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Nice Australian Gold Products photos

August 17th, 2011 admin No comments

Some cool australian gold products images:

Welsh Gold
australian gold products

Image by jovike
Bath Ales Gem premium amber ale
Brains SA Gold
Bundaberg Australian Ginger Beer

Belly Dancing School demonstration - Carrara Market
australian gold products

Image by avlxyz
A trash and treasure market... but the emphasis is on cheap Made in China goods. No wonder it didn't get a mention in the Lonely Planet. Just as well it wasn't hard to get to on public transport.

www.carraramarkets.com.au/
Visitors to this enormously popular Treasure Trove can browse in a relaxed market atmosphere and an environment where individuals and families can spend a couple of hours or a whole day searching for bargains, have a meal, be entertained and generally have a great time.

The Markets have become a virtual institution on the Gold Coast, drawing weekend crowds of more than 25 000.

Over the years the Markets have become a bargain hunters paradise providing an almost unlimited variety of products from 500 stalls. Plant Nurseries, Fruit & Vegies, Clothing, Shoes, Arts & Crafts, Watches, Jewellery, Tools, Leathergoods, Butchers Shops, Bakery & Fish Shop just to name a few of the many diverse types of businesses with a large variety of unique and innovative goods for sale, all at bargain prices.

Enjoy a world famous market breakfast from 6:30am or have a snack, enjoy a beer, wine or cup of coffee or tea or lunch at a variety of outlets.

Carrara Markets is the largest permanent Markets in Queensland and is open every Saturday & Sunday from 6am to 4pm.

Photos:
- Australian and Pan-Asian crafts 1
- Australian and Pan-Asian crafts 2
- Bananas by the bunch
- Belly Dancing School demonstration

Nice Australian Gold Products photos

August 1st, 2011 admin No comments

Some cool australian gold products images:

Australian and Pan-Asian crafts 2 - Carrara Market
australian gold products

Image by avlxyz
A trash and treasure market... but the emphasis is on cheap Made in China goods. No wonder it didn't get a mention in the Lonely Planet. Just as well it wasn't hard to get to on public transport.

www.carraramarkets.com.au/
Visitors to this enormously popular Treasure Trove can browse in a relaxed market atmosphere and an environment where individuals and families can spend a couple of hours or a whole day searching for bargains, have a meal, be entertained and generally have a great time.

The Markets have become a virtual institution on the Gold Coast, drawing weekend crowds of more than 25 000.

Over the years the Markets have become a bargain hunters paradise providing an almost unlimited variety of products from 500 stalls. Plant Nurseries, Fruit & Vegies, Clothing, Shoes, Arts & Crafts, Watches, Jewellery, Tools, Leathergoods, Butchers Shops, Bakery & Fish Shop just to name a few of the many diverse types of businesses with a large variety of unique and innovative goods for sale, all at bargain prices.

Enjoy a world famous market breakfast from 6:30am or have a snack, enjoy a beer, wine or cup of coffee or tea or lunch at a variety of outlets.

Carrara Markets is the largest permanent Markets in Queensland and is open every Saturday & Sunday from 6am to 4pm.

Photos:
- Australian and Pan-Asian crafts 1
- Australian and Pan-Asian crafts 2
- Bananas by the bunch
- Belly Dancing School demonstration

Australian and Pan-Asian crafts 1 - Carrara Market
australian gold products

Image by avlxyz
A trash and treasure market... but the emphasis is on cheap Made in China goods. No wonder it didn't get a mention in the Lonely Planet. Just as well it wasn't hard to get to on public transport.

www.carraramarkets.com.au/
Visitors to this enormously popular Treasure Trove can browse in a relaxed market atmosphere and an environment where individuals and families can spend a couple of hours or a whole day searching for bargains, have a meal, be entertained and generally have a great time.

The Markets have become a virtual institution on the Gold Coast, drawing weekend crowds of more than 25 000.

Over the years the Markets have become a bargain hunters paradise providing an almost unlimited variety of products from 500 stalls. Plant Nurseries, Fruit & Vegies, Clothing, Shoes, Arts & Crafts, Watches, Jewellery, Tools, Leathergoods, Butchers Shops, Bakery & Fish Shop just to name a few of the many diverse types of businesses with a large variety of unique and innovative goods for sale, all at bargain prices.

Enjoy a world famous market breakfast from 6:30am or have a snack, enjoy a beer, wine or cup of coffee or tea or lunch at a variety of outlets.

Carrara Markets is the largest permanent Markets in Queensland and is open every Saturday & Sunday from 6am to 4pm.

Photos:
- Australian and Pan-Asian crafts 1
- Australian and Pan-Asian crafts 2
- Bananas by the bunch
- Belly Dancing School demonstration

Nice Aussie Food Products photos

June 12th, 2011 admin No comments

Some cool aussie food products images:

shiny star leaf fringed weirdly in tarry moongate
aussie food products

Image by quapan
The shiny star leaf being stranded fringed weirdly in a moongate gravitating sun-side down earth↓wards exhibiting her flashed, chthonotrope, fawnbeige moon-side, fringed by rippling rickrack purlieus; subfusc harbinger of the non-trivial Hecate-Day, the Blue June Moon on June 30th, 2007 [GMT], transformed by wintertimes into a moonscaped, tellurian-coloured ghost; serendipitously cultivated undulant, darkly leaf rings all around, a mystique caused by the processes of becoming embedded into {fossilized onto} & trying to escape from her marblelike, hygrophilous tar-yard.
─► Elucidated as a figuration: Mystical avatars agonize each other. Metamorphosed into hellenic myth: Persephone struggles to elude from the ineluctable gate of Hades.

─► The litter 'moonlanded' in a black asphalt moon-gate that contains an area of 3,141 m² . Therefore you can call it a π-gate. It belongs to a landscaped pedestrian precinct and is the left part of a twin-moon∩gates-ensemble, i.e. tar-black asphalt-circles lined up two abreast in lane 3 of the running track that extends on two long sides of the Eastgate in Marzahn.
This moon-gate is the most western of the 11 (∑=2+3+2+2+2=4+4+3) totally black circular tar bubbles. These special eleven fields do not contain - like those other 26 {1|2|3|e|a|s|t|g|a|t|e| ∟ |e|a|s|t|g|a|t|e|e|a|s|t|1|2|3} surrounding the building - white alphanumeric signs, but these are void and black like gravel-free tar. [_pearl of civilization, 16 Dec 2007_]
─► Apocryphal 9/11-Speculation: The star leaf was found in the eleventh π-gate (The number 11 in Greek Numerals : acrophonic: ΔΙ ; alphabetical: ιαʹ). Might the 'twin moon∩gates' represent the 'twin towers'? Are the eleven tar-filled circles esoteric mourning memorials for 9/11?
─► Another question: How did the puzzling sedimentation-like black halo come about? - Most likely: The thin film of water on the hygrophilous tar evaporated quickly and left the fringe pattern. Less likely: Melted, gravel-free tar as a kind of sealing wax. Chromatographicly. Osmoticly. Silver Thaw.

