View allAll Photos Tagged workstudy
This Babo Uglydoll was created for the Tag the System show in NYC. Artist from around the world were given a 20 inch NYC subway car replica to personalize. The wonderful creative minds of David Horvath and Sun Min took that replica and decided to design their own 20 inch Babo Uglydoll Train plush. This is a one of a kind plush created exclusively for this event. In this picture Babo Train is reunited with his creators at Uglycon 1 in Los Angeles. Everyone was all smiles.
From the show where Babo's Uglytrain was originally offered -
Uglydoll's, Sun-Min Kim & David Horvath, customized 20" subway train. "Babo's Uglytrain." As displayed at The Showroom NYC: Tag The System, October 2004. Presented by Toy Tokyo and Drastic Plastic. 10% of proceeds will be donated to the Manhattan Occupational Training Center Charity. This school works with disabled children in a hands on manner assisting them with job training and workstudy programs in addition to the standard, required curriculum.
170/365
when Night comes, it bellows. sweeping tree lines and waking the dead, Night lingers in the bark crevices, beneath rotting leaves, and in the folds of her blood dress. when He comes, she stands, alert, her blood thumping against the veins like a snake writhing as afarmer quickly chops the head off. Night is ideal for searching. three years have trudged on, but mother has not been found.
fear follows her, it lifts her up into the copper shadows, but it never waits or lingers. as quick as it is there, it is gone. she is left with only a brazen lantern, a candle's flame blinking in the wind, and a red dress that is just a reminder of a mother she never knew.
Lightbox this. It makes it larger and looks better
I'm really, really happy with this. I bought this dress for 5 bucks at a thrift store. It's hideous, but it has so much personality and so many stories behind it. Kudos to my friend Adam for the location and hair styling and to Sarah for being still since I shot with a longish exposure. I wanted this to look like a painting, and it does. It's always exciting when a photo looks exactly like it does in your mind. :)
Also, my junior year of college has began and I am swamped with homework, work, workstudy, my presidency of our Gay-Straight Alliance, and my 365. I'm going to keep photographing though!
P.S. That is Sarah Ann Loreth's lantern. :)
--at Warren Wilson College, Swannanoa, NC.
Building of cord-wood construction, an old technique, recently built. Student crews work at an old style forge on a daily basis throughout the school year. They make many devices, useful and ornamental, for use about the campus and to sell at festivals. This school has a work-study program.
Olympus SP500UZ
I had to go out here last weekend to get some clothes for my workstudy job. This place opened in 2005.
This Babo Uglydoll was created for the Tag the System show in NYC. Artist from around the world were given a 20 inch NYC subway car replica to personalize. The wonderful creative minds of David Horvath and Sun Min took that replica and decided to design their own 20 inch Babo Uglydoll Train plush. This is a one of a kind plush created exclusively for this event.
From the show where Babo's Uglytrain was originally offered -
Uglydoll's, Sun-Min Kim & David Horvath, customized 20" subway train. "Babo's Uglytrain." As displayed at The Showroom NYC: Tag The System, October 2004. Presented by Toy Tokyo and Drastic Plastic. 10% of proceeds will be donated to the Manhattan Occupational Training Center Charity. This school works with disabled children in a hands on manner assisting them with job training and workstudy programs in addition to the standard, required curriculum.
Meghan Barker works as the marketing head for sustainabilities at luther college. Photos by Sarah Bauer
This Babo Uglydoll was created for the Tag the System show in NYC. Artist from around the world were given a 20 inch NYC subway car replica to personalize. The wonderful creative minds of David Horvath and Sun Min took that replica and decided to design their own 20 inch Babo Uglydoll Train plush. This is a one of a kind plush created exclusively for this event.
From the show where Babo's Uglytrain was originally offered -
Uglydoll's, Sun-Min Kim & David Horvath, customized 20" subway train. "Babo's Uglytrain." As displayed at The Showroom NYC: Tag The System, October 2004. Presented by Toy Tokyo and Drastic Plastic. 10% of proceeds will be donated to the Manhattan Occupational Training Center Charity. This school works with disabled children in a hands on manner assisting them with job training and workstudy programs in addition to the standard, required curriculum.
I decided to blow some of my workstudy check on some NARS last week. I wanted to see if price really equaled quality. I'm still testing them out though.
This Babo Uglydoll was created for the Tag the System show in NYC. Artist from around the world were given a 20 inch NYC subway car replica to personalize. The wonderful creative minds of David Horvath and Sun Min took that replica and decided to design their own 20 inch Babo Uglydoll Train plush. This is a one of a kind plush created exclusively for this event.
