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I was messing around trying to see if I could make a perfect geometric shape using all my magnets when I noticed that Cale's 12-gonal antiprism guide used 120 magnets per pentagonal subunit. I just added a pentagon and single ball stellation to each subunit to give it the look of an icosahedron, and put ti together. It's sitting in a bucket of dry ice lit up by L.E.D's
I used 1512 balls.
My variation of the square one.
Same rectangle as this triangular box of mine, but the technique is completely different.
Triangles and circles... (Stairs at a playground)
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This picture was taken and edited with the Iphone for the Iphone365 project and for the Flickr group Our Daily Challenge ODC- Triangular .
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Iphone apps used:
Iris Photo Suite
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Dozens of locomotives have passed beneath Lynch 3 over the years, with the framing and such sporting various paint schemes and logos in the past, such as the 3194 and the 1827. However, this is the first time that the "Monon" lettering has been seen here.
In the Foro Triangulare: "M. CLAUDIO C F MARCELLO / PATRONO" = "To Marcus Claudius Marcellus, son of Gaius, patron." Marcellus was nephew and son-in-law to Augustus, and his presumptive heir before he died.
I thought it was neat how there was a triangular shaped cloud in the middle of the sky, almost like it's pointing at something.
Designed by Sir Thomas Tresham (father of one of the Gunpowder Plotters) and constructed between 1593 and 1597. It is a testament to Tresham’s Roman Catholicism: the number three, symbolising the Holy Trinity, is apparent everywhere. There are three floors, trefoil windows and three triangular gables on each side.On the entrance front is the inscription ‘Tres Testimonium Dant’ (‘there are three that give witness’), a Biblical quotation from St John’s Gospel referring to the Trinity. It is also a pun on Tresham’s name; his wife called him ‘Good Tres’ in her letters.