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PHYSICS ◄─
Chromatography the collective term for a family of laboratory techniques for the separation of mixtures. It involves passing a mixture dissolved in a "mobile phase" through a stationary phase, which separates the analyte to be measured from other molecules in the mixture and allows it to be isolated.
Osmosis The tendency in fluids to mix, or become equably diffused, when in contact. It was first observed between fluids of differing densities, and as taking place through a membrane or an intervening porous structure.
sediment [mass noun] matter that settles to the bottom of a liquid; dregs
sedimentation coeffizient (also sedimentation constant) Biochemistry a quantity related to the size of a microscopic particle, equal to the terminal outward velocity of the particle when centrifuged in a fluid medium divided by the centrifugal force acting on it, expressed in units of time [New Oxford Dictionary of Englisch, p.1681, 1998, reissued 2001]
Emergence "...out of a multiplicity of relatively simple interactions... is central to the physics of complex systems ... Emergent structures are patterns not created by a single event or rule"
Complex Systems From Sync by Steven Strogatz: "Every decade or so, a grandiose theory comes along, bearing similar aspirations and often brandishing an ominous-sounding C-name. In the 1960s it was cybernetics. In the '70s it was catastrophe theory. Then came chaos theory in the '80s and complexity theory in the '90s."
fractal five-edged-star
mandala (Sanskrit maṇḍala "circle", "completion") has in practice become a generic term for any plan, chart or geometric pattern that represents the cosmos metaphysically or symbolically, a microcosm of the universe from the human perspective ... The Psychoanalyst Carl Jung saw the mandala as "a representation of the unconscious self," and believed his paintings of mandalas enabled him to identify emotional disorders and work towards wholeness in personality.
avatar (sanskrit 'avatara'=descent, from 'ava'=down and 'tar'=passing over) a manifestation of a deity or released soul in bodily form on earth; an incarnate divine teacher. Computing: movable icon representing a person.

─► EASTGATE ◄─
□ UK: Gateshead,Hornsea,Louth,Derby,Leeds,Accrington (─►Google Earth)
□ US: FL,WA,TX (─►Google Earth)
Shopping Centers named Eastgate Inverness, Basildon, Berlin, Harare etc.

─► AUTUMN LEAVES ◄─
Herbstlaub, Laub, hojas del otoño (254), осенние листья, feuilles d'automne(4) ,أوراق الخريف (ar.), 秋は去る (jp.=4),
秋叶(ch.simplified=100), 秋葉 (ch.traditional =300), fogli di autunno (4)
litter material forming a bedding or carpet (also leaf litter) decomposing but recognizable leaves and other debris forming a layer on top of the soil, especially in forests (NODE p1078)

─► WHY LEAVES CHANGE COLOR AND FALL ◄─
Four leaf pigments are responsible for leaf color: chlorophylls, carotenoids, tannins, and anthocyanins.
Why do leaves fall? Shorter days and cooler temperatures signal leaf senescence in which an increase in the enzymes that promote the breakdown of cells occurs. The veins that carry fluids into and out of the leaf gradually close off as a layer of cells (abscission layer) forms at the base of each leaf petiole where it is attached to the twig. These clogged veins trap sugars in the leaf and promote production of anthocyanins. Once the separation layer is complete and the connecting tissues are sealed off, the leaf is ready to fall.

▐►LYRICS about moons & autumn-leaves)◄▌
the man in the moon is a lady
a lady with lipstick and curls
the cow who jumped over
cried jumping jehovah
i think it's just one of the girls!
her friends are the stars and the planets
she throws the big dipper a kiss
so don't ever offend her,
remember her gender
the man in the moon is a miss.
magpie-moon
Der Fischer / The Fisherman (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe 1808
translated to English by Emily Ezust
)
Autumn-Leaves by Johnny Mercer
Les feuilles mortes by Jacques Prévert

─► SWEETGUM ◄─ [_Liquidambar styraciflua_]
Liquidambar styraciflua@duke.edu: the star-shaped leaves have a pleasant, sweet fragrance when crushed ... Molecular studies have shown that Liquidambar isn't closely related to Hamamelis and is better placed in the Altingiaceae instead of the Hamamelidaceae
Amerikanischer Amberbaum In the german language this deciduous tree is called Amerikanischer Amberbaum and belongs to the family of the Zaubernußgewächse
tree for Michigan's lower peninsula
□ The Redgum (also called sweetgum, sapgum, starleaf-gum or bilsted) from the witch-hazel family (Liquidambar styraciflua / Hamamelidaceae) is a tree from North America that hit Europe for the first time in 1681:
The leaves are palmately lobed, 7-19 cm (rarely to 25 cm) long and broad and with a 6-10 cm petiole, looking somewhat similar to those of some maples. They have five sharply pointed lobes, but are easily distinguished from maples in being arranged alternately, not in opposite pairs.
.....
The gum resin, also known as liquid amber or copalm balsam, yielded by this tree has no special medicinal virtues, being inferior in therapeutic properties to many others of its class. It is a kind of native balsam, or resin, like turpentine. It may be clear, reddish or yellow, with a pleasant smell like ambergris. As it grows older, it hardens into a solid form, which historically was shipped to other countries in barrels. It was reputed an excellent balsam for mollifying and consolidating, and good against sciatica, weakness of the nerves, etc. Mixed with tobacco, the gum was once used for smoking at the court of the Mexican emperors. It was long used in France as a perfume for gloves and other such items. It is mainly produced in Mexico, little being obtained from trees growing in higher latitudes of North America, or in England.
An American Sweetgum will be featured as part of the Memorial Grove at the World Trade Center Memorial, with installation set for fall 2008 and spring 2009.

─► MOON ◄─
lt.,es.,it. luna (fem.) | ru. луна {a series of Soviet moon probes launched in 1959-1976. They made the first hard (1959) and soft (1966) landings on the moon} | pt. lua | fr. lune
gr. σελήνη, φεγγάρι --> πανσέληνος -
nl. maan | nw. Måne | de. der Mond (masc.)
ch. 月亮 | jp. 月 | ko. 달 | ar. القمر
MOONING the act of displaying one's bare buttocks by removing clothing. Mooning is used in some cultures to express protest, scorn, disrespect or provocation but can simply be done for shock value or fun.
Moon has been a common shape-metaphor for the buttocks in English since 1743, and the verb to moon has meant 'to expose to (moon)light' since 1601, long before they were combined in US student slang in the verb(al expression) mooning "to flash the buttocks" in 1968. Formerly, mooning was slang for "wandering idly" and "romantically pining".[1]

─► MOON's TRUE COLOUR ◄─
○ blue-grey | golden-beige | fine-brush-gold
beige: of a pale sandy fawn colour - ORIGIN: mid 19th (denoting a usually undyed and unbleached woollen fabric of this colour): from French, of unknown ultimate origin [NODE p.158]
fawn 1. young deer 2. a light yellowish-brown colour
tellurian-coloured is the only true color of planet earth (myth. fair {ξανθή=blonde} 'mother' Demeter) and her satellite moon (myth. darkly-blue {κυανῆ=negative colour of ξανθή} 'daughter' Persephone), the colour of the ○ tohubohu {from Hebrew tohu wa-bohu = 'emptiness and desolation' (Genesis 1.2.), translated in the Bible of 1611 as 'without form and void' (<--'wüst und leer' [Luther].}
The true colour of primeval animals in the earth history, e.g. Mosquitos, is tellurian, too.
"Except for small outcrops of rock on Earth, the whole surface of the moon is older than the oldest parts of the Earth's surface." (Richard Teske)
Watch for second full moon in June (June 30,1996)
"When it is highest in the sky, the full moon looks brilliant and has an undoubted yellow-white color," Teske says. "Yet the moon is a very poor reflector of sunlight, with about the reflecting power of an asphalt parking lot. Its brilliance and apparent yellow-white color in the night sky are an illusion caused by dark adaptation of one's eyes, together with the fact that the black sky provides no background illumination for comparison. Astronauts who have circled the moon and walked on its surface report it is almost colorless. Some describe the color as a dull grey; others say it is a dull grey-tan." (Astronomer Richard Teske)
darkly 1. in a threatening, mysterious or slightly ominous way; in a depressing or pessimistic way: I wondered darkly if I was wasting time 2 with a dark colour: a figure silhouetted darkly against the trees NODE p.467
subfusc Dark or dull in color; drab, dusky. lt. fuscus=kyanos like Poseidon--> fuscina=trident of Poseidon-Neptune. The tea-cosy, property of one Edmund Gravel -- "known as the Recluse of Lower Spigot to everybody there and elsewhere," as the book's first page informs us -- is haunted by a six-legged emcee for various "subfusc but transparent" ghosts.
-- Emily Gordon, "The Doubtful Host", Newsday, November 8, 1998

