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Yarn: Patons Kroy Socks in Whitecap, Knit Picks Palette in color #6865 Green, Red Heart Heart & Sole in #3012 Black, and polyfil
Needle Size: US 0/2mm
Pattern: Teeny Tiny Mochimochi Snowmen
Recipient: Me
Completed: 4 December 2011
L-R: Lisa Renee Pitts, Dana Green, and Brian Michael Smith in Tiny Beautiful Things at The Armory.
Photo by Patrick Weishampel/blankeye.tv/Courtesy of Portland Center Stage at The Armory
Tiny Beautiful Things
Based on the book by Cheryl Strayed
Adapted by Nia Vardalos
Co-conceived by Marshall Heyman, Thomas Kail and Nia Vardalos
Directed by Rose Riordan
Scenic Designer Megan Wilkerson
Costume Designer Jacqueline Firkins
Lighting Designer Kristeen Crosser
Sound Designer Casi Pacilio
Stage Manager Janine Vanderhoff
Production Assistant Sarah Stark
February 23 — March 31, 2019
On the U.S. Bank Main Stage
A celebration of the simple beauty of being human, this funny and deeply touching exploration of resilience is based on Cheryl Strayed’s (Wild) journey as the beloved anonymous advice columnist for “Dear Sugar.” Over the years, thousands of people turned to Sugar for words of wisdom, compassion and hope. At first unsure of herself, Sugar found a way to weave her own life experiences together with the deep yearning and heartrending questions from her readers. Brilliantly adapted for the stage by Nia Vardalos, the Academy Award-nominated writer of My Big Fat Greek Wedding.
I've been working again on the dollhouse and doing all the touch ups and tiny details of painting (outside only) and I can hardly wait for this to be done - maybe tomorrow then we can shingle the roof - I really want to have this completed on the outside this year and then next year work on inside cause there is just to much work to complete inside before Christmas decorating so I'm working till my hands give out!!!
Tiny houses less than 1" wide made of thin cardboard. Painted and covered with extra fine crystal glitter. My own tiny putz houses for my mini tree. These could go on an Easter tree also. Jan. 2016.
What started with feeding a few nuts every day turned into a bond of trust.
I took this picture while standing right next to the squirrel with my big zoom lens, and yet she trusts me so much that she didn't even move away at all ✨
Tiny Mycena mushrooms were carpeting a log in our neighborhood park. These were growing on a more or less vertical surface, so I made a z-stack of six exposures @ f10 to get all of the caps in focus. Canon 7D, 100mm macro. Actual cap diameter 3-5 mm.
Use of this image on websites, blogs, magazines, calendars or any other forms of media without the expressed permission of the photographer is illegal.
© Lyubov Love Photography. All rights reserved.
What's new on the Excel Blender model front then? Well, I've updated... the front. Yes, I have quite literally made updates on the Excel front.
Working from the top down, if you look (very) closely you can see the glass part for the destination blind area is marked out; it is in fact inset from the 'metal' part by a very tiny amount because I don't think the glass and metal would be exactly flush in real life. Above are the two upper marker lights which have also been added in 3 dimensions! The whole destination blind box area is ever so slightly over-scaled and comes a few inches further down the windscreen than it does in real life, but like I've said before this is not going to be millimetre perfect because I'm not that skilled at Blender, but so long as it looks like an Excel and doesn't have any big problems then I'm pleased.
Moving down to the windscreen itself, I've added the rubber gasket that runs around its edge so now you can see its exact position, as up until now I had its shape cut with the knife tool but now I've added and extruded the rubber part it's visible in the 3d render.
For now the dash panel and headlights have remained as they were before, but the angle between the flat dash panel/lights part and the front bumper has been tweaked, so that it slopes more and the upper edge of the bumper has a smoother join to its front edge.
The final addition for now is the extra protruding lip stuck on the front of the bumper, which features on some Excels and not others. I previously said this was going to be separate object so that when the time comes I can make it a setvar in OMSI (assuming that's how it works), and that's exactly what I've done, so it's not part of the same model as the main body.
In fact neither is the registration plate area for that matter - I made it its own box so it stuck out lower down and then cut the bumper around its top edge with one of the modifiers (boolean difference I think..?)
The reg plate panel I can group in with the main body when I need to but the bumper lip should be kept as a different object. At least that's how I think it should work anyway!
So, what next? I'm actually running out of things to do on the body that require the mirroring on both sides, so I'm thinking of applying the modifier to allow me to edit each side separately and add things like the door aperture, emergency exit, fuel filler and engine grille. Of course I might run into other difficulties before I can do that since I'm sort of learning by doing, plus I think I might have made a mistake with the area I've left for the side windows, so it's all busy and fun in the world of Optare Excel modelling.
(Also, work on this is going wayyyy better than how work on the Omnidekka ever went)