View allAll Photos Tagged midsection

was full I promise! I shoot for about a gallon of water a day. water is needed for your body to burn fat off your body... plus it flush out toxins! can't go wrong with straight up water... hate water? add a little bit of lemon or, my favorite, cucumber and ment leaves. any artificial garbage screws with your hormones... and your metabolism is controlled by you, tax Da, hormones.... Which is why you eat organic and non-processed foods. your body doesn't know what to do with it and gets confused... which means hello cottage cheese on your thighs and a very bloated midsection.... clogged arteries, high blood pressure, cancer, heart disease, diabetes, acne... the list goes on. even if you aren't over weight and eating processed foods, its so not good for your body. your body, moods, skin, hair and livelihood will thank you.

The boys thought it was funny that I couldn't get their life vest all the way around my rotund midsection.

 

I found it not as funny ... but will post this anyway - as inspiration.

Port Baku Towers are high-rise office buildings in Baku situated on Neftchilar Avenue next to marine port. The high-rise complex includes two towers - Northern and Southern - with 14 and 32 storey accordingly.

 

The architectural style of the buildings is modern. The tallest tower has been built in a shape of a triangular prism with lower and upper bases. Due to such a geometry, The Southern Tower presents multiple aspects to the view depending on the angle of viewing: it looks like a flat rectangle from the eastern and western part of the city, but from the northern point tower's seen as a cylindrical building; lateral faces of construction meeting in the prism's edge are seen from the south of Baku. According to skyscrapernews.com, such shape of Southern Tower reminds Flatiron Building, New York's skyscraper built in the early 20th century. But in contrast to the Flatiron Building, the upper levels of Port Baku Southern Tower are gradually constricted toward the top, that creates convexity in the midsection of the building. Such a geometric solution allows decreasing number of beams in upper levels, which makes the cladding steady blue and provides high reflective characteristics in the daytime and crystal transparency at night.

 

The buildings comprise class A offices, retail departments, an international SPA and wellness centre, restaurants and cafés. There is also parking for 1200 cars.

Mary wants bellydancers to cover/uncover midsection....

this little beach next to myponga is entirely made of pebbles and can be reached by a mildly dangerous path along the midsection of the cliff

The midsection of the Pistyll Rhaeadr falls in North Wales, known as the "Fairy hole".

The final piece in this series was inspired by Louise Bourgeois and the common fear of arachnophobia. I created the body of the spider using clay in a syringe-type mechanism, which I then pushed out to create the foundation of the body. After firing, I painted the body with grey acrylic paint. I then made the midsection using metal wiring, which I wrapped with brown pipe cleaner. The legs of the spider were made by braiding different shades of brown pipe cleaners together and bending them to mimic spider legs. I made the head using a hot glue gun and red beads. I then attached the spider to a metal mesh door to take photos, as the metal caging represented a spider's web. Finally, I did an observational pencil drawing of the spider.

The pathway was overgrown here. As I was walking, looking down for more flowers to photograph, I came two steps from stepping on this large rattlesnake laying across the path. If I had been looking up instead of down, I would have stepped on him. He was buried in the grass and all I could see was this midsection which was a big around as my forearm.

Another look at the midsection. Clearly I was fed up with touching up all that dust. I hadn't noticed it when I shot it, otherwise I would have cleaned the thing up before I started shooting.

Exquisite corpse is a segmented drawing of feet, midsection, and head, each drawn by a different person. This drawing has a wiggly abstract face, millipede like midsection with many small human arms, and roots of a plant underground.

Nike Air Max LeBron VII 7, Men’s Size 10.5, White, Black, Red, 375664-102, LeBron James, UPC: 00885259680520, Release Year 2009, Full-grain and synthetic leather upper, 360-degree Max Air unit, 23 stripes in the midsection, 3D decoder key, Layer of memory foam on top of high resiliency foam, Rubber outsole with herringbone pattern, LeBron James’ seventh signature shoe, translucent side walls, metallic Silver accents, 80% more air than previous full-length units, Nike Flywire strands on the tongue, designer Jason Petrie

'49 Ford sedan with a major slice taken out of its midsection.

douglass tied a shoestring around LBM's midsection and that is Snausage on the left, playing with said string

12x zoom into the middle of the bridge underside.

