View allAll Photos Tagged technique
Here is a new set of LEGO ideas and techniques, made with LDD
I'm sure you'll find a use to this idea
I tried to make the explanation readable thanks to the colors as if we had a tutorial
Do not forget to watch the album with all the right techniques on your right =>
Find all my creations on Flickr group « News LEGO Techniques ».
This Flickr group includes:
- Ideas for new LEGO pieces
- Techniques for assembling bricks
- Tutorials for making accessories, objects, etc.
Lasso technique with steel wool on the river Chelmer
Visit Essex Massive Studio Location Meets group for more location visits and photos from the members
please see my like page www.facebook.com/edthelightmonkey for more
Da ich es liebe, Techniken zu kombinieren, finden sich bei diesen Ohrringen Einflüsse von verschiedenen Tutorials, z. B. von Rebecca Watkins und Nikolina Otrzan.
As I love to combine different tutorials, these earrings are influenced by Rebecca Watkins and Nikolina Otrzan.
Favorite technique with individuals: There's something magical about the way the paint goes onto the paper;
a favorite technique is watercolor over a light pencil sketch.
Kay Fox for SICA
Southern Indiana Center for the Arts (SICA)
Bread kneading technique I learnt at the Paul baking course and that I use for my sourdough ever since
MUNICH/GERMANY - JANUARY, 22: Dara Khosrowshahi (Uber, r.) in conversation with Tanit Koch (BILD) on stage during the DLD18 (Digital-Life-Design) Conference at the Alte Bayerische Staatsbank on January 22th, 2018 in Munich, Germany (Photo: picture alliance / Andreas Gebert) | Verwendung weltweit
Tower Climbing Safety and Rescue at the Sabana Field Research Station, Luquillo, Puerto Rico.
Photo Credit: María M. Rivera Costa/IITF
Here is a new set of LEGO ideas and techniques, made with LDD
I'm sure you'll find a use to this idea
I tried to make the explanation readable thanks to the colors as if we had a tutorial
Do not forget to watch the album with all the right techniques on your right =>
Find all my creations on Flickr group « News LEGO Techniques ».
This Flickr group includes:
- Ideas for new LEGO pieces
- Techniques for assembling bricks
- Tutorials for making accessories, objects, etc.
BAGHDAD – Pvt. Andrew Bowles (left) and his comrade, Pvt. Gabriel Fain, both assigned to 501st Military Police Company, Division Special Troops Battalion, 1st Armored Division, demonstrate a search technique learned during training leading up to their first mission outside Camp Liberty. The young Soldiers are military policemen who claim they set the standard. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Samantha Beuterbaugh, 366th MPAD, USD-C)
Stunning work from this independent school in Edinburgh. Superb use of advanced graphics techniques. Very impressive folio work and pupil displays. Jordanhill pupils will learn a lot from the work shown here.
Experiment where I try some of the Shallow Depth of Field techniques in the manner of David Burnett's photography using a Speed Graphic camera of the Hurricane Katrina devastation.
Created by Ridgewood Elementary School, Winterville, NC
Artists: Zell's class
Title: Mrs. Zell's Cape Lookout Collaborative
Teacher: Kim Lunde
Theme: Conservation
Materials and techniques: Pencil, oil pastel, and tempera water color.
Did you enjoy this project? Very much.
About: Preserving the nature of Cape Lookout and North Carolina's natural treasures.
Learn more about IFC Projects at www.ifcprojects.com
Title: Dance
Technique: pastel and ink
Artist: Terri Prall - テリ
Donation Artwork for 'Art Bra Event' in Sacramento, CA. All proceeds from auction of artworks for event go toward breast cancer awareness and services in the Sacramento, CA area.
Date:
Brand: Chesterfield
Manipulation Technique: Using Light/Fresh as a Metaphor for Healthfulness
For more information on BehindTheSmoke, please visit www.behindthesmoke.com/.
Please visit tobacco.stanford.edu for an extensive collection of tobacco advertisements.
MUNICH/GERMANY - JANUARY, 22: Aleksandr Yampolskiy (SecurityScorecard) speaks on stage during the DLD18 (Digital-Life-Design) Conference at the Alte Bayerische Staatsbank on January 22th, 2018 in Munich, Germany (Photo: picture alliance / Andreas Gebert) | Verwendung weltweit
crispy breast + braised leg terrine + chickpea glaze + asparagus
It reminded me of the brilliant textural contrasts I first experienced at Nuno Mendes' Bacchus back in 2008. The Red Mullet Toast (www.flickr.com/photos/sifu_renka/2613555626/in/set-721576...) showcased a well cooked piece of tender red mullet shielded by a whisper thin but crisp toast. Here it was the same, only on all four sides of a shredded confit duck terrine. Besides providing interesting texture, the toast also helped to lighten the supple rich confit, and the uncutous rich jus that provided enough seasoning to the terrine.
This was only one half of the dish, and it isn't something (the effort used to make this simple looking component) that's normally found on the menus in town. I was pleased as punch to re-encounter this technique. It really is quite delightful. An epiphany at the time when I had it at Bacchus.
