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Photographer: Paul van Bueren
Model: Heidi van Dijk
Cambo SC-1
Fomapan 400
Copyright by Paul van Bueren
The Royal Ballet: The Dante Project
The Royal Ballet presents ‘The Dante Project’ at the Royal Opera House. 14 - 30 October 2021. Digital Stream 29 October. A new ballet partly inspired by Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy. The unique ballet receives its world premiere in the 700th anniversary year of Dante’s death in 1321. A co-production between The Royal Ballet and Paris Opera Ballet.
Choreography: Wayne McGregor
Music: Thomas Adès
Design: Tacita Dean
Lighting design: (part 1) Lucy Carter and Simon Bennison, lighting design: (parts 2-3) Lucy Carter
Dramaturgy: Uzma Hameed
Dancers:
Dante: Edward Watson
Virgil: Gary Avis
photo © Foteini Christofilopoulou | All rights reserved | For all usage/licensing enquiries please contact www.foteini.com
By kind permission of the Royal Opera House
A serious restoration project, apparently waiting to be finished.
The 403 was styled by Pininfarina and first presented in April 1955.
I forgot this picture in the chronological posts. So here it is finally.
Production 403: 1955-1966.
Number seen: 2.
RD1083 probably near Lons-sur-Saunier (Fr), Aug. 3, 2016.
© 2016 Sander Toonen Amsterdam | All Rights Reserved
.50 cal. AE / 40mm advanced infantry rifle.
A lightweight weapon system borne from the combined efforts of the Archwell-Shepard Collaborative Design Team. It is intended to replace the MOWS-1 Stormbreaker Rifle currently in service by the GR Military, but this weapon is still undergoing trials.
Not much is known about this weapon, thanks to the lack of design specs at the time of its submission, but testing reports indicate that the .50 AE rounds fired from this gun are propelled at a much higher velocity, courtesy of the three electromagnets placed halfway on the barrel.
Credits to Guyver94 for providing the base weapon and some important design specs.
Forse sarà 1/52 /Ma non vi assicuro niente./
Mi ha ispirato la canzone di Bruno Mars Versace on the floor.
Another christmas tree ornament. It's easy these days to have a daily photo when the day had no photo. My tree is full of details!! I used a new app to edit the photo: VSCO. I'm no fan of presets but... I like to try new things.
The heavy lift vessel Anne-Sofie is seen here discharging a 350 ton unit. The cargo was loaded in Taragonna and is destined for the Total refinery. It is part of a 1 billion investment by Total in the Antwerp refinery which is the second largest refinery in Europe. The total project will involve 5 ship loads that will be brought in over the ABES Terminal of which this is the first.
Type 176 Heavy lift vessel
Length over all : 159,80m
Beam : 24.34m
Maximum draught : 9,00m
Gross registered tonnage : 12950
Nett tonnage : 4647
Built : 2008 (april)
Yard : JJ Sietas KG
Gear : 2 cranes eacht 700 tons SWL, 1 crane 350 tons SWL
Hold (LWH) : 107,10m x 17,00m x 13,29m
Engine : MAN B&W 9L58/64
Power output : 12600 kW
The cargo is being loaded on a Goldhofer 4 file unit self propelled modular Transporter (SPT) to get it to a temporary storage further up the terminal.
Details Goldhofer SPT :
Length : loading deck 16,50m (+4,00m for the engine)
Width : 6,29m
Height : 1,175m(+/- 0,3m)
Carrying capacity : 61,4 ton per axle (x 8 axles)
Each axle had 55° steering
My project table that I purchased from Pier One (on sale). This is the back side of my project desk showing my trash can. I love this trash can. It's so perfect for this space and I have a perfect reach from my desk to get to it behind me. This project table has six cubbies on one side and nine cubbies on the other side (great storage).
Project Flickr monthly challenge for July - Weather "See how many extremes of weather you can photograph in one month! "
In North East Scotland we don't have many 'extreme' weather events (happily) - but we do have some wonderful skies! This was shot early in the month as the setting sun lit up the sky. Shot with the Sony NEX-7 55-210mm telephoto lens.
My Project Flickr 2014 set is here: www.flickr.com/photos/e_liddell/sets/7215763938086885
Drawn during a break from a big project at work. I'm quite happy with what the team achieved, but it could not have been done without communication and teamwork.
What did we do?
Installed over 375 WiFi access points in 80+ degree residence halls at UW-Whitewater in one week.
Trying out color and fabric combinations for project #2. These are all 1930's reproduction fabrics from Kitchen Sink, Storybook, Aunt Grace, 1920's and Beyond, and a few other lines. These were popular a few years ago, but I have a bunch in my stash!
I'd originally had something else planned for my 365 pic today, but do to one thing or another, it didn't turn out. What can I say? It's been busy as hell around this place, and today we had moved a lot of trucks through the bays. I'd taken this at the last minute as sort of a poor ditch effort. All considered I thought I'd try something else today, being as the pic hadn't been what I'd wanted, and the day had sort of reminded me of one I'd written about a few years back.
An old blog post I'd written a few years back. Enjoy.
"The blaus"
originally written May 19th , 2006
Putterin' down York road after a robust day at work, and feeling a very euphoric sense of gratification with myself and my crew this week, I drifted off into a deep inner monologue conversation with myself. It has been one hell of a week, and we'd done it with a skeleton crew. But now, as I'm admiring the windmills on the bench, and the wheat sprouts in the fields, our accomplishments underplay the dead dogged tiredness that was gnawing at the bottom of my feet, and the nagging pain kicking me in the back.
