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Technique not recommended: hand held one hand; cordless phone other hand while talking to flickr member...
The Suggs Technique is a sort of: "bollocks to CAD, bollocks to measuring - let's make it completely in cardboard first then cut metal" method of design engineering. It's very effective.
It can also be very embarrassing when, two weeks into your new job, the manager calls everyone - and I do mean everyone, engineers and technicians alike - into the workshop to show them all your cardboard creation before announcing:
"This is what I want - some clear thinking. Well done [Suggs]."
This is the resultant duotone. It is a pure duotone, and has only one color in the entire picture -- it could be printed using a single ink.
It's just one step away from being a true colorization, but I think it was inherently more interesting being a pure duotone.
NCPTT held the Advanced Cemetery Conservation Techniques workshop in the American Cemtery in Natchitoches, La., on July 10-14, 2006. The hands-on workshop allowed participants to work in small groups systematically on a complex and multi-stage monument repair.The workshop covered the topics of stone monument cleaning, adhesive repair, color matched fills, historic lime stucco, lime mortar brick masonry and lime wash.
The National Park Service’s National Center for Preservation Technology and Training protects America’s historic legacy by equipping professionals in the field of preservation with progressive technology-based research and training. Since its founding in 1994, NCPTT has awarded over $7 million in grants for research that fulfills its mission of advancing the use of science and technology in the field of historic preservation. Working in the fields of archeology, architecture, landscape architecture and materials conservation, the Center accomplishes its mission through training, education, research, technology transfer and partnerships.
Students study the scene after a car was blown up as part of the Basic Post Blast Investigative Techniques class, taught by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms & Explosives ATF NCETR at Redstone Arsenal on Thursday, Dec. 5. Three cars were blown up in controlled explosions so students could study the scene and find evidence after the explosion. (Eric Schultz / The Redstone Rocket)
The National STEM Guitar Project, in partnership with NSF Advanced Technological Education (ATE) Centers with funding provided through a grant from The National Science Foundation (#1304405), hosts innovative Guitar Building Institutes around the United States. The 5-day institutes, combined with additional instructional activities comprising 80 hours, provide faculty training on science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) for middle, high school, and post-secondary faculty. The institutes present and teach participants hands-on, applied learning techniques to help engage students and spark excitement for learning STEM subject matter.
Nationwide, there are increasing concerns from businesses about the supply of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics trained workers. Science and math test scores in the U.S. are among the lowest around the world.
The goal and objective of the STEM Guitar Building Institutes is to showcase a new way to present learning for students with applied methods.