When a male wants to attract a female he does what is known as infrasound mating call. This activity involves bellowing in a low frequency call, that is inaudible to humans. With their head and tail raised over the water surface while their midsection is partially submerged, the water over their backs shoots up like a fountain display from the vibrations produced from the low frequency bellow. This is known as the "Water Dance of the Caiman". Our guide said that they only do this "water dance" call once a day. We were lucky to see it three times...all early in the morning.

Summer road trip across midsection of Illinois, west to east and back.

Summer road trip across midsection of Illinois, west to east and back.

(part of) The Family of Man. Midsection detail

Descubre cómo la dieta sin gluten ha impactado la vida de aquellos con síndrome de Tourette.

Loowit Falls - Midsection of glacial waterfall pouring from the crater of a volcano, on Halloween, lit by a full (blue) moon

E3 2006 : wearing shirts that cover their midsections

Credit: Daniel Terdiman/CNET News.com

 

Created in 1928 for the home of Marjorie Merriweather Post, this window is located in the Tutor mansion's Great Hall, now the administration building at the C.W. Post Campus of Long Island University. The window is crafted of 10 intricate sections of leaded glass set into a plaster and stone frame and featured the Post family crest and nautical scenes. The university crest was added to the lower midsection of the window in 1979.

The sight arm on a Mance Heliograph[1] is used to attach either the foresight ("jointed sighting rod") or the secondary ("duplex") mirror to the base of the primary gimbaled mirror. To see how the sight arm fits in with the other parts of the Mance heliograph, see the 5" Mance Mark V diagrams at flic.kr/p/ecRWyr for the sighting rod and flic.kr/p/2pAtytv for the duplex mirror. For complete instructions on the use of a Mance heliograph, download the 1922 manual at: www.prc68.com/I/pdf/1922_08_Heliograph_5in_MarkV_med.pdf For much more information about Mance heliographs, visit the British Heliograph Club on Facebook at: www.facebook.com/groups/776510812960897

 

In the photos in this album, the top end is the "outboard" end, and the small hole there clamps onto the rod at the base of the foresight or secondary mirror. The large hole at the bottom clamps onto the base of the primary mirror. The clamping screws at the top and bottom are used to tighten the clamps securely.

 

Mance invented his heliograph in 1869, but took over a decade to adopt the idea of a sight arm for his heliograph. Mance's early design, shown in his patent applications filed in England on October 3, 1874[2] and in the United States of America on February 25, 1876[3], and depicted in the August 1876 British Army Signalling manual[4], used a separate long sighting pole set up 30 feet in front of the instrument[5]. By the time of the 2nd Afghan war in 1879, Mance had traded in the long sighting pole for a short sighting rod mounted on a separate tripod 3 ft in front of the mirror tripod[5], but still resisted attaching a sight arm to the primary mirror. In contrast, Begbie's sun-flashing instrument is shown in the 1876 British Army Signalling manual with a sight arm, and the Roorkee heliograph used in the 2nd Afghan War during 1878 and 1879 used a sight arm 16 inches long[5].

 

However, the 5" Mance Mark I adopted in 1882, and all subsequent Marks, did have a sight arm attached to the base of the primary mirror, interchangably holding a foresight or second mirror in front of the center of the primary mirror.

 

This album of photos shows top, bottom and side views of sight arms from four versions of the 5" Mance heliograph:

 

- an early 1880s(?) 5" Mance Mark I (Mark I defined in List of Changes §4147, date of order 11 Sept. 1882)

Mark I diagrams here: flic.kr/p/ncpBL6 and here: flic.kr/p/QU5PM9

 

- an 1890 5" Mance Mark II (Mark II defined in List of Changes §4941, date of order 19 Oct. 1885)

Mark II diagram here: flic.kr/p/QUaV9S

 

- a 1909 5" Mance Mark V (Mk V defined in List of Changes §13195, date of order 15 Jan 1906)

Mark V diagrams here: flic.kr/p/ecRWyr and here: flic.kr/p/2pAtytv

 

- a WW2 5" Mance Mark V

 

I don't have sight arms from the Marks III and IV to photograph, but the Mark III arm is very similar to that of the Mark II, and that of the Mark IV to the Mark V, with the peculiar variation that the rear clamping screw for the Mark IV is in front of the tripod, rather than behind it, as in all other Marks. An example of the Mark IV sight arm can be seen at Wikimedia Commons[6].

 

The sight arms of the Mark I and Mark II folded up at a hinge, and when deployed, could be locked in place by a screw in the Mark I and a spring clamp in the Mark II (and III). In contrast, the arms of the Mark V (and IV) were rigid.