chthonotrope = tellurian-coloured. antonymous to heliotrope [mass noun] a light purple colour, similar to that typical of heliotrope flowers [NODE p.852]
→ heliotrope [noun] a plant of the borage family (genus: Heliotropium, family: Boraginanaceae), cultivated for its fragrant purple or blue flowers which are used in perfume.
heliotropism the directional growth of a plant in response to sunlight. Compare with Phototropism. Derivates: heliotropic
phototropism the orientation of a plant or other organism in response to light (positive phototropism) or away from it (negative phototropism). Compare with Phototaxis.
Photosynthesis the process by which green plants and some other organisms use sunlight to synthesize foods from carbon dioxide and water. Photosynthesis involves the green pigment chlorophyll and generates oxygen as a by-product.
☼ There are many False Colour Moons. By means of stretching the saturation in Photoshop you can easily achieve the 'Green Moon of Alabama' or a Moon Blue.
Earth in True Color © NASA Here are the true colors of planet Earth. Blue oceans dominate our world, while areas of green forest, brown mountains, tan desert, and white ice are also prominent. Oceans appear blue not only because water itself is blue but also because seawater frequently scatters light from a blue sky. Forests appear green because they contain chlorophyll, a pigment that preferentially absorbs red light. The above image is a composite generated predominantly with data from Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS), an instrument mounted on the Terra satellite that has orbited Earth since 1999 December.
Full Moon by High Dynamic Range Image [HDRI] --> 200.000 :1; Exposure: 1/50 sec; Aperture: f/4.9; Focal Length: 46 mm; ISO Speed: 100
Full Moon in True Color Exposure: 1/320 sec; Aperture: f/3.5
Focal Length: 72 mm; Digital Zoom: x2 © hkhoodoo
Full Moon (yellowish long-term exposure) © stitch witch
279/365: Hello Earth (Kate Bush Lyrics) © practicalowl
"Somewhere out there" (May 16th 07) (moon, reflected moonlight on waves, stars) © Aussie Julie (aka Julie Holland)
○ ○ tellurian formal or poetic/literary adjective - of or inhabiting the earth Origin: mid 19th
○ ○ telluric adjective - of the earth as a planet ■ of the soil Origin: mid 19th ---> telluric acide
○ ○ ○ Tellurium the chemical element of atomic number 52, a brittle, shiny, silvery-white semimetal resembling selenium and occurring mainly in small amounts in metallic sulphide ores. (Symbol: Te.) Origin: Early 19th from lt. tellûs,ûris n. (soil), probably named in contrast to Uranium. [NODE p.1907]

─► MOONS & JUNES ◄─
"'All hands on deck, we've run afloat!' ......
Now many moons and many Junes have passed since we made land."
(A Salty Dog, © 1968 Procol Harum)
-------------
Moons and Junes and Ferris wheels
The dizzy dancing way you feel
As ev'ry fairy tale comes real
I've looked at love that way
(Both Sides, Now, © 1969 Joni Mitchell)

BLUE MOONS
○ lt. metiri 'to measure' (the moon being used to measure time)
○ lunar: day (24 h 50 m -> 'MeridianCrossings'), month (29½ d), year (~ 354 d)
lunisolar
□ of or employing a calendar year divided according to the phases of the moon,
but adjusted in average length to fit the length of the solar cycle
□ of or denoting a 532-year period over which both the lunar months and the days of the week return to the same point in relation to the solar year Origin: late 17th
lunar cycle another term for metonic cycle
Blue Moon [scienceworld.wolfram]
When two full moons occur in any calendar month, the second is called a blue moon. The term (in its modern usage) therefore has nothing to do with the Moon's actually color. A blue moon occurs about once in 2.5 years on average. A blue moon can occur in January and the following March if there is no full moon at all in February, as is the case in the years 1999, 2018, and 2037.
There are several other meanings ascribed to the term "blue moon" (the most common being "a very uncommon event"), but the one given here seems first to have appeared in The Maine Farmers' Almanac of 1937. The phrase "blue moon" has been around for several hundred years, but its meaning has changed a few times. The earliest use of "blue moon" meant an obvious absurdity which everyone knew never happened. However, the moon does occasionally turn blue as a result of smoke from forest fires or particles from a volcanic eruption. Since these blue-looking moons were rare but did happen from time to time, the phrase "once in a blue moon" was coined, meaning that an event is unusual, but can happen occasionally (Kibbey). "Blue moon" has also been used as a symbol of sadness and loneliness. That appears to have a history of its own among musicians and songwriters (Kibbey).
Blue Moon I [en.wikipedia, Sept07]
is called the third full moon in a season with four full moons, as described in the Maine Farmer's Almanac. Until recently it was commonly misunderstood that the second full moon in a month was the blue moon. However, it was recently discovered by Sky & Telescope Magazine and reported on NPR that the interpretation of a blue moon as the second full moon of the month was erroneously reported in an issue of Sky & Telescope dating back to 1946 and then perpetuated by other media.
Blue Moon II [en.wikipedia, Sept07]
Farmer's Almanac blue moons
The older meaning of blue moon to name an extra full moon, as was used in the Maine Farmer's Almanac, was the third full moon in a quarter of the year when there were four full moons – normally a quarter year has three full moons. The division of the year into quarters for this purpose has the dividing line set between March 21 and March 22. This has to do with the rule for setting the date for the Christian Holy Day of Easter, which depends on the last full moon - as calculated by the computus, a somewhat inaccurate formula - on or before the Equinox on March 21, which is also somewhat inaccurate.
This meaning of blue moon was lost when the editors of the original Farmer's Almanac died. It was recovered only when researchers for Sky & Telescope magazine noticed that the Maine Farmer's Almanac from 1829 to 1937 reported blue moons that did not fit the meaning of the term calendar blue moon.
Calendar Blue Moons
In recent times, people have taken to calling a full moon a blue moon based on the Gregorian calendar. By this use of the term, a blue moon is the second of two full moons to occur in the same calendar month. This definition of blue moon originated from a mistake in an article in the March 1946 Sky & Telescope magazine, which failed in an attempt to infer the earlier definition used in the original Farmer's Almanac (see above). It was helped to popularity when Deborah Byrd of Earth & Sky walked into the Peridier astronomy library at the University of Texas at Austin one day, leafed through some old magazines, and found the 1946 blue moon article in Sky & Telescope. She used the definition – the second full moon in a single month – in the radio series Star Date for some years. As a result, the game Trivial Pursuit used a question and answer about blue moon. Sky & Telescope discovered the error nearly sixty years later and the magazine printed a retraction and correction.[2] By the time the correction came the calendar definition had already come into common use. As it is easier to understand, the mistaken calendar-based meaning has stuck.
Calendar blue moons occur infrequently, and the saying once in a blue moon is used to describe a rare event. However, they are inevitable because of the mis-match between the solar and lunar cycles. Each calendar year contains twelve full lunar cycles, plus about eleven days to spare. The extra days accumulate, so that while most years contain twelve full moons to match the twelve months, every two or three years there is a year with thirteen full moons. On average, this happens once every 2.72 years. Additionally, in some years there is no full moon in February at all, since February is slightly shorter than the time from one full moon to the next. This condition, known as black moon, gives additional 'blue' moons in the preceding and following months (namely January and March). The last time this occurred was in 1999. The next time this will occur will be in 2018, because February will have no full moon that year, according to UTC, which means that January and March will each have a calendar blue moon that year.
When there are thirteen moons in a year, twelve of them are given the twelve traditional names associated with that time of year (the names vary from culture to culture), and the extra one is termed a blue moon. Which of the thirteen moons is termed 'blue' depends on whether it is calculated by the old or the new method.
The months of the Gregorian calendar are all very close to the 29.5306-day period of the moon's phases: the synodic month, or lunation. Most of the months are longer than this by one or two days, except February, which is the only month which cannot contain a calendar blue moon. Since February is one or two days shorter than the moon's cycle, very occasionally it has no full moon – there is a full moon at the end of January, and the next one is at the beginning of March. What this means is that both January and March will have blue moons. This happens, on average, once every thirty-five years.
The previous calendar blue moon (based on UTC) was on June 30, 2007. The first full moon would have occurred on June 1, 2007. But that was May 31, 2007 in the Western Hemisphere making that full moon the second occurrence in May in the Western Hemisphere; see below); and the next calendar blue moon will be December 31, 2009.
Time zone problems
Occasionally whether a moon is called blue depends on the time zone. Any full moon occurs simultaneously everywhere, but at that moment clocks and calendars are not the same.
Example, when it is early evening on August 31 in Europe, it is already early morning September 1 in New Zealand. Hence, residents of London seeing a full moon when their clocks and calendar say it is August 31 would call what they see a calendar blue moon. People seeing the same full moon from Auckland would note by their clocks and calendar that it is the early morning of September 1, and they would not term it a blue moon. But they would probably have a calendar blue moon at the end of September, or perhaps October.
Because this is confusing, astronomers worldwide and the calendar makers who rely on them typically choose the time zone of the Royal Greenwich Observatory in the United Kingdom, known as Greenwich Mean Time, or the nearly identical UTC time zone. As a practical matter, because the moon seems to the casual viewer to be full for almost three days, the use of a foreign time zone for calendar markings for full moons makes little difference.
Blue Moons between 2004 and 2010
The following data is based on the Calendar and Farmers' Almanac definitions.
August 2005 — Third full moon in a season of four full moons
June 2007 — has a second full moon falling on the 30th
May 2008 — Third full moon in a season of four full moons
November 2010 — Third full moon in a season of four full moons
Blue Moon (Elvis Presley)
Blue Moon of Kentucky (Elvis Presley) & (Apollo 11, Moonlanding-Footage, July 20th, 1969)
○ Blue moon, you saw me standin' alone
Without a dream in my heart, without a love of my own
Blue moon, you knew just what I was there for
You heard me sayin' a prayer for
Someone I really could care for
And then there suddenly appeared before me
The only one my arms will hold
I heard somebody whisper "please adore me"
And when I looked, the moon had turned to gold
Blue moon, now I'm no longer alone
Without a dream in my heart
Without a love of my own
Lorenz Hart, Richard Rodgers

