View allAll Photos Tagged morphe
Screen Still from a collaborative dance video filmed with Pia Vinson and Lorenzo Pagano
"SPECTRA-MORPHE"
Watch video:
A young woman face picture morphed on iPad with eLastyc Pix elastyc.com
volyy.com/en/elastyc/ios/astore.php
©Volyy LLC www.volyy.com
A young woman face picture morphed on iPad with eLastyc Pix elastyc.com
volyy.com/en/elastyc/ios/astore.php
©Volyy LLC www.volyy.com
detail of submission to Neststudio's Morphe exhibition:
neststudio.typepad.com/neststudio/
by Mym, age 11.
from child to teenager to woman. being, antithesis, synthesis.AND THE UNWELCOME EYE OF THE OBSERVER.
Danny morphed into a cute little kitty. Aw.
Lol, Cali hopped up on the table beside the Jackal pistol and I thought it too cute a moment to go unphotographed.
A young woman face picture morphed on iPad with eLastyc Pix elastyc.com
volyy.com/en/elastyc/ios/astore.php
©Volyy LLC www.volyy.com
Opportunity morphed colorized panorama of Pinnacle Rock, Cook Haven, Solander Point, Endeavour crater, Meridiani Plain, Mars
A young woman face picture morphed on iPad with eLastyc Pix elastyc.com
volyy.com/en/elastyc/ios/astore.php
©Volyy LLC www.volyy.com
Even with the advent of modern press-fit bottom bracket systems and almost a million different bottom bracket standards that have morphed from the introduction of this new method(s) to install crank sets, nothing beats the reliability and user-friendliness of the simple threaded bottom bracket. Spend enough time with old bicycles, and the importance of having access to a good set of bottom bracket taps comes sooner than later.
The tap set that we have is a VAR Tools# 77/6 Bottom Bracket Tap. The tap itself is held in a steel shaft of diameter just smaller than a BB shell which is used to help centre the tap. It has a shallow slot milled into one end, to fit into a tap holder. The bench mounted tap holder is cast iron with a hole in it to fit the shaft. A handle above the hole turns a screw which fits into the rod’s slot, preventing the rod from rotating during tapping. The tap holder is normally bench mounted, however with our limited bench space, some steel angle has been attached to the tap holder to be able to be clamped in a vice.
A bench mounted tap is much easier to use than hand taps. Having a whole frame gives a lot of leverage to rotate the frame around the tap, a whole lot more leverage than the shorter handles found on hand taps.
It is absolutely essential to chase the threads of the bottom bracket shell prior to installing a bottom bracket. This is because the threads are likely to get gunked up during the brazing process, whether it is with dust, flux, or even excess filler rod or slightly deformed from the heating cycles. Furthermore, tapping is recommended after painting a frame, to remove unwanted paint on the BB threads. By chasing the threads, any foreign material is cleaned out, and thus the bottom bracket cups can be installed properly. Chasing is done with taps that match the specific thread of the BB shell.
Taps are also useful in scenarios where new BB threads need to be cut. This occasion may arise if the shell threads have been damaged during installation and/or removal of cups. It is a matter of filling the damaged area with brass, then carefully re-cutting new threads into the shell. Or boring out an English BB shell to the Italian BB shell core size and tapping Italian 36mm x 24 TPI threads.
It is important to note that English BB shells are 1.37” x 24 TPI. The drive side is left-hand threaded while the non-drive side is right-hand threaded; therefore a separate tap is required for each side. Conversely, Italian shells are 36mm x 24 TPI but both sides are right-hand threaded. French shells? Good luck finding a tap… We have one though - 35mm x 1". T47? Still too new for us.
Also, never run the tap dry. Use some form of lubrication to reduce cutting friction helping keep everything cool. Ideally a cutting fluid should be used, but grease or a thicker oil will suffice.
was playing around with what i have an this was the end result Mick said he wanted me to upload it so here i am! :D Leave comments below i wanna hear how i done!
A young woman face picture morphed on iPad with eLastyc Pix elastyc.com
volyy.com/en/elastyc/ios/astore.php
©Volyy LLC www.volyy.com
A young woman face picture morphed on iPad with eLastyc Pix elastyc.com
volyy.com/en/elastyc/ios/astore.php
©Volyy LLC www.volyy.com
A young woman face picture morphed on iPad with eLastyc Pix elastyc.com
volyy.com/en/elastyc/ios/astore.php
©Volyy LLC www.volyy.com
A young woman face picture morphed on iPad with eLastyc Pix
volyy.com/en/elastyc/ios/astore.php
Transformed with a few gentle touches.