 

Mark I: The Mark I sight arm has a tapering arm that is "lightened" by four spaced openings, giving it a slight resemblance to a stepladder when viewed from above. Those openings are larger on the underside. The rear clamping screw has a longer shaft than those on the Mark V, and the slot at the outboard end has a "strain relief hole" drilled at its inner end, unlike the other examples. The distance between the centers of the small and large holes is roughly 8.7 inches. Note that this example is painted black, and the design was retired in 1885. Since this 1880s sighting arm and the 1890s sighting arm are painted/finished black, I believe that Mance heliographs from the 1880s on were originally painted/finished black, and that examples of Mance heliographs in plain brass are a combination of wear and deliberate polishing for aesthetic reasons.

 

Mark II: The original clamping screws are missing in this 1890 example, replaced by wing nuts, and a broken bit of rod is clamped in the outboard end, so those bits should be ignored. The changes from the Mark I are described in List of Changes §4941 as: "The joint of the arm is made rigid by the introduction of a snap-action catch in lieu of a screw.

The jointed arm has been fitted with two small projections which prevent it from striking the mirror when doubled up". These changes in the sight arm are the only changes to the heliograph itself between the Mark I and Mark II that are described in the text of the List of Changes entry. However, the List of Changes comment that "A pattern has been sealed", and there might be other small changes in the pattern besides those described in the text, such as the absence of the strain relief hole. Note also in the side views that the thickness of the midsection of this Mark II sight arm is less than that of the Mark I example.

 

The switch from the brass hinge locking screw to the spring clamp are most easily seen in the photos of the tops and undersides of the sight arms. The two small projections (hinge stops) are most clearly seen in the side view of the sight arms.

 

Mark V 1909: The length of the Mk V sight arms are less than those of the Mk I/II, with the distance between the centers of the clamping holes reduced by about 1 inch - from 8.7 inches to 7.7 inches. There is no hinge, the arm is narrower, and it has a "T" cross-section. The manuals say to mount the arm with the vertical rib on the underside, and that's the way one sees it in period photos, but one often sees the arm mounted "rib up" in museum displays and auction listings. The heads of the clamping screws are hollow/skeleton, vs. the solid heads seen in the Mark I example.

 

Mark V WW2: The hollow/skeleton clamping screw heads of the 1909 model have returned to the solid heads, and the smooth black paint/finish of the other three examples has been replaced by the rough "wrinkle" paint invented in the late 1920s. Those are the only changes from the 1909 model that I see.

 

The image on this web page is a low-resolution preview - to view or download the image in other resolutions, up to the full 3604 × 3541 pixels, go to:

www.flickr.com/photos/signalmirror/54910070887/sizes/o/

 

These images are entirely my own work. They are photographs I took of artifacts I own, and I did all the subsequent

postprocessing and annotation. I dedicate them to the public domain under a CC0 license.

 

[1] From Wikipedia: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heliograph "A heliograph (from Ancient Greek ἥλιος (hḗlios) 'sun' and γράφειν (gráphein) 'to write') is a solar telegraph system that signals by flashes of sunlight (generally using Morse code from the 1840s) reflected by a mirror. The flashes are produced by momentarily pivoting the mirror, or by interrupting the beam with a shutter." Henry Mance invented the British Mance pivoting-mirror heliograph in 1869. Mance heliographs were used by the British in combat from at least the 1877 Jowaki Afridi expedition in Afghanistan through the June 6, 1944 D-Day Normandy landings in WW2.

 

[2] A.D. 1874, October 3. – No. 3390.

 

MANCE, Henry Christopher, of 5, Magdala Terrace, Manor Road, Brockley, in the county of Kent –"Improvements in apparatus for telegraphing by means of reflected light."

 

This Specification describes arranging a mirror in such manner that flashes of sun light may be reflected with such ease, quickness, precision, and accuracy, both as regards direction and duration, as to afford a ready means of communication between stations however remote (provided the rotundity of the earth or other obstacle does not intervene). The apparatus is specially adapted for use between changing positions, and therefore for military purposes in the field. The apparatus permits of the use of the Morse alphabet, which as the best code of signals extant is usually employed.

 

books.google.com/books?id=ykgyAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA728

 

[3] Henry G. Mance, "Improvement in Apparatus for Signaling by Means 0f Reflected Light", US Patent 186,427, January 23, 1877; application filed February 25, 1876.

www.google.com/patents/US186427

 

[4] "Manual of Instruction in Army Signalling", Horse Guards, War Office, 1st August 1876, London.