That's when I started wondering to myself. Another useless thought to add to the list of useless thoughts and information, endlessly collecting and clogging up my mind.
By a show of hands who thinks which is worse. "The blau" tired’s or "This day just kicked my ass" tired’s? For the last few weeks they have been pulling dozens of refer trailers off the fleet, and bringing them to us to be de-identified and cleaned up for trade. Typically my job, you could say is really quit physical. I'm always on my feet, and on the move, watching, repairing, directing my crew, insuring the operation runs as smoothly and efficiently as possible. It leaves me exhausted by days end, and seems to make for a viable excuse to do little more then ly around in front of the television set and drink cold lager at days end.
Then there are times when say they pull two dozen refer trailers off the fleet to be traded. The de-identifying process is no big thing, a little tedious, but requiring little physical rigger. A little know how, a little patients, a good eye, and the right home brew mix of some rather nasty chemicals...
De-ided and it's on to the cleaning. A bit more tedious, and by far less physical for me. Before I continue I have to stress that by no means am I down playing the work a professional truck driver endures. They are required to keep the keenest of attention of everything around them, in a vehicle that typically spans more then eighty feet in length, and has as many blind spots as visible spots. (For thou’s of you motorists that have never been behind the wheel of a big rig remember one thing. If you can't see the drivers face in his mirror, he can't see you) but this sucks, at least an over the road driver gets a change of scenery.
Sitting behind the wheel of a run down Freightliner Century for a better part of the day, playing the part of "Drop and hook donkey". The Blaus begin to set in.
After the trailer is De-ided I move it out of the detail bay, and run it around the building to one of the wash bays. Wash the trailer, and again, run it around the building to the wash out bay. Washed out, and it's over to the lot, where I drop it, and hook up another, and repeat the entire process, with very little physical activity detected all the while.
It's probable that the most physical parts of this would involve lowering the landing gear, releasing the king pin from the fifth wheel, and oh yes, flipping the switch that dumps the tractors air bags, and after a day of this, I feel exhausted. "The Blaus" .
How does one explain that to the wife, well enough to justify sweats, beer, and televison? "Baby bear, I'm just to tired to mow the lawn tonight, I had to spend the entire day, in a spacious, all though be it ugly, air conditioned environment, with a cold beverage at my beacon, and you know, sometimes the radio just didn't play a song I liked. My radio station changen' finger is spent".....
Well needless to say, the lawn is mowed, and I'm left to ponder...Which is worse. Blaus or Ass kickedness tired?
Static
Wednesday, August 27th. 2008
Greetings everyone!
If you did not had a chance to see The Aurora Project, my collaboration with talented Lorin Tone at the SLB regions, its now your chance to revisit it at the Burn2 Regions!
This collaboration needs to be experienced. Remember to enable if you can advanced lighting, shinny, shadows and bump-mapping/shinny and multiple light sources to experience it to its maximum effect. A twilight or night windlight is recommended!
Additional info and Taxi bellow:
maps.secondlife.com/…/Burning%20Man-%20Deep…/67/60/24
The build is based on and inspired by a musical piece called "Aurora", composed by Hans Zimmer (used with permission).
Suggested settings: In your graphics settings, please enable bump mapping and shiny to view textures.
We have chosen a midnight Windlight setting, but the build looks great with any lighting model.
In your sound settings, please turn Sound Effects all the way up.
About the Sound: The choral musical piece has been cut into almost 60 pieces and rebuilt into 5 sound emitters. Each set gradually fades in and out, and each sound emitter has a different number of silences built in. The result is 5 musical sections that constantly evolve, never repeating the same combination twice. One of these sound emitters is in the center of the build, the other 4 constantly rotating to enhance the audio proximity effect.
Four additional rotating sound emitters are inside the main structure. These contain 36 solo female voice sounds. When clicked, each emitter will randomly play one sound one time. The overall effects of the combined sound emitters serve as an example of how to create constantly evolving interactive sound environments.
About the Structure and Lighting:
The structure architectural is high fantasy styled, mixing elements from Celtic knot-work decoration and greco-roman architectural elements.
The structure's crystals are created using all SL's advanced material features. Randomly rotating colored projected lighting will cause different refractions on the crystal's surfaces, complementing the evolving moving sound. Set your windlight to night or twilight settings to better enjoy the surrounding sounds and effects.
Thank you from Elicio Ember and Lorin Tone.
-> LAST DAYS !
The event ends on 25th but I just added a new Limited item
New Mesh Skirt !
You have 5 sizes ( XXS, XS, S, M, L) and 4 colors inside (Grey,Black,Teal,Blue)
Demo is available
taxi: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Metropolis/147/146/23
LSP's house, complete with Lumpy Space King's car. Please support the project here: lego.cuusoo.com/ideas/view/38958
Picture the Holidays Day 6: Every Little Thing.
I don't think this is exactly what Tracey was looking for, and I will keep looking for that.
But here, anyway, are details of the project I am working on right now -- creating photo calendars for holiday gifts, using the Shutter Sisters calendar template. I got the printing and cutting figured out yesterday, and the pages look gorgeous. It turns out, however, that the full calendar is too thick for the CD case, and if I take the inside out of the CD case, it slides around. So I'm working on solving that problem now. I'm hoping that if I can iron out the kinks of this project this year, perhaps next year I can sell a few.