View allAll Photos Tagged scaling
Scale: 1:2
Producer: Kaiyodo (Dinotales 2)
Sculptor: Eiichiro Matsumoto
Released: 2001
Time: Early Devonian
dinotoyblog.com/forum/index.php?topic=3390.msg178271;topi...
Mixed Media HO Scale model of Dominion of Canada as she was loaded to be shipped from Montreal to England in 2012 for Restoration. Presentation at Hindsight 20/20 13.0 on April 16/2022 and more on my blog: sjgardiner.wordpress.com/2017/05/22/dominion-of-canada-sh...
CN M338 tops the grade at Scales Mound Illinois
Canadian National Railway
Dubuque Subdivision
Scales Mound IL
D7A_2782ef
Found at Wazee Lake Recreation Area in west central Wisconsin. Jackson County, Wisconsin, USA.
Found on oak sapling in oak/pine barrens habitat. There are a few oak saplings at this site infested with these scales.
Not familiar with the amount of damage these scales do. Could all that damage on the branch be due to this single scale? Or maybe some of the damage is from secondary fungal infection (see this page for more info)?
Single exposure, uncropped, handheld, in situ. Canon MT-26EX flash unit, Ian McConnachie and plastic cup diffuser.
'Take Courage' , a 'Police Signal', tramlines, STL bus, Austin Devon, and a 'sandwich board man'.
1/76 scale OO gauge London tramway layout Kennington Cross, on exhibition at the Crewe Heritage Centre, 8/9th June 2019.
I just had to stop on may way home from work to capture this phenomena. New snow on the thin ice at a very gray evening.
ODC-Black
I traded in my very old digital weight scale for this new one, it's great. I figured I'd have gained some weight since I haven't been to the gym since March...nope, I'm still the same as I was then. Yay!
Scale Hall railway station, Lancaster looking east towards Lancaster. Early October 1975
Photograph copyright: Ian 10B.
Four upright scales. The two on the left are English by Salter; the larger one (no. 28) weighs up to 28 lb and belonged to my grandmother. The small one (no. 11D) only weighs up to 8 oz in 2 dram increments; 16 drams to the ounce.
The two on the right I assume to be German and early 20th century, the cream-coloured one is by Krups; both have kilogram and pound measurements, although the 'Pfund' is the German version which is half a kilogram. I recall that when I was young the Pfund was is common use in Germany when I was sent to do shopping, but I'm not sure its use is as popular now.
For Weekly Scavenger Hunt
The World Through My Eyes : Scale
Detail from the old, Swedish scale I inherited after my grandmother.