View allAll Photos Tagged tiny
As the sun starts to get a bit higher in the sky, it begins to peek over the fence at the end of the day, highlighting tiny leaves that have remained hidden all Winter.
I’ve been having fun making found poetry this past week. It’s like collage only using words. The poem written in the above image reads:
cracked
found in the sand
between you and me
contents emptied
forgotten by now
Each line is from its own source, found as a complete phrase in some of my own creative writing, a recipe from a cook book and an instruction manual.
The doll head in the drawing is real. I found it in the garden two autumns ago while picking brussels sprouts. We live in an old farm house and the back of the property must have once been where a previous family dumped things they no longer wanted. After heavy rains or wind, the soil shifts, revealing household remnants of china and glasss shards, buttons, rusty belt buckles, tarnished coins, tiny medicine bottles, marbles, wheels off toy cars…
The doll’s head was by far the coolest thing I have found yet. I wonder how long she stared at us walking by her before I discovered her. She would have been tiny, her head is about an inch long; she is wearing a 1920’s flapper hat with a blue stripe on it. She has a mischievous smirk, she is not a classic beauty, but she is exquisite in her own right. I call her Betty.
Taken on day two of ballet lessons. The first session lasted for 2 minutes, 39 seconds -- she came out crying with a Kleenex™. This time she made it through the whole class, probably because mom took her -- I guess I'm off the hook?
Moderator:
Jarod Neece, SXSW
Panelists:
Lena Dunham, Director of TINY FURNITURE
Lance Edmands, Editor of TINY FURNITURE
Kyle Martin, Producer of TINY FURNITURE
Alicia Van Couvering, Producer of TINY FURNITURE
Without any local electric noise then is possible to detect thousand of meteors per day. My experiment was to increase the captation as many as possible of those and observe thin and tiny vertical signals. A japanese scientist study the use this meteor detection to mesure the ionosphere and then predict earthquakes!!! This meteors don't leave horizontal trail of air ionization because they have low kinetic energy (low mass, low density or lower velocity). It seems like drops of rain but at 30 times the velocity of bullet! Please look how many captations is possible in just 22 second of recording. Because a damage in the radio receiver this experiment was't finished.
Tiny House done! I don't think I need a sink for the bathroom, they can wash their hands in the shower!
Tiny Tim Missile
The Tiny Tim air-to-ground missile was the largest American rocket in service during World War II. Loaded with TNT, it could destroy coastal defense guns, pill boxes, bridges, tanks, and ships. Tiny Tims sank at least one Japanese ship and seriously damaged another. During the Korean War, one Tiny Tim knocked out a key bridge. Visible in this partial cutaway are simulated solid-propellant sticks and some of the rocket’s 24 exhaust nozzles.
Length:
3.1 m (10 ft 3 in)
Weight, loaded:
565 kg (1,255 lb)
Weight, warhead:
67 kg (148 lb)
Range:
1.6 km (1 mi)
Thrust:
13,600 kg (30,000 lb)
Propellant:
Solid fuel (Ballistite)
Manufacturer:
California Institute of Technology
For more info: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiny_Tim_(rocket)
Tiny Tim is a skinny old man. The kennel card says he slowly warms up and likes affection but for me he just wanted to walk and smell things.
Tiny Tim, Male Terrier Mix
15 lbs, 10 years old
Animal Rescue League
Birdsboro, Pennsylvania
On the same day that I took the orchid photos in the Acadia University conservatory, our photo club conducted its annual trip to the local Nova Scotia Community College campus greenhouse. I'll be posting a few shots over the next few days.
While a lot of the plants were in a very nascent stage, it was still a refreshing break from dull winter scenery and there were plenty of neat things to see. I tried to make use of my tripod for most of the shoot, although these particular photos were mostly taken handheld. I used my Nikkor 105mm macro for pretty much the whole outing, except for a few shots of statues. I'm still having difficulty squeezing out top notch work from it, but I'm getting more accustomed to how it works and the challenges of proper macro photography.
This tiny well built something could be my dream home! Tiny Home BIG PROPERTY! I haven't been around the back but those might be solar panels. it might just be a cool place to park a tractor!
Don Ho of "Tiny Bubbles" fame. I vaguely remember seeing Don Ho on the Lawrenece Welk show growing up. (taken by m, this should be the end of the Hawaii photo uploads.)
It's a crazy tiny lens. My GH1 is smaller than any DSLR on the market, and the lens still looks too small for it.
Tiny portrait. 2 1/4 by 1 3/4 inches.
Written on the back:
"Miniature Photos.
Send your Cabinet Picture and get 12 Miniature Photos for 25 Cents.
Send Postal Note.
When silver is sent it must be wrapped very secure in HEAVY Wrapper and SEALED. In-close 2-cent stamp for re-turn postage.
No tintypes copied.
F.J. Walsh,
No. 353 Perry Street,
Trenton, N. J."
Also written on the back, in pencil so faint I can barely read it:
"Miss Sc y d {?}
Bible Gymnasts"
That's what it looks like!
Found in my friend Jessie's barn in Middlebury, Vermont.
Most of the photographs are are damaged from damp and mold but are still interesting to see.
Using the kimono baby shoe pattern. Possible gift for an expecting friend.
I think I added too many layers (batting for the sole and flannel to give the top shape) because around the seams it's definitely a little bulky.
Also, it's *tiny*! Maybe I just haven't been around babies enough lately but I'm a little skeptical that it will even fit! =)