∩_moon_gate_∩
Moon Gate: a circular gateway in a wall (chinese architecture);
○ One of the seven Doors of the ancient city of Thebes was called Moongate (-->Seven against Thebes, Aeschylus]

LUN
lunar of, determined by, or resembling the moon: a lunar landscape
LANDSCAPE all the visible features of an area of countryside or land, often considered in terms of their asthetic appeal: the soft colours of the Northumbrian l., a bleak urban landscape 2. wider than hig, contr. portrait verb: be landscaped (moonscaped)= improve (deteriorate) the aethetic appearence of (a piece of land) by changing its contours, adding ornamental features or planting trees and shrubs --> landscapist (-->moonscapist)
Lunarian (in science fiction) an imagined inhabitant of the moon
lune (lunette) = crescent shaped figure; lunula or lunule = white area at base of fingernail; BronzeAgeNecklace
lunatic fringe exreme or eccentric minority within society or group

─► STAR ◄─
it. stella; es. estrella; fr. étoile [googlish: 'tenir le premier rôle']; ru. звезды; de. Stern; ch. 明星; jp. 星; ko.별; ar. النجم
─► PLANET ◄─
fr. planète; ru. планета; jp. 惑星; ch. 星球; ar. الكوكب
─► SATELLITE ◄─
ru. спутник; es. satélite; de. Trabant;
ch. (simp.) 卫星; ch. (trad.) 衛星; jp. 衛星;ko.인공위성; ar. ساتل

─► EARTH ◄─
gr.γῆ,χώμα - arch.gr.χθών,χθονός poet. surface of the earth (rarely soil)
lt. tellus,terra | it.,pt. terra | fr. terre;es. tierra
ru. Земли, de. Erde arch.Nerthus (in a grove on an island)
ch.,jp. 地球 | ko. 지구 | ar. الأرض

▐►C H T H O N I A N S ◄▌ greek god(desse)s
χθόνιος in, under or beneath the earth II. sprung from the earth, Titans (Hesiod.Theogonia.697) 2. in or of the country; native S.OC948; S.Aj.202 III. of things, of the earth, Aeschylus.Septem contra Thebas.736
■ χθονία ('Chthonίa') Earlier name of γαῖα ('Gaia') Pherekydes. Syr.I,cf. Dam.Pr.124 [LSJ p.1991].
■ Χθόνεια,τά festival of Demeter and Persephone [LSJ p.1991].
■ χ. θεοί gods of the nether world opp. ypatoi (=superi), Aeschylus.Agamemnon.89
■ χ. θεαί, i.e. Demeter and Persephone, Herodot. 6.134, 7.153; of the Erinyes, Socphocles.OedipusColoneus 1568.
■ χ. Ἑκάτη (Hekátē, Hecate) Aristophanes Fragmenta 500
■ χ. poreia opp. ourania Plato.Respublica.619e
■ χ. phreni of the dead Pindar.Pythian Odes.5.101.
■ χ. Ερμής Hermes as conductor of the dead Aeschylus.Choephori.1, Sophocles. Electra.111
Ζεύς χ. of Jupiter Tonans, Hades-Pluto in Hesiod.Opera.465

