View allAll Photos Tagged scaleability
Taken for the Fazed photo challenge, "Scale".
I've never played with tilt shift (or rather, fake tilt shift) so with a topic like "scale" there was certainly some scope for investigation...
This is the view from my window in work, at an eternally busy wee junction. I can imagine someone wanting to build a scale model of the street - it's one of the best streets in Glasgow and has some of the most wonderful buildings, old and new. I just hope that if someone did build a scale model, they'd do a better job of fixing the potholes...!
Scaled Dove - Columbina squammata ridgwayi - Чешуйчатая земляная горлица
Malecon De Puerto Lopez, Meta Department, Colombia, 02/22/2022
Karl Womack's model aircraft are showcased during this annual event. Featured at www.ModelAviation.com/sha2014
“Incognito” was my very first Gene doll, my very first 1/4 scale doll, my very first repaint of that scale. Yeah, that last one is a bit of a tragic story. The nail polish remover I used to remove the paint, my sloppy paint job, stained the skin around her eyes. I hope to remove her paint soon and give her a better face (eventually).
I dug out some clothes for her, which I was glad to see fit her well. All my Gene clothing is packed away, and there aren’t many casual outfits in my collection of 1:4 doll stuff. The top came from a Ken doll, Generation Girl Blaine (first version). The skirt was handsewn by me from an old lace bra and dark-gray tights (which made the lining).
Balloon rides in Hangar One at NAS Moffett Field Air Show 1989
Hangar One covers 8 acres at Moffett Field near Mountain View, California in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Constructed as part of a US Navy program for a “lighter-than-air” reconnaissance. Hangar One was one of the largest freestanding structures in the world at the time of its completion. The scale of the hangar was so vast that fog occasionally formed near the ceiling.
NAS Sunnyvale was renamed in 1935 after the death of Admiral William A. Moffett, who was credited with the airfield’s creation. Originally planned to house the USS Macon, a 6.5 million-cubic-foot dirigible powered by eight engines as well as other associated aircraft, after the Macon crashed off the coast of California during a 1935 training mission, the hangar housed smaller blimps and surveillance aircraft.
Location: Santa Clara County, near Mountain View and Sunnyvale, California, USA
Built: 1933
Architect: Dr. Karl Arnstein and Wilbur Watson Associates Architects and Engineers
Area: 8 acres (32,000 m2)
Designated CP: February 24, 1994
Quiet now with most of its locos busy around Ashdown Junction. One of the fine layouts at Brighton Modelworld 09