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Registration NJM2X
Make FORD
Model CAPRI INJECTION
Date of Liability Tax due 01 September 2018
Date of First Registration 23 05 1984
Cylinder Capacity 2792cc PETROL
Vehicle Status Licence Due to Expire
Vehicle Colour SILVER
by izak one
Location: Laagri Train Stop, Tallinn, Estonia
Dimensions: 20x3m
Project: Street Art Jam Baltic Session 2016
This traditional origami ring starts with a half of a square paper. One special folding technique you would learn from this model is inserting one strip into the other.
www.origami-make.com/origami-ring-traditional.php under www.origami-make.com/howto-origami-ring.php
Strive To Be A complete Sentence. Make Effect To Build A Complete...
Translated by the geniuses at the Sanya Municipal Party Committee Propaganda Department. In other words, translated by the genius of Baidu, for the geniuses at the Sanya Municipal Party Committee Propaganda Department.
It's a special kind of arrogance that can't even be bothered to learn how to use written language properly well into adulthood and yet still presumes to teach others how to be civilized. And these are the guys who want to be in charge of brainwashing people? Give me a break.
Back stage del desfile de Miss Sixty en el 7 World Trade Center Building. La maquilladora labura tranquila probando sombras. Afuera, hace un frio imposible
Serj Kravchenko from Make Me Famous
8/17/12
Starland Ballroom, NJ
Please don't use without my permission.
Contact me at: courtneyroseee@yahoo.com
Come make your own gadget, robot or wearable art at Tam Makers!
On Wednesday evenings, we host ‘You Can Make It’ workshops for adults and teens in our makerspace at Tam High School. During these open sessions, participants build new projects, with guidance from our staff and other community members.
Many of them are experienced makers, who are happy to share what they know. Here are some of the cool maker projects they are working on this month: a graceful robot spider, an eagle god with creepy eyes, an Arduino-powered garage opener, a Wifi server on a chip, and many laser cut picture frames.
If you are interested in creating your own maker project with the help of others, join us this fall, on Wednesday evenings from 6 to 9pm in the woodshop at Tam High School in Mill Valley. Learn more about You Can Make It:
www.tammakers.org/you-can-make-it/
One of the great benefits of this open shop program is that you get a lot more than just access to tools: you join a community of makers who like to make things together and help each other.
View more photos of You Can Make It:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157670867561896
View more photos of Tam Makers:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157660433218276
Learn more about Tam Makers:
I finally had a little time to play with my dolls today and started restyling Mod Misaki's hair.
The flip is not quite as extreme as I wanted it to be and I will maybe apply another boil perm at some point but I must say that I already like her much better now. More hair Volume suits her well, I think! ;)
Misaki is wearing a dress by sevastra which was made for Blythe/Pullip but fits nicely, I think :) The shoes are Blythe. Sevastra also had the idea to flip her hair!! ;)
Our girl's contribution.
Gressenhall "Village at war" event. Children (and adults) encouraged to make paper poppy's to fill a wall in remembrance.
24th August 2014.
Model > mjranum-stock.deviantart.com/art/Zombie-Bride-teaser-1492...
Background > rafido.deviantart.com/art/Background-206464454
When the rain
Is blowing in your face
And the whole world
Is on your case
I could offer you
A warm embrace
To make you feel my love
When the evening shadows
And the stars appear
And there is no one there
To dry your tears
I could hold you
For a million years
To make you feel my love
I know you
Haven't made
Your mind up yet
But I would never
Do you wrong
I've known it
From the moment
That we met
No doubt in my mind
Where you belong
I'd go hungry
I'd go black and blue
I'd go crawling
Down the avenue
No, there's nothing
That I wouldn't do
To make you feel my love
The storms are raging
On the rolling sea
And on the highway of regret
Though winds of change
Are throwing wild and free
You ain't seen nothing
Like me yet
I could make you happy
Make your dreams come true
Nothing that I wouldn't do
Go to the ends
Of the Earth for you
To make you feel my love
Rule no.1: never speak to a woman when she's focusing on something... especially when it's about make up.
Posters make ideas visual for all kinds of causes including social change, struggles for peace, and icon political campaigns. These visual messages can also document time and place and define a culture.
All That Jazz: A selection of Jazz Posters from the Collection of Howard Courtney is on view at the Stambaugh Studio Theatre Gallery from January 17–February 17, 2012 at Ohio Northern University. The exhibit showcases about 50 works out of over 1,200 posters, representing several countries and the Chicago jazz scene.
The collector Howard Courtney has a Bachelor of Arts in anthropology, an M.A. in Arabic, a graduate certificate in Middle Eastern Studies and additional graduate work in Mesopotamian Archaeology and Persian Literature. He taught at several junior colleges in the United States and at the Birzeit University in Jordan, where he lived in the Middle East for several years. Courtney eventually worked as a parole agent, supervising mental patients and sex offenders when they were released from the penitentiary. Due to the dangerous job, Courtney retired 20 years ago.
“I often joke that I was a born collector and started collecting when I was a child,” stated Courtney as he described his poster collection. “Over the years my interests have included specialized stamp collections, stained glass windows, Persian carpets, World War I posters, art, ancient Middle Eastern pottery, antiques, art pottery, autographs and Jazz posters.”
Courtney has been a jazz fan since my early teen-years, “due to my parents’ interest in such,” he explained. “But also having lived in small towns, or out-of-the-way places, there was not much of an opportunity to see the major participants in person. Consequently, I had to live my jazz fantasies through recordings and reading about the musicians.”
While attending junior college in his hometown of Port Huron, Michigan, “I met a handful of others whom were also interested in jazz. We formed a jazz club and would travel the 60 miles to Detroit to attend concerts. Over the years, I bought many recordings of the musicians I liked and currently have over 4,000 jazz CDs, 300 classical and 100 opera CDs. Although I played the saxophone in the high school band and took piano lessons, I realized I had absolutely no talent. So, I gave it up after graduation. But, after college, I sang in the chorus of Opera Illinois for 11 years.”
Throughout Courtney’s lifetime, he had the opportunity to maintain his interests in jazz and to see many performers live in concert. Reviewing his collection, he explained, “With the rich history of Chicago jazz and the opportunity to attend a performance almost daily, I began to ask for posters once a performance was over. Soon I knew which stores, hallways and bulletin boards would have them. Seven years later, I had over 1,300 different posters from 1927 to the current week. Now, I am well known to Chicago jazz musicians fans as “The Poster Man.”
Courtney’s criteria for collecting a poster comprised of the genuine advertisements created at the time for an actual event. “I do not knowingly collect later printings or posters that only have a jazz theme. Without me asking, numerous well-known musicians from all over the world have given me posters of their performances once we have met and they see how serious I am about them. Most musicians never see the posters they are listed on as they fly to a performance. Often they are astounded when I appear and ask them to autograph a 30-year old poster they were listed on as they often didn’t know existed.”
Courtney’s jazz poster collection is currently archived at the University of Chicago Library that holds accumulations of autographs, photographs, programs, flyers, tickets, business cards, etc. “They have approached me several times about donating my poster collection, but that is a decision I will make in the future. Since I have no musical talent, my philosophy is that my contribution to jazz history is preserving the posters and other memorabilia.”
The picture was taken during the make-up for the play "Bug" in the theater Kosmos www.theaterkosmos.at