixar film Cars, one of the characters Sally Carrera runs a "newly refurbished" neon-lit motel that is clearly inspired by Wigwam Village #6. The motel is called the Cozy Cone Motel, and each room is fashioned as a traffic cone.
In 2012 a digitally altered image of Wigwam Village #6 appeared in an advertisement for Microtel Inn and Suites.
Wigwam number 1 of the Holbrook, Arizona, Wigwam Village #6 was featured in the second episode of Oprah and Gayle's Big Adventures on The Oprah Winfrey Show.
Wigwam Village #6 is featured in the 1991 movie The Dark Wind, based on the 1982 Tony Hillerman novel of the same name.
We make hand made and custom confetti bags for graduations.
All materials used for the construction has been produced in Italy.
Sacchettini porta confetti / Bomboniere per Laurea di lino.
Tutto il materiale utilizzato per la realizzazione è stato prodotto in Italia.
Repetitive? Oh well. I've always wanted to take a picture like this, but I'm not satisfied. I'll try again, during golden hour, perhaps with my cousin as model.
Song of the day. I actually like the lyrics.
Today was the last day of school, so tomorrow my easter holiday officially begins, yay!
Yesterday me and my classmates had the funnest latin test ever! Other than it being really easy, it was actually FUN. Since it was a test for all the second years, done the same day in the same hour, our history of art teacher was looking after us in that period. It was super easy to copy from each other, although nobody really needed to (like I said, it was easy). Then after 20 minutes from the start the teacher saw that we had finished, and asked us if we did everything. I said "Well, there are certain words I'm not sure of", and she asked "which?", I said them, and she went like "You're asking me?? I never studied latin! Consultatevi tra di voi (=clear things out between you students)". So everyone began talking about their answers and the teacher was just smiling the whole time. I laughed so hard, the situation was absolutely hilarious!! :D
Ok, now I've got to go put the laundry away. See ya!
Make sure you go hit up Hot Import Nights / Xdc Circuit at Texas Motor Speedway on Sept 22 and go to the Texas Finest Magazine booth.. They'll have advanced copies of the magazine including my cover feature (feature shot and written by me!!!) of Chris Beardon metal widebody G35.. Trust me, you won't wanna miss this.. If you can't make the event, be on the lookout for the mag at your local Walmart, HEB, and Barnes & Noble Bookstores.. And don't forget to like my page Tony Walls Media for more of my work.. Thanks guys!! Thanks to Lauren Tuttle for the modeling.. This is only the beginning of work from the both of us.. More coming soon!!!
Canon 7D
Tokina 12-24mm F4
Promaster 300C 1/8 power through 36" octabox camera right aimed at model
Promaster 300C 1/32 power camera left aimed at front wheel
triggered w/ cybersyncs