Volyy LLC www.volyy.com
Original photo:
Portrait of a young woman. Domenico Ghirlandaio (1449-1494) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ghirlandaio_-_Ritratto_di...
A young woman face picture morphed on iPad with eLastyc Pix
volyy.com/en/elastyc/ios/astore.php
Transformed with a few gentle touches.
Volyy LLC www.volyy.com
Original photo:
Portrait of a young woman. Domenico Ghirlandaio (1449-1494) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ghirlandaio_-_Ritratto_di...
A young woman face picture morphed on iPad with eLastyc Pix
volyy.com/en/elastyc/ios/astore.php
Transformed with a few gentle touches.
Volyy LLC www.volyy.com
Original photo:
Portrait of a young woman. Domenico Ghirlandaio (1449-1494) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ghirlandaio_-_Ritratto_di...
A young woman face picture morphed on iPad with eLastyc Pix
volyy.com/en/elastyc/ios/astore.php
Transformed with a few gentle touches.
Volyy LLC www.volyy.com
Original photo:
Portrait of a young woman. Domenico Ghirlandaio (1449-1494) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ghirlandaio_-_Ritratto_di...
St George's Anglican Cathedral morphed through the C20 from a bastion of the Anglo-South African establishment into the spiritual centre of resistance to apartheid known as the "People's Cathedral". Designed by Sir Herbert Baker, the foundation stone was laid in 1901. The cathedral replaced a church built in 1834 on the same site, and is still incomplete.
The north side was finished by 1909, with the transept completed in 1936, finally making Baker's design a reality.
The two images morphed together in this animation are arrest booking photos from Florida of the same young woman at the ages of 23 and 26. They were made available by Daniel Onines on flickr for others to use under a Creative Commons License.
It took a year for this guy to look at me :) -- Oh I was so much dying to see the eyes!!
Please see more images on www.facebook.com/pages/Anupam-Dashs-Photography/204617659...
It will be an honor if you can "Like" the page!!
Forms of Resistance, a two-person exhibition featuring works on paper by Tim McFarlane and Washington, D.C.-based artist, Miguel Rodriguez. The show consists of 20 new works on paper by each artist, with all work produced in 2017.
Reception
Friday, May 5 at 6 - 9 PM
Exhibition Statement: When talking about the “why” behind this show, we made a list of some of the things which drew our interest. We spoke about survival, how it relates to cities, oppression, graffiti being put up, then erased, then put up again. Graffiti as protest art. How the traces of words and marks build up and form a sort of collective language over time. We touched on how that relates to evolutionary biology. How all organisms belong to the same tree of life and contain elements of each other, morphed into endless variety through long periods of adaptation and reproduction over time. How we are derived from microscopic meteor particles, our alien origins. How we dream of life beyond our planet, or wish that we would be rescued. Or how terms like “illegal” aliens take a whole group of people and make them the other. We found ourselves deep into the role of artists in societies, whose free speech and thinking goes against the grain of authoritarian ideologies, and how every mark we make, every painting we realize is a form of resistance.
Tim McFarlane and Miguel Rodriguez
Exhibition
May 5 - May 27
Gallery Hours
Saturdays 11 - 2 pm
ARTIST BIOS
Tim McFarlane is a painter based in Philadelphia, PA. McFarlane’s paintings and works on paper examine the fluid nature of memory, time and place, with an emphasis on color, multi-layered systems and process. A 1994 Temple University/Tyler School of Art graduate, McFarlane exhibited in various group exhibitions around the Philadelphia region before gaining representation with the Bridgette Mayer Gallery in 2002, where he has had several solo exhibitions.
Tim McFarlane has exhibited his work extensively in the U.S. in group exhibitions and featured at art fairs in New York, Miami, Dallas and San Francisco. He has been a visiting artist at several universities, participated in artist panels and has been a juror for exhibitions and grants. McFarlane’s paintings and works on paper reside in numerous private and public collections, including those of West Virginia University, Bucknell University, Temple University, the Hyatt Hotel at the Bellevue and more.
Miguel Rodriguez is a Washington D.C. based painter. He is a graduate of Tufts University/School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and has shown his work in Philadelphia, Trenton and Boston. He is part of the Earth Issue Artist's Collective, and was interviewed recently for Young Space, an online platform dedicated to emerging artists. His work is included in numerous private collections.
