View allAll Photos Tagged mangle
The fore runner to the tumble dryer, brings back memories of turning the handle for my granny when i was a boy
Ebba's house is Malmö's smallest museum. A street house with a residence from the 1910s where time has stood still. There is still the wood stove, zinc sink, attic chamber and outhouse.
A mangle or wringer is a mechanical laundry aid consisting of two rollers in a sturdy frame, connected by cogs and, in its home version, powered by a hand crank or electricity. While the appliance was originally used to wring water from wet laundry, today mangles are used to press or flatten sheets, tablecloths, kitchen towels, or clothing and other laundry.
A family is on the move from a back-to-back house in Birmingham, unlike our present day, more circumspect, approach to other peoples business, here, this is an event and all the neighbours have turned out to watch.
Furniture is being loaded into a van being watched over by a tall man in glasses. The man actually doing the loading has a cigarette on the go. Father of the family is in the van, making sure their goods are being stowed safely.
Between the onlookers we see an old style wooden roller mangle, it has a large handle on the top to adjust the pressure of the rollers. Heading for the van is a Victorian leather sofa, a tin trunk and a shoe rack. Two rolls of linoleum are waiting, one by the van and one by the ladder. The one by the ladder had probably been brought down that ladder, as these cramped houses had narrow and often winding staircases. It was much easier to drop things down from a sash window rather than struggle down the stairs.
Across the cobbled street is a another van, the trailer would have been towed here and has a 20mph speed limit disc, perhaps it was for the house move if it was needed?
Unfortunately we do not know where this street was, I had hoped to decipher a name from the Saw Mills sign but the angle renders it unreadable.
Photographer Miss P.A. Nicklin.
Collection Geoff Dowling ARPS
"I think the emplyees just refer to it as, *sigh* the Mangle..."
Got another FNaF2 creation. This time the infamous heap of walking (or should I say crawling) parts, AKA the Mangle.
This isn't a very accurate model when it comes to the overall body design, and that's mostly because I wanted to make this without using super glue as much as possible. I did manage to get Mangle's second head on though, that's a bonus.
The main head is...something else. As you may know, I highly prefer painting over molding, and I'm really only good when it comes to hats and hair pieces in that regard. This was my first time trying out something like this and it's ok imo. The quality's worse than what I usually make due to a combination of just not having enough white paint and playdoh at the time, and my super glue being an off brand to what I'm used to. I will admit I mostly traded off the quality to give it the ability to open and close it's lower jaw though.
Even though Mangle has many flaws, it remains as one of my all time favorites due to this being the very first model I built that took my molding skills and creativity to the test. This made making Mangle an overall fun experience! When I get Freddy and co finished, you should expect Mangle getting a redesign.
(EDIT: The redesign is here!)
The Selfie Tour. On Belgium derps with Dursty, Pezar and Martin. Many selfies, lots of cool locations. Good times.
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The remains of a CSX maintenance-of-way ballast car, built as a 55-ton coal hopper, lay torn to shreds in the SA Recycling scrapyard near downtown Nashville, Tennessee. It's a sad sight to see many of these orange icons fall to the torch, as they're one of the few remaining links back to CSX's glory days of the 1990s.
Taken with a Nikon FA on Kodak 400TMAX using a Nikkor 35-105mm lens. Developed in replenished XTOL. Scanned using a Canon 5DS R and an EF 100mm f/2.8.
Had a little time today so picked up the camera and enjoyed the sunshine for an hour. This was the only shot I thought was interesting. If you look large you can see some lady bugs crawling over the mangle. Have a great week ahead all my friends.
Mark x
Mangle joven estableciéndose en agua salobres de la isla Santa Cruz, Galápagos. El crecimiento y la multiplicación de estos ejemplares originarán los tÃpicos manglares que tanta biodiversidad albergan. Se ven las tÃpicas raÃces adventicias. que comienzan a desarrollarse y les permiten fijarse en tan particular ambiente