▐►Χ θ ό ν ι α ι___θ ε α ί ◄▌ @ Aeschylus
▐► Χορός: ἀλλὰ σύ μοι Γᾶ τε καὶ ἄλλοι / χθονίων ἁγεμόνες / δαίμονα μεγαυχῆ / ἰόντ' αἰνέσατ' ἐκ δόμων, / Περσᾶν Σουσιγενῆ θεόν: / πέμπετε δ' ἄνω οἷον οὔπω / Περσὶς αἶ' ἐκάλυψεν.
Chorus: O Earth, and you other rulers of those who dwell in the nether world, ensure, I implore, that the glorious spirit, the god of the Persians, whom Susa bore, may quit his abode. [645] Send to the upper world him the likes of whom the Persian earth has never entombed (translated by Herbert Weir Smyth, Ph.D.). (Aeschylus Persians 641)
My Comment: γᾶ (GA) is Singualaris or Dualis.--->
The Chorus of Persian Loyals calls upon the Monade Earth ('Gaia'). as Ph.D. H. W. Smyth translates for Perseus Tufts. But the Dyade of Demeter & Persephone can be meant - additionally!
▐► Ἠλέκτρα: καί πότ' ἂν ἀμφιθαλὴς / Ζεὺς ἐπὶ χεῖρα βάλοι, / φεῦ φεῦ, κάρανα δαί̈ξας; / πιστὰ γένοιτο χώρᾳ. / δίκαν δ' ἐξ ἀδίκων ἀπαιτῶ. / κλῦτε δὲ Γᾶ χθονίων τε τιμαί.
Electra: And when will mighty Zeus bring down his hand on them [395] and split their heads open? Let it be a pledge to the land! After injustice I demand justice as my right. Hear, O Earth, and you honored powers below! (translated by Herbert Weir Smyth, Ph.D.). (Aeschylus.Libation Bearers 399)
▐► Πυθιάς:
πρῶτον μὲν εὐχῇ τῇδε πρεσβεύω θεῶν
τὴν πρωτόμαντιν Γαῖαν: ἐκ δὲ τῆς Θέμιν,
ἣ δὴ τὸ μητρὸς δευτέρα τόδ' ἕζετο
μαντεῖον, ὡς λόγος τις: ἐν δὲ τῷ τρίτῳ
λάχει, θελούσης, οὐδὲ πρὸς βίαν τινός,
Τιτανὶς ἄλλη παῖς Χθονὸς καθέζετο,
Φοίβη: δίδωσι δ' ἣ γενέθλιον δόσιν
Φοίβῳ: τὸ Φοίβης δ' ὄνομ' ἔχει παρώνυμον.
My comment : Heirs of the oracle: Gaia, Themis , (Demeter & Persephone), Phoebe & Phoebus.
In her prologue of the Eumenides the Pythia - 'unconsciously' - reveals the unutterable, nevertheless conspicuous CRUEL MYSTERY of the Oracle of Delphi: Phoebe & Phoebus have once ousted (and silenced) Demeter & Persephone by force (ἣ δὴ τὸ μητρὸς ... πρὸς βίαν ). The telluric-matriarchal Mother&Daughter-Succession, Demeter → Persephone, was replaced by the solaric-patriarchal Grandmother → Grandson-Succession, Phoebe → Phoebus.
MYTHOLOGICA:
○ Demeter : earth, dark ('daemonized') side of the sun.
○ Persephone (lt. Proserpina): daughter of Zeus and Demeter. under-earth(⅓) & vegetation(⅔ ), dark ('daemonized') side of the moon. Was carried off by Hades and made queen of the underworld. Demeter vainly seeking her, refused to let the earth produce its fruits until her daughter was restored to her, but because Persephone had eaten som pomegranade seeds in the other world, she was obliged to spend part of every year there.
○ Phoebe: a Titaness born by Uranus and Gaia, mother of Leto (--> Apollo & Artemis). Later Greek writers identify her with Selene and even Isis, CIG4987 (Ethiopia)' [LSJ p.1947], bright side of the moon.
○ Phoebus-Apollo: Horus, bright side of the sun.
○ Pythia: the priestess of Apollo in Delphi - Origin from Pythô, a former name of Delphi.
○ Hades (also called Pluto): the underworld, the abode of the spirits of the dead
▐► Ἑκάτη◄▌
Hekate {Hekátē}, or Hekat (lt. Trivia), was originally a goddess of the wilderness and childbirth, naturalized early in Thrace, but originating among the Carians of Anatolia,[1] the only region where theophoric names are attested[2], and where Hekate remained a great goddess into historical times, at Lagina. The monuments to Hekate in Phrygia and Caria are numerous but of late date.[3] Popular cults venerating her as a mother goddess integrated her persona into Greek culture as Ἑκάτη. In Ptolemaic Alexandria she ultimately achieved her connotations as a goddess of sorcery and her role as the "Queen of Ghosts", in which guise she was transmitted to post-Renaissance culture. Today she is often seen as a goddess of witchcraft and Wicca. One aspect of Hecate is represented in the Roman Trivia.
○ ○ lt. Trivia: Godess of the moon @ three-way crossroads --> lacus Triviae=sea of Diana=Lago di Nemi (V.) - adripere maledictum ex trivio
Unusual Trivia CollectionSuperstitions: old wives tales, folklore, bizarre beliefs, taboos, omens, lucky & unlucky things
Hekate: magic, witchcraft, the night, moon, ghosts, necromancy. ...
Hekate assisted Demeter in her search for Persephone, guiding her through the night with flaming torches. After the mother-daughter reunion became she Persephone's minister and companion in Hades.
Two metamorphosis myths describe the origins of her animal familiars: the black she-dog and the polecat (a mustelid house pet kept to hunt vermin). The bitch was originally the Trojan Queen Hekabe, who leapt into the sea after the fall of Troy and was transformed by the goddess into her familiar. The polecat was originally the witch Gale who was transformed into the beast to punish her for her incontinence. Other say it was Galinthias, the nurse of Alkmene, transformed by the angry Eileithyia, but received by Hekate as her animal.
Ἑκάτη (Hekátē) Hecate she who works her will, Hes.Th.411;
Ἕκατos epith. of Apollo. Il.7.83, 20.295; Ἑκάτη epith. of Artemis, Aeschylus.Supplici.767 (lyr.), CORN.ND32.; χ. Ἑκάτη Aristophanes Fragmenta 500;
II. Ἑκάτηs δεῖπνον Hecate's dinner, a meal set out by rich persons at the foot of her statue on the 30th day of each month (cf. 30th April = Walpurgis-Night, 'Hexennacht' on Blocksberg [Brocken: highest peak in the Hartz-Mountains --> Brocken spectre ('Brockengespenst', often surrounded by the glowing halo-like rings of a glory, described by Johann Silberschlag in 1780 as an optical illusion)). ... Curiously Adolf Hitler, with several members of his staff (including Joseph Goebbels), committed suicide in the Walpurgisnight, April 30/May 1, 1945), when it became a dole for beggars and paupers, Ar.Pl.594, hence as it consisted of offal, Ἑκαταῖα κατεσθίειν Ekataia katesthieein, of rapscallion D.54.39, cf. Luc.D.Mort 1.1.
Ar.Pl.594pp
Πενία:
τὸ γὰρ ἀντιλέγειν τολμᾶν ὑμᾶς ὡς οὐ πάντ' ἔστ' ἀγάθ' ὑμῖν
διὰ τὴν Πενίαν.
Χρεμύλος:
παρὰ τῆς Ἑκάτης ἔξεστιν τοῦτο πυθέσθαι,
εἴτε τὸ πλουτεῖν εἴτε τὸ πεινῆν βέλτιον. φησὶ γὰρ αὕτη
τοὺς μὲν ἔχοντας καὶ πλουτοῦντας δεῖπνον κατὰ μῆν' ἀποπέμπειν,
τοὺς δὲ πένητας τῶν ἀνθρώπων ἁρπάζειν πρὶν καταθεῖναι.
ἀλλὰ φθείρου καὶ μὴ γρύξῃς ἔτι μηδ' ὁτιοῦν.
οὐ γὰρ πείσεις, οὐδ' ἢν πείσῃς.
Poverty
Thus you dare to maintain that Poverty is not the fount of all blessings!
Chremylus
Ask Hecate [595] whether it is better to be rich or starving; she will tell you that the rich send her a meal every month and that the poor make it disappear before it is even served. But go and hang yourself and don't breathe another syllable. [600] I will not be convinced against my will...
Ἑκάταιον (Hekataion) or Ἑκάτειον (Hekateion), τό, statue or dedication stone (Calvet Collection. This stone-shrine contains two iconized ornamental stars, 'asterisks', starlets amazingly similar to japanese maple leaves) of Hecate, placed at the entrance of houses or where three roads meet. These shrines dedicated to Hekate were invented by Alcamene as Pausanias remarks(2,30,2.). An epigonal Roman Hecateion of the 2nd BC stands in the Metropolitan Museum, a triple-bodied Hekate, resembling Alkamene's Hekate Epipyrgidia, which was erected around 425 BC on the Athena Nike bastion to guard the entrance of the Akropolis. Alkamene's statue was one of the earliest representations of the retrospective style known as archaistic, which imitated the stiff, linear quality of drapery that marked works of the sixth BC The three figures of the goddess also wear poloi, cylindrical headdresses often associated with female deities of rebirth.
Ar. l.c. Ra.366 cf. Hsch.
Χορός
ἢ χρήματα ταῖς τῶν ἀντιπάλων ναυσὶν παρέχειν τινὰ πείθει,
ἢ κατατιλᾷ τῶν Ἑκαταίων κυκλίοισι χοροῖσιν ὑπᾴδων,
ἢ τοὺς μισθοὺς τῶν ποιητῶν ῥήτωρ ὢν εἶτ' ἀποτρώγει,
Or persuades anyone to send supplies to the enemies' ships,
Or defiles Hecate's shrine, while singing dithyrambs,
Or any politician who bites off the pay of the poets
Aristophanes. Frogs.365-367

