View allAll Photos Tagged phaser
At the end of the autumn term, parents and carers of phase two children were invited to see work produced for the Winter exhibition. Year three presented their responses to the climate crisis; year four produced a museum exhibition showcasing their investigations into ancient Egypt; year five showed off vehicles produced as part of their 'How high, how far, how fast?’ project; year six took up residency in The Clipper on Union Street to respond to the question: ‘What does community mean to us?’ This fantastic event was really well attended and the children really enjoyed showing off the results of their learning through the term. A big thank you to all involved!
I was going through iPhoto and decided I really like this picture for some reason. It's not a very good picture or anything, so I don't know why. Oh well. Here it is for you!
Photographer: Jake Hicks Photography (www.jakehicksphotographyco.uk)
Makeup Artist: Rachael Kent (rachaelkent.com/)
Products: Illamasqua, Mac Cosmetics, Stila Cosmetics
'97 Black College Dance Exchange, Grambling University. Fort Valley State University's dance company, PHASES, performing at the student concert.
I got permission to head into the pumpkin field and shoot some pictures before the gates opened and the crowds streamed in.
©2011, Ken Szok All rights reserved
The original Maestro PS-1 phasers were cooler-sounding for guitar, but the Stage Phasers were just monsters for bass.
I built one of these for Cherokee Bunn a while back. He'd used one in the 70's with the Brides of Dr. Funkenstein and always regretted selling it.
When I finished the build I played my Junior through it and was like, "Eh...it's OK, I guess." But then I thought I should play a bass through it so I'd know the calibration was going to hold up under his bass signal. It sounded HUGE as a bass phaser. WAY better than with a guitar going through it.
So I've been meaning to build one for myself ever since.
Check this out from NASA -- Just as the Moon goes through phases, Venus' visible sunlit hemisphere waxes and wanes. This composite of backyard telescopic images illustrates the steady changes for Venus during its current stint as our evening star, as the inner planet grows larger but narrows to a thin crescent. Images from bottom to top were taken during 2020 on dates February 27, March 20, April 14, April 24, May 8, and May 14. Gliding along its interior orbit between Earth and Sun, Venus grows larger during that period because it is approaching planet Earth. Its crescent narrows, though, as Venus swings closer to our line-of-sight to the Sun. Closest to the Earth-Sun line but passing about 1/2 degree north of the Sun on June 3, Venus will reach a (non-judgmental) inferior conjunction. Soon after, Venus will shine clearly above the eastern horizon in predawn skies as planet Earth's morning star. After sunset tonight look for Venus above the western horizon and you can also spot elusive innermost planet Mercury. (ift.tt/2TqBnPt)
March 20/22
22-618612
Toronto,
Mixed-use Development,
CIBC Square Phase II,
141 Bay St,
Ivanhoé Cambridge,
Hines,
50s,
Wilkinson Eyre Architects,
Adamson Associates Architect,
3 phase pillar drill and saw running on a home built rotary converter, Shaping machine running on its own built in converter, all from single phase 240v 13 amp wall socket.
freedownloadplanet.net/movies/phase-7-2011-720p/ - The only place it's a bit thin is in its attempt at some greater relevance. Horacio, the survivalist, theorizes that the virus was unleashed by the rich as a response to the recent financial crisis, in order to lower the world's population for the good of the economy. Argentinian filmmakers have often used, with good reason, global financial concerns as subtext, but here it seems a stretch.
Photographer: Jake Hicks Photography (www.jakehicksphotographyco.uk)
Makeup Artist: Rachael Kent (rachaelkent.com/)
Products: Illamasqua, Mac Cosmetics, Stila Cosmetics
At the end of the autumn term, parents and carers of phase two children were invited to see work produced for the Winter exhibition. Year three presented their responses to the climate crisis; year four produced a museum exhibition showcasing their investigations into ancient Egypt; year five showed off vehicles produced as part of their 'How high, how far, how fast?’ project; year six took up residency in The Clipper on Union Street to respond to the question: ‘What does community mean to us?’ This fantastic event was really well attended and the children really enjoyed showing off the results of their learning through the term. A big thank you to all involved!
December 12/24
24-675073
Mississauga
Pinnacle Uptown
Pinnacle Uptown: Gemma Condos
Residential/Commercial
Phase 5
5046 Hurontario St
Pinnacle International
35s
Richmond Architects
5081 Hurontario St
Residential/Commercial
Liberty Development Corporation
21s + 33s + 42s
DIALOG
The third phase of our Utah trip didn't take us far. We stayed close enough to Torrey, in fact, that it seemed reasonable to come back for dinner at that hamburger shack the evening after this. Our original thought had been to drive down to Zion National Park and explore it a little more thoroughly than we had over the hour or two we spent there in 2007, but Zion sits at a considerably lower altitude than Capitol Reef, and the forecast suggested temperatures down there were edging up toward 100°F. Zion also is easily accessible to travelers on Interstate 15, and it tends to be very busy in the summer. Meanwhile, our planned path was to take us through Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument anyway, and on the way we would pass by a number of U.S. Forest Service campgrounds sitting at high altitude on Boulder Mountain. This seemed more appealing, so we changed it all up and decided to see what the Forest Service had to offer.
Here's the view looking east from a roadside overlook on the flanks of Boulder Mountain, pointed back toward Capitol Reef and the Henry Mountains beyond.