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350 Scratchers celebrated Scratch's 5th birthday at MIT's Scratch Day event on Saturday, May 19, 2012.
350 Scratchers celebrated Scratch's 5th birthday at MIT's Scratch Day event on Saturday, May 19, 2012.
Close to Nosferatu 2.0 graffitti (next pic to come) an empty white-wall displays this rainbow-colourful repetitive prohibition: RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE SPONSORING COMPANY.
Among clonic printed groups, RASKA (SCRATCH) suggest a hidden message: THE LABOR REFORM KILLS.
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Contigüo al graffitti de Nosferatu 2.0 (foto siguiente) una vacía pared blanca despliega esta repetitiva y colorida prohibición arco-iris: RESPONSABLE LA EMPRESA ANUNCIADORA.
Entre los grupos clónicos impresos, RASKA (Rasca) sugiere un mensaje escondido: LA REFORMA LABORAL MATA
350 Scratchers celebrated Scratch's 5th birthday at MIT's Scratch Day event on Saturday, May 19, 2012.
Developed an old roll of film recently. If memory serves me correct, this was the wall of an abandoned old house somewhere between Ceres and Citrusdal.
350 Scratchers celebrated Scratch's 5th birthday at MIT's Scratch Day event on Saturday, May 19, 2012.
Project: Textures 3/7, Project 365/2011
This is shot from my working table, a little modified with levels, multiply blending, added noise,...
Texture is free to use, just credit me with a link back to this texture, please.
(public display, Drake Well Museum, Titusville, Pennsylvania, USA)
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From museum signage:
PENNSYLVANIA CRUDE: STILL THE BEST
“Seneca Oil” is one of the purest crudes known. It brings some of the highest prices on the worldwide market. Pennsylvania crude is paraffin-based. Early wells that mysteriously stopped flowing were often clogged with wax. The paraffin base and lack of impurities make Pennsylvania oil ideal for use as a lubricant and motor oil.
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From museum signage:
One of the earliest tools designed to maintain production, was the Scratcher used to keep the face of the oil sand free of paraffin [wax] which is found in Pennsylvania crude oil. It was used like a bottle brush, and was soon replaced with chemical or explosive techniques for maintaining wells.
I really hate cleaning it myself since I see all of the scratches and rock dings on the hood. I got some touch-up paint and started to fill them in. Once I put a few coats down and then some clear coats and then some wax and some buffing, it might look ok once again.
Idiots have scratched the heck out of the front window upstairs on a double decker transit bus, ruining the view for everyone else.
On the final day of Scratch Camp, students used webcams as inputs for Scratch to capture motion and color from the camera to control their programs. Students also had an opportunity to use a Microsoft Kinect as a Scratch input.
This is not my texture, I am not trying to claim credit or redistribute it for profit. I just simply CAN NOT find it here on Flickr anymore. If anyone can lay claim to it and/or point me to the original link to this texture, I will gladly delete this copy. It's just such a great texture, I hate to see it gone.
You can download the fullsized image here:
350 Scratchers celebrated Scratch's 5th birthday at MIT's Scratch Day event on Saturday, May 19, 2012.
MaMa Clarinet is an homemade (DIY) clarinet that plays music with Scratch via Makey Makey board / é un clarinetto autocostruito che funziona con il software Scratch attraverso la scheda Makey Makey
ScratchEd hosts monthly meetups at MIT where educators gather informally to learn and share about Scratch.
Find out what happened at the April 2014 Scratch Educator Meetup at MIT - bit.ly/apr2014-scratch-meetup
Scratch Educator Meetups take place once a month at MIT. Check out our events page for more info - scratched.media.mit.edu/events
scratch-ed.org
scratch |skra ch | verb 1 [ trans. ] score or mark the surface of (something) with a sharp or pointed object.
350 Scratchers celebrated Scratch's 5th birthday at MIT's Scratch Day event on Saturday, May 19, 2012.
350 Scratchers celebrated Scratch's 5th birthday at MIT's Scratch Day event on Saturday, May 19, 2012.
Day Two of Scratch Camp was spent learning to use Lego WeDo motors and sensors to raise and lower helium balloons, and some students used their Makey Makey controllers to make the balloon motion even more interactive.
Mikesch admiring Kimba's art work... I had placed a couple of styrofoam boards against the walls around the litter boxes in the basement to protect the walls from splatter. Not such a great idea! Kimba quickly figured out he could scratch on them and cover the litter with little styrofoam bits. Now the cats all have styrofoam clinging to their fur and are spreading it throughout the house.