From the show where Babo's Uglytrain was originally offered -
Uglydoll's, Sun-Min Kim & David Horvath, customized 20" subway train. "Babo's Uglytrain." As displayed at The Showroom NYC: Tag The System, October 2004. Presented by Toy Tokyo and Drastic Plastic. 10% of proceeds will be donated to the Manhattan Occupational Training Center Charity. This school works with disabled children in a hands on manner assisting them with job training and workstudy programs in addition to the standard, required curriculum.
We're celebrating 40 years of Dance is for Everyone! See all our Resident Arts Partners, youth companies, staff, faculty, board, students, and our entire extended dance family. Thank you to Workstudy Photographer Rob Cannon for shooting these photos!
This Babo Uglydoll was created for the Tag the System show in NYC. Artist from around the world were given a 20 inch NYC subway car replica to personalize. The wonderful creative minds of David Horvath and Sun Min took that replica and decided to design their own 20 inch Babo Uglydoll Train plush. This is a one of a kind plush created exclusively for this event.
From the show where Babo's Uglytrain was originally offered -
Uglydoll's, Sun-Min Kim & David Horvath, customized 20" subway train. "Babo's Uglytrain." As displayed at The Showroom NYC: Tag The System, October 2004. Presented by Toy Tokyo and Drastic Plastic. 10% of proceeds will be donated to the Manhattan Occupational Training Center Charity. This school works with disabled children in a hands on manner assisting them with job training and workstudy programs in addition to the standard, required curriculum.
This Babo Uglydoll was created for the Tag the System show in NYC. Artist from around the world were given a 20 inch NYC subway car replica to personalize. The wonderful creative minds of David Horvath and Sun Min took that replica and decided to design their own 20 inch Babo Uglydoll Train plush. This is a one of a kind plush created exclusively for this event.
From the show where Babo's Uglytrain was originally offered -
Uglydoll's, Sun-Min Kim & David Horvath, customized 20" subway train. "Babo's Uglytrain." As displayed at The Showroom NYC: Tag The System, October 2004. Presented by Toy Tokyo and Drastic Plastic. 10% of proceeds will be donated to the Manhattan Occupational Training Center Charity. This school works with disabled children in a hands on manner assisting them with job training and workstudy programs in addition to the standard, required curriculum.
This Babo Uglydoll was created for the Tag the System show in NYC. Artist from around the world were given a 20 inch NYC subway car replica to personalize. The wonderful creative minds of David Horvath and Sun Min took that replica and decided to design their own 20 inch Babo Uglydoll Train plush. This is a one of a kind plush created exclusively for this event.
From the show where Babo's Uglytrain was originally offered -
Uglydoll's, Sun-Min Kim & David Horvath, customized 20" subway train. "Babo's Uglytrain." As displayed at The Showroom NYC: Tag The System, October 2004. Presented by Toy Tokyo and Drastic Plastic. 10% of proceeds will be donated to the Manhattan Occupational Training Center Charity. This school works with disabled children in a hands on manner assisting them with job training and workstudy programs in addition to the standard, required curriculum.
This Babo Uglydoll was created for the Tag the System show in NYC. Artist from around the world were given a 20 inch NYC subway car replica to personalize. The wonderful creative minds of David Horvath and Sun Min took that replica and decided to design their own 20 inch Babo Uglydoll Train plush. This is a one of a kind plush created exclusively for this event.
From the show where Babo's Uglytrain was originally offered -
Uglydoll's, Sun-Min Kim & David Horvath, customized 20" subway train. "Babo's Uglytrain." As displayed at The Showroom NYC: Tag The System, October 2004. Presented by Toy Tokyo and Drastic Plastic. 10% of proceeds will be donated to the Manhattan Occupational Training Center Charity. This school works with disabled children in a hands on manner assisting them with job training and workstudy programs in addition to the standard, required curriculum.
This Babo Uglydoll was created for the Tag the System show in NYC. Artist from around the world were given a 20 inch NYC subway car replica to personalize. The wonderful creative minds of David Horvath and Sun Min took that replica and decided to design their own 20 inch Babo Uglydoll Train plush. This is a one of a kind plush created exclusively for this event.