Here is a new set of LEGO ideas and techniques, made with LDD
I'm sure you'll find a use to this idea
I tried to make the explanation readable thanks to the colors as if we had a tutorial
Do not forget to watch the album with all the right techniques on your right =>
Find all my creations on Flickr group « News LEGO Techniques ».
This Flickr group includes:
- Ideas for new LEGO pieces
- Techniques for assembling bricks
- Tutorials for making accessories, objects, etc.
MUNICH/GERMANY - JANUARY, 22: (l-r) Reinhard Ploss (Infineon) and Mariya Gabriel (European Commission), take part in a panel discussion on stage during the DLD18 (Digital-Life-Design) Conference at the Alte Bayerische Staatsbank on January 22th, 2018 in Munich, Germany (Photo: picture alliance / Andreas Gebert) | Verwendung weltweit
MUNICH/GERMANY - JANUARY 15: Mansour Abu Rashid (Amman Center for Peace and Development) speaks during a panel discussion of the DLD17 (Digital-Life-Design) Conference at the Alte Bayerische Staatsbank on January 15, 2017 in Munich, Germany.
DLD is Europe's big innovation conference on Digital-Life-Design.
(Photo: picture alliance / Andreas Gebert) | Verwendung weltweit
Just before I went to sleep last night I had an idea. I don't think this has done before but let m know if it has. I was trying to think of a good way to put a minifig's arm sideways. Here you see some of my space marines running from... something. One of them chose to fire s few shots off. He looked back and fired with one arm. Now comes my technique. Take a BA monopod and clip it onto a minifig arm. Then take the round end of the monopod and stick it in the arm socket. The arm moves around a bit but you should be able to pose it long enough to take a picture at least.
This is a shot where you change the zoom after you start taking a long exposure image. I wouldn't want every image to look like this...but once in a while...
As promised. Similar shot as the last one, just a faster shutter speed. Same black card technique used and minimal processing done.
Andreas Bernhard Lyonel Feininger (27 December 1906 - 18 February 1999) was a German American photographer, and writer on photographic technique, noted for his dynamic black-and-white scenes of Manhattan and studies of the structure of natural objects.
Feininger was born in Paris, France, to an American family of German origin. His father, painter Lyonel Feininger, was born in New York City, in 1871.[1] His great-grandfather emigrated from Durlach, Baden, in Germany, to the United States in 1848. His younger brother was the artist T. Lux Feininger (1910-2011). [2]
Feininger grew up and was educated as an architect in Germany, where his father painted and taught at Staatliches Bauhaus. In 1936, he gave up architecture itself, moved to Sweden, and focused on photography. In advance of World War II, in 1939, Feininger immigrated to the U.S. where he established himself as a freelance photographer and in 1943 joined the staff of Life magazine, an association that lasted until 1962.
Feininger became famous for his photographs of New York. Science and nature, as seen in bones, shells, plants and minerals, were other frequent subjects, but rarely did he photograph people or make portraits. Feininger wrote comprehensive manuals about photography, of which the best known is The Complete Photographer. In the introduction to one of Feininger's books of photographs, Ralph Hattersley described him as "one of the great architects who helped create photography as we know it today." In 1966, the American Society of Media Photographers (ASMP) awarded Feininger its highest distinction, the Robert Leavitt Award. In 1991, the International Center of Photography awarded Feininger the Infinity Lifetime Achievement Award.
Today, Feininger's photographs are in the permanent collections of the Center for Creative Photography, Museum of Modern Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art, National Gallery of Art, London's Victoria and Albert Museum, and the George Eastman House in Rochester, New York.
A quick "pony", pulled up top, and it's ready to give. If your company has a color scheme, choose some fun ribbons that coordinate, mixing and matching patterns and widths. Add a few sparkles and your customers will FLIP!
Place of origin:
ulm (probably, made)
Date:
ca. 1480-1490 (made)
Artist/Maker:
Unknown
Materials and Techniques:
Hand carved limewood
Museum number:
A.26-1913
Gallery location:
Medieval & Renaissance, Room 50b, The Paul and Jill Ruddock Gallery, case FS, shelf NR PILLAR
This is a figure of St. George in limewood, and carved from one piece of wood. It originally formed part of the central panel of an altarpiece. St George was a saint from the East, but as the result of the crusades he became popular throughout Europe. Having rescued a princess by slaying a dragon, he personified the ideals of chivalry and was often depicted with the tamed or dead beast beside him.
St. George stands on an irregular base wearing elaborate armour. His raised right hand holds a tournament lance and his left hand is clasped around the turned neck of the dragon. It would have been fully painted, but has subsequently been stripped of its colouring with the exception of flesh tone in the face, traces of black colour indicating the pupils, red traces in the mouth, ear, and the wound of the dragon, and green pigments on the base. The head of the lance is missing and the index finger of the right hand is a later replacement. The back of the body has been hollowed out and the reverse of the base is flat.
Story: This is some work I’ve done for Dr. Gregg Miller. He’s a talented MD who’s board certified in internal medicine, critical care medicine and nephrology. Much of his work involves dialysis vascular access care. Since this past summer he’s commissioned me to create these diagrams displaying various procedures he performs on his patients in order to submit them to various journals to share his techniques with other doctors.
Tools: Photoshop, pen and pencil (for various sketches), references including my very own angioplasty balloon given to me by Dr. Miller