Nice Australian Exports photos

May 17th, 2011 admin No comments

Some cool australian exports images:

Australian in Shenzhen _3354
australian exports

Image by \!/_PeacePlusOne
3 finger "Peace + One" Sustainability Symbol in Shenzhen, China view more "DragonTHINK" photos at www.SustainabilitySymbol.com

(Contact Philip McMaster at www.SustainabilitySymbol.com for information to use photo)

the 3 finger Sustainability Symbol is shared by people around the world -a personal

statement declaring "I'm Part of the Solution!"

- Join the FUN, "Peace Plus One"!

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RECIPE TO SAVE THE WORLD

www.SustainabilitySymbol.com
*************************
Start now and share the 3 finger "Peace Plus One" Sustainability Symbol with those you

love and care about. We only have one life-sustaining planet... what are you doing to

keep it liveable?

It's really EASY!

Understand that the Sustainability Symbol represents a PERSONAL INTEREST in living a

good and prosperous life - a life of balance in 3 dimensions - Society, the

Environment and the Economy - ( or if you like: "People, Planet and Profit" ) ... and

please feel free to share the Sustainability Symbol and its meaning with at least 3

friends..

... that's it! that's all you have to do!

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RECIPE FOR "PEACE PLUS ONE" -

www.PeacePlusOne.com (English)

*************************

1.) Make the "Peace" sign in the old boring way,

2.) add ONE finger,

voila!

3.) Peace, Plus One... the new 3 finger Sustainability Salute! ...Cool!

(Now get someone to take a photo of you, and add it to your online photo account...

tell us about it and we'll share the link!)

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BE A CLIMATE CHANGE AGENT
- - - - ---- - - - - -
BECOME A CLIMATE CHANGE AMBASSADOR

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If you would like to learn more, and become a Climate Change Agent (or even be

appointed a Climate Change Ambassador for your country!!) check out
www.SustainabilitySymbol.com
or
www.PeacePlusOne.com

There are so many distracting problems in the world, it's hard to stop thinking with a

negative, disaster mentality...
Instead - take control of your life, and spread the good news that WE the People will

make the new sustainable world happen.
We'll do it by sharing meaningful ideas,
we'll do it by cooperating with each other,
we'll do it by becoming our own leaders and decision-makers,
and following what we know is right for us and for the world.

*************************
WEALTH , WISDOM, WELLNESS
*************************

Participate with the Institute for Sustainable Development in Commerce,
and we'll help you get a better job, live healthier and longer,
be respected and admired by everyone around you,
and PROFIT BY BEING PART OF THE SOLUTION, not the problem.

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the Sustainability Symbol:
www.Dragonpreneur.com
www.DragonTHINK.com
www.PeacePlusOne.cn (Chinese)
www.PeacePlusOne.com (English)
www.SustainabilitySymbol.com
<a

Coal Down Under: I Go Under
australian exports

Image by Erland Howden
Copenhagen's Little Mermaid speaks up about Australian coal exports!

Nice Australian Shopping photos

May 16th, 2011 admin No comments

A few nice australian shopping images I found:

texas chili at milk bar, an australian coffee shop
australian shopping

Image by cherrypatter
cherrypatter.com/2009/11/milk-bar-good-coffee-with-real-b...

avocado toast at milk bar, an australian coffee shop
australian shopping

Image by cherrypatter
cherrypatter.com/2009/11/milk-bar-good-coffee-with-real-b...

Nice Australian Baby Products photos

April 21st, 2011 admin No comments

A few nice australian baby products images I found:

Old Fashioned British Sweets From Your Childhood
australian baby products

Image by brizzle born and bred
1953: Sweet rationing ends in Britain

Children all over Britain have been emptying out their piggy-banks and heading straight for the nearest sweet-shop as the first unrationed sweets went on sale today. Toffee apples were the biggest sellers, with sticks of nougat and liquorice strips also disappearing fast.

One firm in Clapham Common gave 800 children 150lbs of lollipops during their midday break from school; and a London factory opened its doors to hand out free sweets to all comers.

Adults joined in the sugar frenzy, with men in the City queuing up in their lunch breaks to buy boiled sweets and to enjoy the luxury of being able to buy 2lb boxes of chocolates to take home for the weekend.

Do you remember your favourite childhood sweets and the excitement of going to the local sweet shop and choosing from the vast array of jars on the shelves full of colourful mouth watering temptations?

They were weighed by the quarter on a big old fashioned metal scale pan and packaged into small white paper bags.

For many of us, the Saturday ritual of sweets-buying has lingered into adulthood, and it is heartening to find so many places selling from jars. Indeed, the Bonds sweets factory in Carlisle - a major supplier - is planning to redesign its plastic jars to be squatter and wider than usual: an echo of the prewar shape. Multicoloured jars lined up on shelves are very alluring, for many of us a potent reminder of a time when the local sweet shop represented a kind of El Dorado.

If you thought it was just kids who ate sugar confectionery you'd be wide of the mark. Many of the lines might have been developed for children but prove a hit with adults, too. Even the tough guys (and gals) in the British armed forces love their sweets according to NAAFI figures, servicemen and women in Afghanistan last year munched their way through 923,583 bags of Haribo.

Here in the UK, sweetie buying habits change as we hopefully head towards warmer weather, with more people opting for fruity sweets rather than chocolate bars.

THE SWEETS GRAVEYARD

Spangles

Dimpled, square boiled sweets in fruit-flavoured and Old English varieties. Spangles was a brand of boiled sweets, manufactured by Mars Ltd in the United Kingdom from 1950 to the early eighties. They were bought in a paper tube with individual sweets cellophane wrapped. They were distinguished by their shape which was a rounded square with a circular depression on each face.

The regular Spangles tube (labelled simply "Spangles") contained a variety of translucent, fruit flavoured sweets: strawberry, blackcurrant, orange, pineapple, lemon and lime.

Originally the sweets were not individually wrapped, but later a waxed paper, and eventually a cellophane wrapper was used. The tube was a bright orange-red colour, bearing the word "Spangles" in a large letters. In the seventies a distinctive, seventies-style font was used.

Over the production period many different, single flavour varieties were introduced including Acid Drop, Barley Sugar, Blackcurrant, Liquorice, Peppermint, Spearmint and Tangerine.

