View allAll Photos Tagged squeegee
With Starfleet cutting back benifits to starfleet vetrans some have taken to the ancient art of the squeegee.
Date: Tue19th July 2011
Camera:Mamiya C330 + tripod
Lens: 80mm f2.8 Sekor
Meter: Paganor Spot
Film: Shanghai GP3 @ 100ASA 6x6
Developer: 6.5ml HC-110 in 500ml
Dev. Time: 15min @ 20deg
Scanner: CanoScan 9000F
Test run of a macro subject taken indoors with two desk lamps - exposed from 1s-9s @ f8-32(normalised to current temps with the Massive dev-chart app on the iPhone). These rolls were the first to be developed using guidance from www.rogerandfrances.com with their excellent advice on reduing fixing time with the spot-test (now down to 2-min fix) and using COLD water for washing to prevent emulsion scratching on final squeegee.
30s presoak in COLD tap-water, NO distilled water as Stourport tapwater is just fine (although remembering Roger & Francis advice to use filtered water for final wash when I move to hard-water Malvern). No stop-bath, just swill out twice with cold tap-water.
Spadina and Adelaide, Toronto. View from the 4th floor mentioned in the two previous shots. This guy could move... he soaped and squeegeed in record time. All together now: "He works hard for the money... so hard for it honey. He works hard for the money so you better treat him right!"
Squeegee's feeling a lot better now. He's enduring daily antibiotic shots from the vet, and hating every minute of it, but it's necessary. Please keep the thoughts and prayers going for my poor, sick kitty! Thanks, Chris
First color red, bloody red, flooded in the screen and ready to print (pull).
"Flooding' is a lighter pressure pass of ink with a squeegee across the stencil and is the way to get enough ink across the screen to fill the stencil and allow for one perfect print pull with the squeegee.
This photo is released under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. If you'd like to use this photo, feel free to do so, but please give credits to the Fantastic Services official website and not to this Flickr account.
They don't usually lay together like this, and when they do, you will almost always see Barrymore and Tigger bookending Squeegee, because they don't get along. You can see them glaring at each other while Squeegee just rests!
Here are some images of my 1st attempt to process C41 at home with my JoboLift CPE2 and Rollei chemistry. 2 rolls of 35mm, Ektar 100 and the new Portra 400. The Ektar got scanned at a lower res and accidently had Grain Compensation enabled so they look a little funny at full size.
I loved processing at home! The process was quick and fairly painless. Next month I'll be picking up some B+W chemistry and doing that next.
A couple of things that I learned:
Get a thermometer that clips to the tank.
Stick to one set of instructions.
Get a film squeegee.
Tucson, Arizona USA
Milagro Cohousing
photo by Cathy Mullan
Ratany (krameria) photosynthesize, but they also parasitize the roots of other plants (esp. Triangleleaf Bursage and Creosote Bush) (partial parasite). Ratany offer their bee pollinators oil instead of nectar. The oil bees (Centris) acquire nectar from other plants, but scrape off the oil from ratany to combine with pollen from other plants to feed their larvae.
wc.pima.edu/Bfiero/tucsonecology/plants/shrubs_whra.htm
The two common species in our region, K. grayi and K. erecta, are extremely similar in general appearance.
Ratanys are partial parasites. They have chlorophyll and photosynthesize, but their roots invade those of other plants to usurp nutrients. Nearly every fruit is infested with a tiny moth larva that eats the developing seed, and fruits with viable seeds are not common. Nothing is known about the moth’s life cycle; it may even be an unnamed species.
Ratany is among the small number of plants with flowers that produce oil instead of nectar as a food reward. Bees in the genus Centris pollinate it. Oil bees have special squeegee-like hind legs specially adapted for scraping up the oil. These bees also feed on nectar at other flowers; they provision their nests with the oil as larval food. In our region flowers of plants in the family Malpighiaceae (e.g., Janusia, Mascagnia) also produce oil.
Cósahui is sold all over Mexico as a major medicinal plant. The O’odham use the roots for a red dye in basketmaking.
www.desertmuseum.org/books/nhsd_krameraceae.php
DSC01647_2
He was so quick that it took several shots to get the head of his squeegee in the photo.
(Do you think that this place only serves Lyons China tea?)
“Basic Research” (1991). MoMA had a wall of these large, black textural pieces. She slathered oil onto a canvas laid on the floor and squeegeed it off, the way you would make a monoprint.
Installation view of Isa Genzken retrospective
Museum of Modern Art, New York
November 23, 2013 - March 10, 2014
One of the few canvas to canvas collages I've ever done. the central black diamond with red squeegeed gel is glued to the larger square diamond.
It was sunny with showers today and loads of skaters were about for Marc Churchills birthday. Luckily everytime it rained or hailed it wasn't for too long and Gavin has a squeegee so it got dried up fast. So actually got a full day session in.
Se quita el papel con agua y una la ayuda de una espátula.
Remove the paper using water and a squeegee.
...out the peppery goodness
Add chipotles, garlic cloves, and New Mexico chile pulp to blender, with enough of the liquid to make smooth sauce.
The New Mexico chiles have a tough, celluloid-like skin (that you don't want to eat!) The early Pueblo Indians infused this skin with ingredients to make a type of film for their early pin-hole cameras. Contributed a soft, red-ish hue to their photos. (Do I need to say J/K?!)
Daniel Heath's beautiful wallpapers look so perfectly crisp and clean when you see them hanging in strips (like the art deco design behind him in the photograph). But each length has been meticulously screen-printed by hand - you can see the process in the photograph, taking during Daniel's demo at the Top Drawer trade show at Olympia.
Daniel prints alternate block of pattern, lets them dry thoroughly, and then comes back to fill in the gaps - this gives a more even effect, he explained. First Daniel inks the screen, with a thick line of colour. Then he uses the squeegee to pull the colour across the screen, pushing it through onto the paper. A second pass of the squeegee complete the application, Every so often the screen has to be washed as ink builds up at the back. A layer of metallic copper will be applied later. The pattern you can see is based on building details in New York, observed during a trip to fulfil a commission,
The pattern at the back is inspired by London's art deco buildings, in particular the old Hoover Building in Perivale.
Daniel is a graduate of the Royal College of Art, and set up his studio in 2006. He prints onto many different surfaces, including salvaged slate and timbers.
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Houston Texas I never witness a person this cheap to wash their whole truck with a gas station window squeegee 2010
Front entrance to The Summit Siliwangi Hotel during a rain storm. Hotel worker is using a squeegee to remove water from the polished stone pavement.
Bandung, West Java. Early April 2019.
A Clean Streak provides top-rated window cleaning in Anacortes, WA. We offer pressure washing, window cleaning, roof cleaning, and more! acleanstreak.com/window-cleaning-anacortes-wa/
Photo by: Karen Yeh,
Monterey Bay Aquarium, More details on Wcities.com. This is one of the best designed aquariums going. A unique feature is the two-story tank, home to a kelp forest in which swim sunfish, sharks, and the occasional diver tasked with squeegeeing the algae off the tank walls. Sand dabs are displayed in shelf-like tanks ideally suited to the flat fish, and a school of sardines swim in an endless circle in their cylindrical tank home. If you want to interact with some aquatic dwellers, you're invited to pet the bat rays (oddly velvet-like). The jellyfish display shows that they are like something from another planet.
I'm on squeegee duty while my colleague fills the tank at a filling station somewhere outside Amsterdam, The Netherlands.