View allAll Photos Tagged tooling
Punches with guide pins are used to mallet textured sheet metal through a series of steel dies while tooling sits on a stand-off ring (not shown)
I thought the tool fair would be kind of small; Adam and his friend, Brian, thought it would be huge (like Chicago's McCormick Place huge). I chose not to get my hopes up and instead I was pretty pleasantly surprised by the size!
A fan and a bamboo blower. The bamboo blower is fully open on the other end. The side you see pictured has a tiny hole in the middle to accelerate the stream of air. The latter was very useful in keeping the fire hot.
Tools for Yakiniku
Sunday, May 20, 2007
Extra sealing on these as they were for a hairdresser who is like to have them in water a lot of the time
At this month's Open MAKE: Tools event, visitors were invited to explore their own creativity with our four Featured Makers from around the Bay Area, who shared their art, ingenuity, and techniques.
Guests made needle-felted creatures with Moxie, created three-dimensional shapes by sewing sheets of fabric together with Judy Castro, fused plastic with clothes irons, used sewing needles and conductive thread to make circuits embedded in bracelets and badges, and used motors and other tools to take Light Painting to a whole new level.
Photo by Gayle Laird
© Exploratorium, www.exploratorium.edu
Drawn for PPPP blog theme "favorite tool" at lynnnonameblog.blogspot.com/2016/01/favorite-tool-mouline...
Not really sure how old this lathe is - apparently Atlas began manufacturing this model 1936. The serial number stamped on the bed is 24117.
A nice, almost complete, Heyco tool set I picked up on eBay for very little cash. Two of the spanners are not original but I have ordered the correct ones. Still looking to replace the non original screwdriver and the missing wire brush.
At this month's Open MAKE: Tools event, visitors were invited to explore their own creativity with our four Featured Makers from around the Bay Area, who shared their art, ingenuity, and techniques.
Guests made needle-felted creatures with Moxie, created three-dimensional shapes by sewing sheets of fabric together with Judy Castro, fused plastic with clothes irons, used sewing needles and conductive thread to make circuits embedded in bracelets and badges, and used motors and other tools to take Light Painting to a whole new level.
Photo by Gayle Laird
© Exploratorium, www.exploratorium.edu
A few antique Iron & Wood Garden Tools displayed in the roof rafters of the National Trust Shop at Lytes Cary Manor in Somerset. (A Hoe, A Scythe and a Sickle)
I reworked this with Lightroom and was able to make it come up quite nicely. Shot in late 2006 at Wembley Arena, London, UK
At this month's Open MAKE: Tools event, visitors were invited to explore their own creativity with our four Featured Makers from around the Bay Area, who shared their art, ingenuity, and techniques.
Guests made needle-felted creatures with Moxie, created three-dimensional shapes by sewing sheets of fabric together with Judy Castro, fused plastic with clothes irons, used sewing needles and conductive thread to make circuits embedded in bracelets and badges, and used motors and other tools to take Light Painting to a whole new level.
Photo by Gayle Laird
© Exploratorium, www.exploratorium.edu
This is how I store all those little tool, pens, pencils, seam rippers, tweezers, punches, etc, etc, etc!! The base is a lazy susan that I got at the thrift shop for a quarter! Of course, I had to paint my flower pots in bright colors, cuz' that's how I roll! LOL
The O2
London, UK
STRICT NO PHOTO POLICY, EXCEPT USING MOBILE PHONES DURING THE LAST SONG
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tool_(band)
Please visit and like my Facebook page: www.facebook.com/hgaborfoto
Can anyone identify what industry these fellas are involved in by the tools they are holding? Do you know what the tools are?
Tools and hacked parts
Workshop: "Meet the Arduino Microcontroller"
Museum Computer Network
MCN conference, Atlanta
November 2011
Tool Cases make any job faster and much easier. From the most basic to rugged, military ones, API can produce custom and standard tool cases so your instruments are always easy to locate and retrieve at a moment’s notice. This means your instruments will always be close at hand, and you will always know when something is missing from your tool case.
In February 2011, I caught up with Danish urban artist Morten Andersen in his studio in Berlin.
For more about Morten and photos of other urban artists in action, visit www.urbanart-photography.eu
P1020185
Mfd. by Plomb Tool Company, made in U.S.A.
3/8" drive speeder handle WF-23. Overall length 16.5 inch.
Plomb produced the WF series of tools for a major government contract during the period from 1942 to 1945.
Detail: www.flickr.com/photos/100761653@N07/19614411548/in/photol...