The Old English Spangles tube contained traditional English flavours such as liquorice, mint humbugs, cough candy, butterscotch and pear drops. One of the flavours was an opaque mustard yellow colour, and one was striped.

The sweets' individual wrappers were striped, distinguishing them from regular Spangles. The tube was black, white and purple, and designed for a more mature and specific clientele than the regular variety.

Spangles were discontinued in the early eighties, and briefly reintroduced in 1994, including in Woolworths outlets in the UK. There are many nostalgic references to them from children who grew up with them. Spangles are associated with the 1970s and they, like Space Hoppers or the Raleigh Chopper, have become shorthand for lazy nostalgia for the time, as in the phrase "Do you remember Spangles?"

Today the Tunes brand is the only remaining relation of the Spangles brand, sharing the shape and wrapping of the original product. In the UK, Tunes no longer have the Spangles style packaging, and they are now lozenge-shaped.

Cabana bar

Very sweet coconut-centred chocolate bar with cherry twist made by Cadbury's.

Pineapple Mars

This early tropical-flavoured prototype was not a lasting success

Fry's Five Centres

Follow-up to famous Fry's Five Boys. Fry's Cream is a chocolate bar made by Cadbury's, and formerly by J. S. Fry & Sons. It consists of a fondant centre enrobed in dark chocolate and is available in a plain version, and also peppermint or orange fondant. Fry's Chocolate Cream was one of the first chocolate bars ever produced, launched in 1866.

There are currently three variants of Fry's Cream:

Fry's Chocolate Cream
Fry's Orange Cream
Fry's Peppermint Cream

Over the years, other variants existed:

Fry's Five Centre (orange, raspberry, lime, strawberry, and pineapple), produced from 1934 to 1992.

Fry's Strawberry Cream
Fry's Pineapple Cream

Cadbury's also produced a solid milk chocolate bar called Five Boys using the Fry's trademark in the 1960s. Cadbury's produced milk and plain chocolate sandwich bars under the Fry's branding also.

Fry's chocolate bar was promoted by model George Lazenby, later James Bond actor, in 1962.

The Fry's Chocolate bar was first produced in Union Street, Bristol, England in 1866, where the family name had been associated with chocolate making since circa 1759. In 1923 Fry's (now Cadbury) chocolate Factory moved to Keynsham, England, but due to the imminent closure of the factory the production of the bar will move, possibly to Poland.

Banjo bar

Banjo is a chocolate bar once available in the UK. Introduced with a substantial television advertising campaign in 1976, Banjo was a twin bar (similar in shape and size to Twix) and based upon a wafer with a chopped peanut layer and the whole covered in milk chocolate. It was packaged in distinctive navy blue - with the brand name prominently displayed in yellow block text - and was one of the first British snack bars to have a heat-sealed wrapper closure instead of the reverse-side fold common to most domestically-produced chocolate bars at that time. It was available into the 1980s. There was a coconut version also available in a red wrapper with yellow text.

Aztec bars

So many sweet lovers would love to be able to enjoy Aztec bars again. Sadly it isn't possible to buy Aztec bars at the moment. It was like a Mars Bar but not as sickly because it had nougat instead of toffee. It had a purple wrapper it was made by Cadbury's.

Opal Fruits

Mars, the manufacturers, is bringing back the sweets for a limited period in conjunction with the supermarket chain ASDA.

The fruit chews that were "made to make you mouth water" were replaced by Starburst in 1998, the name under which they had been exported to the US in the seventies.

But the iconic British brand is being revived in celebration of the tenth anniversary of the change.

They will be available for an initial period of 12 weeks from May 10, exclusively in ASDA stores.

A spokesperson for ASDA said: "The demise of the Opal Fruit was mourned across the nation, and we're really excited to be staging the exclusive comeback of this great British favourite."

Opal Fruits were initially introduced in Britain in the 1960s.

In 1998, the US brand Starburst was adopted in England in order to standardise the brand in the global marketplace.

Expectations are high that the move to bring back Opal Fruits will be popular with consumers.

As well as reverting to the original flavours of lemon, lime, orange and strawberry, the new Opal Fruits will be a strictly natural affair.

The limited edition will be produced using no artificial colouring or preservatives, a move that both ASDA and Mars hope will appeal to twenty-first century customers.

The return of Opal Fruits continues the recent trend of reviving classic brands.

Cadbury reintroduced the Wispa last year after an internet campaign which also involved protesters storming a stage at the Glastonbury festival.

Sherbert Fountain

Sherbet is sold in a plastic tube with twist-off lid, with a stick made from liquorice as a sherbet fountain. Many consumers regret the replacement of the former paper packaging, which allowed an extra dimension of enjoyment: the crushing of the caked lumps of sherbet as the paper cylinder was rolled between the hands. The top of the stick is supposed to be bitten off to form a straw and the sherbet sucked through it, where it fizzes and dissolves on the tongue, though many people prefer to either dip the liquorice in the sherbet and lick it off or to tip the sherbet into their mouths and eat the liquorice separately.

When paired with liquorice, sherbet is typically left unflavoured in a white form and with a higher reactive agent so that it causes a fizzy foam to develop in the mouth.

They are manufactured by Barratt, a subsidiary of Tangerine Confectionery.

Though some shops still sell the old-style only.

Sherbert Flying Saucers

These small pastel coloured rice paper sweets were shaped like a U.F.O. and contained delightfully fizzy sherbet.

Small dimpled discs made from edible coloured paper (rice paper), typically filled with white unflavoured sherbet (the same form as in Sherbet Fountains) These sweets had sherbert in the middle and a kind of melt-in-your-mouth outer shell.

Black Jacks Chews

Black Jack is a type of "aniseed flavour chew" according to its packaging. This means that it is a chewy (gelatin-based) confectionery. Black Jack is manufactured under the Barratt brand in Spain. Black Jack is very similar to Fruit Salad, which are also manufactured by Barratt.

Black Jacks are one of the most well-known classic British sweets. They`re aniseed-flavoured, chewy and black with a unique taste, and they make your tongue go black!

The original labels from the 1920's pictured a grinning gollywog - unbelievably, back then images of black people were used to advertise Liquorice. This is seen as unacceptable today, of course, and by the late 80s manufacturers Trebor deleted the golly logo. It was replaced by a pirate with a black beard.

In the early 1990s the pirate logo was replaced by a rather boring black and white swirl design.

Cabana bars

Cabana bars died out in about 1984, and as they were made by Rowntree (sold to Nestle in 1989) they're very unlikely to make a comeback.

Licorice Bootlaces

Long thin strips of licorice in the shape of boot laces.

Pineapple Chunks

Pineapple Flavour Hard Boiled Sweets.

Jamboree Bag

Bags of different sorts of sweets, with dodgy plastic toys and whistles etc, where are they now?

Rhubarb & Custard

Rhubarb and Custard flavoured boiled sweet, with it's two colours.

Gobstoppers

Gobstoppers, known as jawbreakers in Canada and the United States, are a type of hard sweet or candy. They are usually round, usually range from about 1 cm across to 3 cm across (though much bigger gobstoppers can sometimes be found in Canadian/US candy stores, up to 8 cm in diameter) and are traditionally very hard.

The term gobstopper derives from 'gob', which is United Kingdom/Ireland slang for mouth.

Gobstoppers usually consist of several layers, each layer dissolving to reveal a different colored (and sometimes different flavoured) layer, before dissolving completely. Gobstoppers are sucked or licked, being too hard to bite without risking dental damage (hence the US title).

