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The girls are loving our new microscope!

The covers of these old kid's science books are always so illustrative. Not just because they're illustrated. Look at that bug— you know what you're goinna see under the lens. These were good to have when you were young, truth being stranger than fiction and all.

 

Fill it in: "The How and Why Wonder Book of ______"

11.6.2010, Microscope Night

 

Machine Project artist in residency at Hammer Museum.

 

Photo by Marianne Williams.

photo reference for possible next painting

Un objet utiliser pour regarder des affaires de plus près.

Close-up of a Leica Microscope using a Nikon Coolpix 950 - back in the day...

Top-down photo of microscope

Medical, research, or educational institution requires microscopes for research or testing process. Buying of efficient and quality microscope is must in order to carry out the research process. This calls for a reliable manufacturer, who is best in the industry to provide quality products... goo.gl/uQVqMz

Guache on grey card

Surface of a common daisy petal taken with a Flatters & Garnett x10 Microscope lens and a Sony A6000.

Microscope cake for valentines day, no heart shaped cakes here, well, unless they are the anatomical variety

Researchers at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Molecular Foundry keep watch over the Spin-Polarized Low-Energy Electron Microscope (SPLEEM).

A laser cut microscope which was a part of my Paper Lab exhibit.

 

BA (Hons) Art & Design (Interdisciplinary) Final Degree Show, Leeds College of Art.

 

www.bevolee.co.uk

 

Have a peek at my blog!

My grand dads old microscope

I bought this uber cool microscope at a flea market for 5 euros and had to carry it with me all day...it's really cute, though

Tri-nocular Dissecting Microscope. Video Interface. #3

Dans le cadre du cours de Mme Danis, nous allons travailler sur le microscope .

Voici une photo du microscope et les fonctions.

This year we decided to get the girls a microscope for their birthday. It was Jane's idea and at first I questioned it. I figured the girls would have no interest in it, but I was wrong. The girls love it! Good call Jane! We've been looking at all sorts of things with it...money, salt, pepper, ants, fruit flies, leaves, Parmesan cheese (Jessie's idea...haha), flowers, pollen, etc.

 

Anyways, the day after their birthday party, the girls went to their friend's birthday party while Jane and I stayed home. The two of us took the microscope into the backyard and spent the next hour looking at all sorts of things from our garden under the scope. I think we're enjoying it more than the girls actually. :)

This was found in the basement and almost thrown away. The thing weighs about 10 lbs.

My cheap made-in-china ebay microscope and messy table in the corner of the living room. (did a nice job of cropping out the roll of duct tape)

 

I do love the substage flash made from a 20$ MS-1 slave flash unit.

from the old St. Martin's Hospital

More from the carpet python. Approx 40X darkfield

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