From the show where Babo's Uglytrain was originally offered -
Uglydoll's, Sun-Min Kim & David Horvath, customized 20" subway train. "Babo's Uglytrain." As displayed at The Showroom NYC: Tag The System, October 2004. Presented by Toy Tokyo and Drastic Plastic. 10% of proceeds will be donated to the Manhattan Occupational Training Center Charity. This school works with disabled children in a hands on manner assisting them with job training and workstudy programs in addition to the standard, required curriculum.
This Babo Uglydoll was created for the Tag the System show in NYC. Artist from around the world were given a 20 inch NYC subway car replica to personalize. The wonderful creative minds of David Horvath and Sun Min took that replica and decided to design their own 20 inch Babo Uglydoll Train plush. This is a one of a kind plush created exclusively for this event.
From the show where Babo's Uglytrain was originally offered -
Uglydoll's, Sun-Min Kim & David Horvath, customized 20" subway train. "Babo's Uglytrain." As displayed at The Showroom NYC: Tag The System, October 2004. Presented by Toy Tokyo and Drastic Plastic. 10% of proceeds will be donated to the Manhattan Occupational Training Center Charity. This school works with disabled children in a hands on manner assisting them with job training and workstudy programs in addition to the standard, required curriculum.
Identifiable students to the lecturer's left are Rob Donaldson, Karel Hancke, Theo Stehle (with Frans Coetzee behind him; Keith Moldenhauer; Gary Heuer and Kobus Venter;
Meghan Barker works as the marketing head for sustainabilities at luther college. Photos by Sarah Bauer
Meghan Barker works as the marketing head for sustainabilities at luther college. Photos by Sarah Bauer
Work-study participants at the 2016 Port Townsend Jazz Workshop meet with program assistant Joan Wenske on Sunday afternoon. Here, Joan talks with Anthony Lefaive
JOMDC Faculty & Workstudy are the lifeblood of the organization. We honor them and their creativity in this concert.
Meghan Barker works as the marketing head for sustainabilities at luther college. Photos by Sarah Bauer
Elyssa works in the writing center in Preus Library and helps students who need assistance with their writing. Sarah Bauer
Meghan Barker works as the marketing head for sustainabilities at luther college. Photos by Sarah Bauer
(I just need to rant a little bit. It's probably not as serious as it sounds. Heck, you probably shouldn't even read the whole thing.)
This is the sordid tale of how I ended up where I am in this picture. It all starts about two weeks ago, with my IST 230 Web Design project.
The project I chose was creating a directory of hospitals that provide scholarships, loans, and grants to students who are going into the "health professions." My clients are a couple of faculty who are nice, but are not at all acquainted with technology.
Two weeks ago, I sat down and worked out a template for the site. I made the graphics, picked the color scheme, and laid out a skeleton organizational plan. All I need to do is meet face-to-face with Jill and Ann to hammer out the specifics of organization and get the hospital data from them. So Friday before last, I start trying to get together with them. Ann ends up scheduling and rescheduling, to the point where I don't meet with her until last Friday.
We get the organizational details figured out in the meeting, but she doesn't have any of the data I need. At that point, I probably should have started adapting my template to the organizational structure of the site. But, I didn't, I spent the weekend catching up on some video games and reading. Fast forward to Monday. By the end of the day, the project has become a trainwreck. I find out that the workstudy gathering the data has it all handwritten. Not only that, but it's incomplete and a few more phone calls need to be made. Ann assures me that she'll have the workstudy put the information into a Powerpoint presentation and send it to me. Powerpoint? Really??
So far the situation is still workable, though. I'm frustrated and a little worried, but I have until Friday - the end of finals week, right? Wrong! Last night, I get word that the project is due Tuesday afternoon. As in this afternoon. At that point, it's almost midnight, and I know I'm in a bind. So I get a liter bottle of Mountain Dew (keeps me awake, but I feel like hell afterwards) and a bag of pretzels and start working. I find out that I need to do some serious work to get the template up to spec, and there's still the matter of data.
At about 2AM I decide just to drop placeholder text in and call it good. Better than nothing, right? So I continue working on the project, refining the template until I'm satisfied it will work. I then start fleshing out the site. All told it takes me until about 10AM before everything is nailed down to the point of satisfaction. During this time, I had to get a second liter of Dew, which was my only break.
Anyway, I'm still not out of the woods. I still have the Web Design final this afternoon. I'm actually taking a quick break from that to post this. Wish me luck. I've been up for about 27 hours, with the final in about 2 hours. As soon as that's over, it's nap time.
If you read all that, congratulations. Also, I'm sorry. I wish I could give you that time back.