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Hello there! This is my new video!"Practice"
Instruments are,
Korg Trinity Plus,
Korg X5,
Doepfer MS-404,
Akai S1000,
Akai S2000,
Korg Mono/Poly,
Roland R8,
Roland TR707,
Steinberg Cubase VST5,
Facebook.
Thanks!
"Practice"
Lyrics. Kanda Mori(=hamhamgo)
Composition. Kanda Mori(=hamhamgo)
Manufacture day.2012/12/18
Original MP3 file is here,
mankos.at.webry.info/201212/article_1.html
All performance is Kanda Mori(=hamhamgo)
(c)Kanda Mori(=hamhamgo) 2012
This was my first attempt at Waldorf style doll making. Actually she's my first doll! I have three boys and have never really had a reason to make dolls.
I didn't have the traditional Waldorf materials on hand, and wanted to practice on something a little less expensive than the pricey tricot from the Netherlands and the equally pricey wool stuffing, so she's made with bamboo velour for her skin and stuffed with polyfill. I didn't have any tubular gauze so I used an old nylon knee-high stocking to shape the head. I made her body pattern and that's the only part of her I'm not thrilled with. Her torso is too long and I should have curved her arms, but overall I think she's sweet. She'll be a gift for my niece. Now that I've had a taste of doll making I think I'm hooked. My niece is going to h
VC-25A SAM 29000 is used to practice landings and takeoffs from Harrisburg International Airport. When the president is on board this modified 747 carries the callsign "Air Force One."
Members of the Clemson Tigers football team show a group of 6th-graders from Wren Middle School around the Allen N. Reeves Football Complex and Indoor Practice Facility. The students were there as part of the annual ‘Kicks, Cleats and Kids’ event held by three Clemson University-based outreach programs with similar goals: Dabo Swinney's All In Team Foundation, PAW Journey, and Call Me MISTER. The event is designed to inspire kids to better understand the link between strong personal character, commitment to academic success, and positive life outcomes. (Photo by Ken Scar)
“The future is there looking back at us.” — William Gibson
According to a recent Fast Company article, design has “matured from a largely stylistic endeavor to a field tasked with solving thorny technological and social problems.” Designers are no longer relegated to the downstream position of making things look pretty. We now have a seat at the table. No longer makers, we now aspire to be leaders. Design is everywhere, yet is now called upon to respond to constantly changing technological, demographic, and environmental conditions.
In this space between ubiquity and obsolescence, how can designers develop ways of working and collaborating that respond to our contemporary world? Join us for a monthly series of provocations at MAD where practitioners and critics discuss the changing nature of design and visual culture and its impact on the also changing fields of music, education, fashion, and more.
Technology
Technology plays the dual role of being instrumentalized as both an impartial tool and critical monitor of progress, security, and connection in our society. In this talk we look at how design, programming, and writing work together to express alternative perspectives on startup culture, surveillance, and automation.
Speakers
Sam Lavigne is an artist, programmer and journalist. His work deals with data, cops, surveillance and automation. He is currently a research fellow at NYU’s Interactive Telecommunications Program, and a contributing editor at The New Inquiry. In 2015 he co-founded Useless Press, an independent online publisher of esoteric internet projects. He is also the co-founder of the Stupid Shit No One Needs & Terrible Ideas Hackathon.
Rob Horning is an editor of The New Inquiry and author of Marginal Utility, a blog on consumerism and technology. He has written for such publications as Art in America, Dissent, and DIS Magazine.
Moderator
Juliette Cezzar is an Assistant Professor and Associate Director of the BFA Communication Design program at Parsons / The New School, where she was the Director of the BFA Communication Design and BFA Design & Technology programs from 2011-2014. She established her small studio, e.a.d., in 2005. While books anchor the practice, her work has spanned a variety of media for clients such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, RES Magazine, The Museum of Modern Art, Vh1, The New York Times, Eleven Madison Park, and Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Art, and Planning. She is the co-author of Designing the Editorial Experience(Rockport) and author-designer of Office Mayhem (Abrams), Paper Pilot, Paper Captain, and Paper Astronaut (Universe / Rizzoli). She holds an MFA in Graphic Design from Yale University and a professional degree (B. Arch) in Architecture from Virginia Tech.
VC-25A SAM 29000 is used to practice landings and takeoffs from Harrisburg International Airport. When the president is on board this modified 747 carries the callsign "Air Force One."
A while back I made a circus cake fro pratice. didnt come out quit the way I hoped for, but I completed it. Type all done by hand.
dancingland, 6 Tippett Road, Toronto, George 416 358 5595
Photo by Andrew Maidanik www.andrewmaidanik.com/
The nine men of the BMC race team during practice for Friday's team time trial..Giro D'Italia ,Belfast 2014.
I turned a practice wooden Rondel dagger for a friend on my homemade lathe. I used a piece of wood he found in his garage, followed a photo he provided, and his marks for the length of the pommel, handle, and guard. Now I want one!
This image reminds me of Mother Teresa’s idea to continuous creating little drops of oil into a lamp, and that the love does not have to be extraordinary, but little, but in this image, it is like a stairway to heaven, each practice makes a step that carries you higher:
“Don’t think that love, to be true, has to be extraordinary. What is necessary is to continue to love. How does a lamp burn, if it is not by the continuous feeding of little drops of oil? When there is no oil, there is no light and the bridegroom will say: “I do not know you”. Dear friends, what are our drops of oil in our lamps? They are the small things from every day life: the joy, the generosity, the little good things, the humility and the patience. A simple thought for someone else. Our way to be silent, to listen, to forgive, to speak and to act. That are the real drops of oil that make our lamps burn vividly our whole life. Don’t look for Jesus far away, He is not there. He is in you, take care of your lamp and you will see Him.”
– Mother Teresa
Many kinds of practices, here are 2 ideas:
“ Asking the simple question:
What will serve life today?
is a penetrating practice.
Not what will serve me, my problems, my family,
my desires or worries.
Such questions only lead us to the realm of worry.
When we ask, What will serve life right here and now?
we begin to live in a larger picture.
Whatever circumstances we find ourselves in,
this question can help us focus our intentions.
It is so fundamental it should lie within
every small choice we make, not just the big ones.
What will serve life today?”
—Gunilla Norris, “Inviting Silence”, p. 41-42
“I turn over my little omelet in the frying pan for the love of God. When it is done, if I have nothing to do, I bow down to the ground and adore God from whom has come the grace to make it. Then I straighten up, more contented than a king. When there is nothing more that I can do, it is enough to pick up a straw from the floor for the love of God. People look for methods for learning to love God. They desire to arrive by I don’t know how many different practices. They take great pains to remain in the presence of God by a quantity of means. Is it not much shorter and more direct to do everything for the love of God, to use all the tasks of one’s situation, to give testimony to it, and to maintain the presence within us by this communication of the heart with Him? He has no fancy ways for this. One has only to go plainly and simply to Him.” – Brother Lawrence