View allAll Photos Tagged modeling

Model: Leah

 

Leah is a Figure Skater by training. I wanted to photograph someone who has had ballet training.

"Vestío con una sonrisa

Sin complejo ni temores"

Caminando Por La Vida - Melendi

 

Photo Shoot w/ a model named Alan today. Great guy to work with.

Instagram: @AHProdvction

Model: Willow @ Elite

Make-up: Milou Meijers

Hair: Lea Muses

Styling: Inez Naomi

Models in the Park

Instagram: @AHProdvction

Shot at Liverpool's record breaking "Very Big Catwalk" event @ the city's Pier Head.

Julian and Dan's Beach Shoot, Mentor Beach Ohio

The full version of what is now the Model 5C.

Now has a scope as well.

Still the same caliber and both(forgot to say before) are straight-pull bolts.

Thoughts?

Pastie: pastebin.com/raw.php?i=8vXF1GGN

My work w/ Fitness model Zack

Skegness Model Village

Model, NYC

Blaudruckmodeln am Textilkunstmarkt Horn

The Museum of Flight, Seattle.

 

Manufacturer: Boeing

First flight: July 27, 1928

Introduction: September 20, 1928 with Boeing Air Transport

Retired: 1934

Primary user: Boeing Air Transport

Number built: 16

Model 80A - improved aerodynamics and Pratt & Whitney Hornet engines (10 built)

Unit cost: $75,000 (Model 80A

 

Crew: Three

Capacity: 18 passengers

 

Payload: 898 lb cargo (408 kg)

 

Length: 56 ft 6 in (17.22 m)

Wingspan: 80 ft 0 in (24.39 m)

Height: 15 ft 3 in (4.65 m)

Wing area: 1,220 sq ft (113.4 m²)

Airfoil: Boeing N-22

 

Empty weight: 10,582 lb (4,810 kg)

Max. takeoff weight: 17,500 lb (7,940 kg)

 

Powerplant: 3 × Pratt & Whitney R-1690 Hornet air-cooled radials, 525 hp (392 kW) each

 

Maximum speed: 138 mph (120 knots, 222 km/h)

Cruise speed: 125 mph (109 knots, 201 km/h)

Stall speed: 55 mph [16] (48 knots, 89 km/h)

Range: 460 mi (400 nmi, 741 km)

 

Service ceiling: 14,000 ft (4,270 m)

Rate of climb: 900 ft/min (4.6 m/s)

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_80

 

"Pioneer Pullman of the Air"

 

Until the mid-1920s, American commercial airplanes were built for mail, not people.

 

Boeing's Model 80, along with the Ford and Fokker tri-Motors, were a new breed of passenger aircraft.

 

The 80 first flew in August 1928 and was working along Boeing Air Transport's route two weeks later.

 

The 12-passenger Model 80 and the more-powerful 18-passenger 80A (re-designated 80A-1s when the tail surfaces were modified in 1930) stayed in service until 1933, when replaced by the all-metal Boeing Model 247.

 

The Museum's Model 80A-1, equipped with three Pratt & Whitney 525-horsepower "Hornet" engines, was retired from service with United in 1934.

 

In 1941, it became a cargo aircraft with a construction firm in Alaska. To carry large equipment, including a massive 11,000-pound (4,950 kg) boiler, a cargo door was cut into the plane's side. After the war, the 80 was stored and then discarded.

 

It was recovered from a dump in 1960 and eventually brought to Seattle for restoration. It is the only surviving example of the Boeing Model 80 series.

 

Stewardesses

 

In 1930, Miss Ellen Church, a student pilot and registered nurse, convinced Boeing management to hire female cabin attendants for their Model 80 flights.

 

Until then, it had been the co-pilot's duty to pass out box lunches, serve coffee, and tend to the passenger's needs.

 

Church reasoned that the sight of women working aboard the Boeing 80s would alleviate the passenger's fear of air travel. She and seven others, all nurses, became America's first stewardesses. Serving on a trial basis, they were very popular and became a permanent part of American commercial aviation.

 

The Luxury

 

A passenger flying in Boeing's earlier Model 40 was in for an uncomfortable trip. The 40 was designed for mail -- people were secondary, packed like sardines into the cold and noisy fuselage.

 

The advent of the Model 80 brought some comfort to travel.

 

The 80A had room for 18, a heated cabin, and leather seats. There was individual reading lights and the lavatory featured hot and cold running water.

 

Although the 80 had a luxurious interior, flying was tough by today's standards: the cabin wasn't pressurized, engine noise made conversation difficult, and despite heaters, the cabin was sometimes very cold.

www.museumofflight.org/aircraft/boeing-80a-1

These photos were taken at a photography workshop I went to for Lighting & Posing. After some great instruction, we each had 5 minutes with the model, and were told to take full control in posing her. This is the result of what she went through.

Model A Front Detail; Lime Rock Park, Lakeville, CT

A model railway at the York Railway Museum, England.

The National Railway Museum (NRM) is a museum in York forming part of the British Science Museum Group of National Museums and telling the story of rail transport in Britain and its impact on society. It has won many awards, including the European Museum of the Year Award in 2001. It is the home of the national collection of historically significant railway vehicles, as well as a collection of other artefacts and both written and pictorial records.

1 2 ••• 39 40 42 44 45 ••• 79 80