Mance's heliograph is depicted on page 19, Begbie's Heliostat on page 16

  

[5] "HELIOGRAPHY AND ARMY SIGNALLING GENERALLY." By Major A. S. Wynne,

R.U.S.I. journal, Volume 24, pp. 235-258 (34 pp) - a lecture from March 15, 1880

books.google.com/books?id=JL6xU3TbfzkC&pg=234

 

"When the heliograph was in its infancy, a sighting rod was set up about 10 yards in front of the instrument, and fitted with a metal stud which slid up or down until truly aligned with the distant station. In communicating, the flash was kept playing on the stud. This sighting rod was abolished in favour of a tripod, which serves to support quite a new form of sighting rod (or, when the position of the sun demands it, a reflector which is ingeniously adapted to serve also as a sighting vane). This second tripod is placed about 3 feet from the signalling mirror tripod; being made to interlock, both can be carried when packed as easily as one. But the instruments now issued to regiments in India are provided with a supporting arm which dispenses altogether with the second tripod. This arm, about 16 inches long, is clamped to the base of the instrument and serves to support the sighting rod, or when occasion requires it, the reflector. The points for and against a supporting arm may be summed up as follows: ..."

...

" Mr. Goode : I should like to ask Major Hamilton a question. He has spoken as if the Roorkee instrument and the Mance were two distinct things ; would he kindly explain in what respects they differ ?

 

Major Hamilton : The Mance instruments which we had were the 6-inch instruments similar to those now in the room, and some 10-inch instruments with heavier tripods. In each case two tripods were used. The Roorkee pattern that I spoke of is of a different pattern, having only one tripod with an arm. The whole machinery was very much lighter. I never weighed one against the other but the Roorkee pattern was of lighter construction ; it was very handy, and on the whole I think worked better than the other. The springs were more satisfactory in their working.

 

Mr. Goode : I asked in what respect they differed in principle or in construction.

 

Major Hamilton : The general principle of the two was the same.1 In the Mance heliograph there were two tripods, one for the sighting rod, and the other for the heliograph. while the Roorkee pattern had but one tripod, and the sighting rod was at the end of an arm.

...

 

1 In order to avoid misapprehension it should be stated that the Roorkee instrument is a modified form of the Mance heliograph.—Ed."

 

[6] Photo of Mark IV heliograph at Wikimedia Commons, available at resolutions up to 3072 x 4068 pixels.

commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:A_boer_war_reenactor,_MC_...

 

Tatra tram outfitted with a low-floor midsection.

Are you ready to maximize your workout with a faja style waist cinching garment the workout band is an ann cherry waist cincher that you wear anytime you're going to be active. Take it to the gym or for a run outside and let it add impact to your healthy lifestyle routine. Here's how it works. You wrap the band around your midsection. This action creates compression in your core, stimulating thermal activity and ramping up perspiration. This process allows toxins and impurities to exit the skin, while mobilizing fat cells.

So I just realized that all my previous pictures have the annoying elastic band concealing the midsection of the pictured pens and since I have a Factory display tray I thought I would take these pictures to ameliorate my OCD. I was going to wait until my other 2 pen acquisitions arrived but OCD is a terrible affliction which is difficult to resist! Laziness however successfully suppressed my initial inclination to again list the various pens so you’ll just have to look at my other posts if you really need to know the various models pictured.

DECEMBER 10, 2019

Jean Calude Saclag of the Philippines (red) connects a powerful spinning back kick to the midsection of his opponent from Malaysia Mohammad Mahmoud (blue) during their fight in the Kickboxing match held at Cuneta Astrodome. Saclag went on to win the Gold medal.

EDWIN BACASMAS

It was the warmest game of the season for the Ravens so far...and a strange blow to the midsection caused Brett to have some problems catching his breath. The big guy has to start taking care of himself, so he can take care of the team easier.

Are you ready to maximize your workout with a faja style waist cinching garment the workout band is an ann cherry waist cincher that you wear anytime you're going to be active. Take it to the gym or for a run outside and let it add impact to your healthy lifestyle routine. Here's how it works. You wrap the band around your midsection. This action creates compression in your core, stimulating thermal activity and ramping up perspiration. This process allows toxins and impurities to exit the skin, while mobilizing fat cells.

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