Images left to right:
Miguel Rodgriquez: Ange, 2017, acrylic and collage on paper, 15" x 11"
Tim McFarlane Uncharted (Blue Seas), 2017, acrylic on paper, 15" x 11"
Melissa Saltsgaver
Sales Account Executive
Signtech Electrical Advertising, Inc.
4444 Federal Blvd.
San Diego, CA 92102
O: 619-398-1639<
C: 619-252-9882<
MSaltsgaver@Signtech.com<
A young woman face picture morphed on iPad with eLastyc Pix
volyy.com/en/elastyc/ios/astore.php
Transformed with a few gentle touches.
Volyy LLC www.volyy.com
Original photo:
Portrait of a young woman. Domenico Ghirlandaio (1449-1494) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ghirlandaio_-_Ritratto_di...
Voronezh is a city and the administrative centre of Voronezh Oblast in southwestern Russia straddling the Voronezh River, located 12 kilometers (7.5 mi) from where it flows into the Don River. The city sits on the Southeastern Railway, which connects western Russia with the Urals and Siberia, the Caucasus and Ukraine, and the M4 highway (Moscow–Voronezh–Rostov-on-Don–Novorossiysk). In recent years the city has experienced rapid population growth, rising in 2021 to 1,057,681, up from 889,680 recorded in the 2010 Census, making it the 14th-most populous city in the country.
For many years, the hypothesis of the Soviet historian Vladimir Zagorovsky dominated: he produced the toponym "Voronezh" from the hypothetical Slavic personal name Voroneg. This man allegedly gave the name of a small town in the Chernigov Principality (now the village of Voronizh in Ukraine). Later, in the 11th or 12th century, the settlers were able to "transfer" this name to the Don region, where they named the second city Voronezh, and the river got its name from the city. However, now many researchers criticize the hypothesis, since in reality neither the name of Voroneg nor the second city was revealed, and usually the names of Russian cities repeated the names of the rivers, but not vice versa.
A comprehensive scientific analysis was conducted in 2015–2016 by the historian Pavel Popov. His conclusion: "Voronezh" is a probable Slavic macrotoponym associated with outstanding signs of nature, has a root voron- (from the proto-Slavic vorn) in the meaning of "black, dark" and the suffix -ezh (-azh, -ozh). It was not “transferred” and in the 8th - 9th centuries it marked a vast territory covered with black forests (oak forests) - from the mouth of the Voronezh river to the Voronozhsky annalistic forests in the middle and upper reaches of the river, and in the west to the Don (many forests were cut down). The historian believes that the main "city" of the early town-planning complex could repeat the name of the region – Voronezh. Now the hillfort is located in the administrative part of the modern city, in the Voronezh upland oak forest. This is one of Europe's largest ancient Slavic hillforts, the area of which – more than 9 hectares – 13 times the area of the main settlement in Kyiv before the baptism of Rus.
In it is assumed that the word "Voronezh" means bluing - a technique to increase the corrosion resistance of iron products. This explanation fits well with the proximity to the ancient city of Voronezh of a large iron deposit and the city of Stary Oskol. As well as the name of Voroneț Monastery known for its blue shade.
Folk etymology claims the name comes from combining the Russian words for raven (ворон) and hedgehog (еж) into Воронеж. According to this explanation two Slavic tribes named after the animals used this combination to name the river which later in turn provided the name for a settlement. There is not believed to be any scientific support for this explanation.
In the 16th century, the Middle Don basin, including the Voronezh river, was gradually conquered by Muscovy from the Nogai Horde (a successor state of the Golden Horde), and the current city of Voronezh was established in 1585 by Feodor I as a fort protecting the Muravsky Trail trade route against the slave raids of the Nogai and Crimean Tatars. The city was named after the river.
17th to 19th centuries
In the 17th century, Voronezh gradually evolved into a sizable town. Weronecz is shown on the Worona river in Resania in Joan Blaeu's map of 1645. Peter the Great built a dockyard in Voronezh where the Azov Flotilla was constructed for the Azov campaigns in 1695 and 1696. This fleet, the first ever built in Russia, included the first Russian ship of the line, Goto Predestinatsia. The Orthodox diocese of Voronezh was instituted in 1682 and its first bishop, Mitrofan of Voronezh, was later proclaimed the town's patron saint.
