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Making Off das fotos do meu portfolio.
Joao Gabriel (Fotos portfolio) e Raphael Peres (Fotos Making Off)
View of the North Pier.
Here's my mini tour of the beautiful, highly ornate Hammersmith Bridge in West London. The original iron suspension bridge was constructed in 1827 at a cost of £45,341 by Mr. William Tierney Clark, but because of the accumulated damage caused by heavy traffic and up to 12,000 people at a time crowding onto the bridge every year to watch the famous University Boat Race - causing the roadway to dip eighteen inches below its maximum margin - the bridge became structurally damaged and was pulled down and rebuilt by Sir Joseph Bazalgette (the genius Victorian civil engineer who designed London's sewerage system and saved the city from "The Great Stink" and the frequent cholera epidemics that were making London a lethal place to be!)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Bazalgette
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Great_Stink
Violent Irish terrorist organisation the IRA tried to bomb Hammersmith Bridge twice, in 1939 and again in 2000!
For anyone interested: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hammersmith_Bridge
and: www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2000/jun/01/northernireland.marktran
Here is 1900 making its way back to Cleckheaton on Sunday 12th October 2008.
All 14 are allocated to Heckmondwike garage.
The Giraffe Centre is a non-governmental, non-profit making organization, which was founded by Betty and Jock Leslie-Melville in 1979. This was in a bid to save the endangered Rothschild Giraffe, which had lost its natural habitat in Western Kenya to agriculture and there were only 130 left in the wild. Funds were raised and 4 herds of the Rothschild giraffes were moved to 4 parks namely Lake Nakuru National Park, Mwea Game Reserve, Ruma National Park and Nasalot Game Reserve. Recently young ones born at the Centre were translocated to: Soy Sambu Ranch near Lake Elementaita, and Kigio Conservancy near Gilgil and Sergoit ranch in Eldoret. Today the Rothschild Giraffe population in Kenya is about 300. A circular wooden building housing a small lecture theatre has been constructed, around which is a raised platform from where we could feed & observe the giraffes.
Udgam School for Children celebrated ‘Hindi Diwas’ with great enthusiasm and fervour. A variety of programmes stressed the significance of the national language. Students took part in a Song competition where they rendered Bhajans composed by renowned poets like Kabirdas, Soordas, Mirabai in a mellifluous manner to the accompaniment of musical instruments, captivating every heart in the gathering. A divine serenity pervaded the entire environment.
Students also spoke on the ability of the language to bind the nation. They threw light on the contribution of great litterateurs like Munshi Premchand, Mahadevi Verma, Bhartendu Harishchandra and others and dwelt on the impact and relevance of Hindi in today’s times.
Extracts from literary masterpieces in Hindi, famous quotes, poems adorned the soft boards along the school corridors.
The Principal Ms. Radhika Iyer commended the efforts of the students towards making the Hindi Diwas a success and distributed certificates to the winners in the Bhajan Competition.
"Build Google": a making methodology workshop at LSE, asking Media postgrads to consider which human value the service fulfills. The results of their making contribute to the serendipity engine project.
lilian@zenithdream.com
Sand making machine is widely used for crushing of hard and crispy materials, such as rocks, grinding materials, refractory materials, cement clinkers, quartzite, iron ores and concrete aggregates. The sand making machine is especially suitable for the sand and sandstone making for construction and road paving.
My friend Himanshu making faces while having his late dinner after a Saturday-night party.
March 9 2008, St.Louis Park. See map.
The chef made up fresh wasabi there and then in front of us. The wasabi root is expensive, about €50 for the one you see here. The wasabi is grated against a shark-skinned board to make the paste you get. Yum yum!
Making Of de Noiva no Hotel Copacabana Palace no Rio de Janeiro, fotografado pelo Fotografo de Casamento Fabio Moro. O Copacabana Palace é o um dos Hoteis favoritos para Noivas se prepararem para o casamento. O Hotel tem espaços para fazer fotos incriveis e tambem tem estrutura completa para realizar casamentos.
After walking all over the gardens Ava was tired out. Too lazy to get up and meet new friends so she just rolled over to meet them.
From fresh tomatoes from out garden, they are washed, seeded and chopped. Some are sauced. We chop onion, green pepper, hot pepper and garlic and simmer it together before pressure canning in pint jars. So far we have almost 50 pints (2 large batches) and hope to do at least one more batch.
The Postcard
A postally unused Gilt Edge Novelty Series postcard that was published by M. T. Sheahan of 297, Congress Street, Boston, Massachusetts. The card has a divided back.
In the place for the stamp it states:
'Place stamp here.
United States and
Canada One Cent.
Foreign Two Cents.'
M. T. Sheahan
M. T. Sheahan, who operated between 1903 and 1910, was a fine art printer and publisher, who in addition to producing prints created many postcards on themes of animals, humor, greetings, and mottos.
Our yearly festive making session, with pewter casting, nailpolish marbling, papercraft and willow weaving.
Middlefield Library, part of Geauga County Public Library, hosted a "Christmas Around the World" event. Kids of all ages had fun learning how other countries keep the holidays. Crafts, treats and posters were enjoyed by all.
Shibang vertical shaft impact crusher is applied widely for the powder process of mineral product including mental and non-metal ore, fireproof material, bauxite, diamond dust,etc.
view "i'm making the biggest truck. ever. in the whole wide world" - _MG_3445 on a black background.
copyright © 2006 sean dreilinger
Then two veneers are added at the sides, and the whole thing is glued and the wooden wedge tapped in until tight.
804 DXV is a DUKW which is a six-wheel-drive amphibious modification of the 2+1⁄2-ton CCKW trucks used by the U.S. military during World War II and the Korean War.
The DUKW, popularly known as the “Duck,” was an amphibious military vehicle developed by General Motors during World War II to provide the Allies with a versatile transport capable of operating on both land and water. Introduced in 1942, the DUKW was based on a 2½-ton CCKW truck chassis fitted with a watertight hull, propeller, and rudder, allowing it to drive directly into the sea and carry troops, supplies, or equipment ashore without the need for docks. It could transport up to 2,500 pounds of cargo or 25 fully equipped soldiers, and its six-wheel drive made it effective on rough terrain once ashore. The DUKW proved invaluable during operations such as the Normandy landings in 1944, where it ferried ammunition, food, and reinforcements from ships to beaches under fire. More than 21,000 units were built, serving not only the U.S. Army and Marine Corps but also British and other Allied forces.