Owing to the Voronezh Admiralty Wharf, for a short time, Voronezh became the largest city of South Russia and the economic center of a large and fertile region. In 1711, it was made the seat of the Azov Governorate, which eventually morphed into the Voronezh Governorate.
In the 19th century, Voronezh was a center of the Central Black Earth Region. Manufacturing industry (mills, tallow-melting, butter-making, soap, leather, and other works) as well as bread, cattle, suet, and the hair trade developed in the town. A railway connected Voronezh with Moscow in 1868 and Rostov-on-Don in 1871.
I morphed the arabic script for the sound "ski" (سكي) into a pair of crossed skis.
Note: this is not the Arabic word for "ski," which is تزلج على الثلج.
so yeah i finally got frustrated with her weird little body and obitsu-ed her. i love her now, so much more fun!! also i had the spare hands so i chose the ones that look like the monster high ones. she is trying to fit in with them so she can steal their stuff.
if she *is* a monster (or something), i think she's one of those pixies...
oh yeah so i had to mod her a little by chunking out some of the supports inside her head, to get the headknob to fit right, and also i had to grind out her eyepockets bigger because i had these nice glass eyes going to waste.
...which soon morphed into proceeding around the ring in three columns.
Philadelphia, PA / September 26, 2009
This one is too cool not to share. One of my pet mealworms from Bugfest a week ago just morphed into the pupa stage! Visible here: shed skin on left, pupa on right (it looks a bit like it's praying; maybe it is!); rolled oats; and (sorry) a bit of frass. Instead of doing my apple homework -- which is why I haven't been sketching this cool guy -- I've been reading more on mealworms (Darkling Beetles). Mostly very interesting -- including the info that they're used as bluebird food, and for other wild and caged birds. (They also can be fed to lizards, snakes, turtles, fish, praying mantises and people, among other things.) It takes a lot to gross me out, but I found myself shuddering at the note that they may be "dried in the oven, and used in place of nuts, raisins and chocolate chips in many recipes." (Silly of me -- I ate some, fried, at a different bug fest last spring!) Raising them can be simple (mine are in oatmeal with a couple of fresh slices of potato on top daily) or challenging (for example adding supplements to provide them more nutrition -- which makes them grow better, reproduce more, and be more nutritious.) I just read instructions on keeping them clean and mite- and moth-free and separating adults from eggs so the eggs and babies don't get eaten! Oh my. One person's experience and instructions, just in case you're motivated to try: www.sialis.org/raisingmealworms.htm
Hopefully I'll paint my apple, and tomorrow's promised grape homework, in time to sketch this, or one of my other three, while still a pupa.
Working on the sims has been a lesson in Second Life resources. I need stuff... so the other day, I went to WaterWorks for some products. I had my draw distance on ultimate and I noticed another sim off in the distance... so I flew over.
OMG! Chaos! This sim is awesome... no, its fricken incredible. I loved it. There's a Japanese saying, "Kimochi warui..." Kinda means, something is creepy or sickening... and that was the feeling I got here... a creepy sense.
Dark and forbidding, each hallway or door sent me through a wild builder's imagination of psychedelics, intergallatic travel, forbidden dreams and even a motor garage!
One area devoted itself in a dissertation of commentaries about the future of mankind. Morphed and modified humanoids with robotic apparatus hung on the walls like an art gallery.
I loved reading the comments and viewpoints of the author. I was in absolute agreement on the sentiments regarding art... wow, this place needs to be visited often... just to absorb everything.
Isabelle Korda: Dans les bras de Morphée
Histoire des expressions nées de la mythologie
Le goût des mots, collection dirigée par Philippe Delerm
Points - Paris, 2007
This building was originally a meat processing plant for A&W restaurant. Then it morphed into a poultry processing plant known as "Just Right Poultry." After years of that it became a White Castle Restaurant meat processing plant. We still have the White Castle plant here in town, but they moved to a new building in the town's industrial park. This building has been for sale now for about 6 years or so, but so far no takers.
Best viewed LARGE!
Had very fun doing this photo. i used a bunch of fill cards and a white box I had laying around. For lighting i used three old phones with flash lights on the back i did it this way because all of the light sources in my place are like a yellow color bulb. Next time i might just try the window during the day to get a better quality light. iso could've been lower maybe even reduce the grain look quality
wonderfulmachine.com/photographer/timothy-hogan?specialty...