Gobstoppers have been sold in traditional sweet shops for at least a century, often sold by weight from jars. As gobstoppers dissolve very slowly, they last a very long time in the mouth, which is a major factor in their enduring popularity with children. Larger ones can take days or even weeks to fully dissolve, risking a different kind of dental damage.

In 2003, Taquandra Diggs, a nine year old girl in Starke, Florida, suffered severe burns, allegedly from biting down on a Wonka Everlasting Gobstopper that had been left out in the sun. Diggs and several other victims' families filed lawsuits against Nestlé for medical bills resulting from plastic surgery as well as pain and suffering; the matters were later settled outside of court for an undisclosed amount.

A 2004 episode of the Discovery Channel television program "Myth Busters" episode subsection named Exploding Jawbreakers then demonstrated that heating a gobstopper in a microwave oven can cause the different layers inside to heat at different rates, yielding an explosive spray of very hot candy when compressed; Myth Busters crew members Adam Savage and Christine Chamberlain received light burns after a gobstopper exploded.

Acid Drops

Tongue-tinglingly sharp boiled sweets.

Barley Sugar

Barley sugar (or barley sugar candy) is a traditional variety of British boiled sweet, or hard candy, yellow or orange in colour with an extract of barley added as flavouring. It is similar to hard caramel candy in its texture and taste.

Barley sugars and other energy sweets are the only food allowed to be eaten in the New Zealand & Australian 40 Hour Famine, an annual event which draws attention to world hunger. A single barley sugar is allowed to be consumed once every 4 hours during the 40 Hour Famine. This applies to participants older than primary school age.

Bulls Eyes Humbug

Humbugs are a traditional hard boiled sweet available in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. They are usually flavoured with peppermint and striped in two different colours (often brown and tan). They have a hard outside and a soft toffee centre. Humbugs are typically cylinders with rounded ends wrapped in a twist of cellophane, or else pinched cylinders with a 90-degree turn between one end and the other (shaped like a pyramid with rounded edges), loose in a bag.

They are more often eaten in winter than summer, as they are considered "warming." The name of the candy is not related to the phrase "Bah, humbug" derived from Dickens' A Christmas Carol. That expression implies a general dissatisfaction with the Christmas season. However, offering humbugs around Christmas time is now seen by some as humorous or ironic, and was featured in an episode of Blackadder in this manner.

A similar sweet is "bulls-eye" which has black and white stripes like a humbug but is spherical like an aniseed ball. These are peppermint flavoured and are also known as bullets in the UK as they are similar in size to smoothbore musket balls.

Love Hearts

Love Hearts are a type of confectionery manufactured by Swizzels Matlow in the United Kingdom. They are hard, fizzy, tablet-shaped sweets in a variety of fruit flavours featuring a short, love-related message on one side of the sweet.

The sweets are small and circular, approximately 19 mm in diameter, and 5 mm in height (including the embossed decorations). Both sides are embossed with a decoration, the rear with a large outline of a heart and the front with the message within an outline of a heart. On the front of the sweet the embossing is highlighted with a red colouring.

The main body of the sweet is coloured in one of the 6 colours - white, yellow, orange, green, purple or red. Especially for the darker red and purple colourings this colouring is somewhat blotchy.

Fruit Salads

Fruit Salad is a type of "Raspberry & Pineapple flavour chew" according to its packaging. This means that it is a chewy (gelatin-based) confectionery. Fruit Salad is manufactured by Barratt in Spain. Fruit Salad is very similar to Black Jack, which are also manufactured by Barratt.

Sweet 'Cigarette' Sticks

(sticks wrapped in paper, in packs that looked just like real cigarettes)

Candy cigarettes is a candy introduced in the early 20th century made out of chalky sugar, bubblegum or chocolate, wrapped in paper as to resemble cigarettes. Their place on the market has long been controversial because many critics believe the candy desensitizes children, leading them to become smokers later in life. Because of this, the selling of candy cigarettes has been banned in several countries such as Finland, Norway, the Republic of Ireland, Turkey and Saudi Arabia.

In the United States a ban was considered in 1970 and again in 1991, but was not passed into federal law. The U.S. state of North Dakota enacted a ban on candy cigarettes from 1953 until 1967. In Canada federal law prohibits candy cigarette branding that resembles real cigarette branding and the territory of Nunavut has banned all products that resemble cigarettes.

The Family Smoking and Prevention Control Act was misquoted as banning candy cigarettes. The Act bans any form of added flavoring in tobacco cigarettes other than menthol. It does not regulate the candy industry.

Candy cigarettes continue to be manufactured and consumed in many parts of the world. However, many manufacturers now describe their products as candy sticks, bubble gum, or candy.

Popeye Cigarettes marketed using the Popeye character were sold for a while and had red tips (to look like a lit cigarette) before being renamed candy sticks and being manufactured without the red tip.

Liquorice "Smoker's Sets"

Sweet smokers sets with sweet cigarettes, tobacco and liquorice pipes. CONCERNS have been raised about the availability of candy-style imitation cigarettes. The sweets, which look remarkably like a hand-rolled cigarette and packaged in replica cigarette packets.

"Recently there has been a trend for buying so-called retro candy such as aniseed balls and spangles. It's unfortunate that chocolate cigarettes have re surfaced but it's not illegal to sell them and it's really up to retailers to decide whether or not it's a product with which they wish to be associated."

Aniseed Balls

Aniseed balls are a type of hard round sweet sold in the UK, New Zealand and Australia. They are shiny and dark brownish red, and hard like Gobstoppers.

Aniseed Balls are something you either love or hate! They are flavoured by aniseed oil (obviously!), and have a very strong aniseed flavour. They last for a long time in the mouth before dissolving and in the centre of the ball is a whole rapeseed that can be crushed.

Butterscotch

Butterscotch is a type of confectionery whose primary ingredients are brown sugar and butter, although other ingredients such as corn syrup, cream, vanilla, and salt are part of some recipes.

The ingredients for butterscotch are similar to toffee, but for butterscotch the sugar is boiled to the soft crack stage, and not hard crack as with toffee. Butterscotch sauce is often made into a syrup, which is used as a topping for ice cream (particularly sundaes).

The term butterscotch is also often used for the flavour of brown sugar and butter together even where actual confection butterscotch is not involved, e.g. butterscotch pudding.

Food historians have several theories regarding the name and origin of this confectionery, but none are conclusive. One explanation is the meaning "to cut or score" for the word "scotch", as the confection must be cut into pieces, or "scotched", before hardening. It is also possible that the "scotch" part of its name was derived from the word "scorch".

However, the word was first recorded in Doncaster, in England, where Samuel Parkinson began making the confectionery in 1817. Parkinson's Butterscotch had royal approval and was one of Doncaster's attractions until it ceased production in 1977. The recipe was revived in 2003 when a Doncaster businessman and his wife rediscovered the recipe on an old folded piece of paper inside one of the famous St Leger tins in their cellar.

Butterscotch is an example of a genericized trademark, originally a trademark of Parkinson's.

Jelly Babies

Jelly babies are a type of soft confectionery that look like little babies in a variety of colours. There are currently several companies that make jelly babies, most predominantly Trebor Bassett (part of the Cadbury Group of companies, and famous for their liquorice allsorts) and also Rowntree (Nestlé).

Jelly Babies were launched by Bassett's in 1918 in Sheffield as "Peace Babies" to mark the end of World War I. Production was suspended during World War II due to wartime shortages and the fact that the name had largely become ironic. In 1953 the product was relaunched as "Jelly Babies". In March 1989 Bassett's were taken over by Cadbury Schweppes who had earlier acquired the Trebor brand.

Jelly Babies manufactured in the United Kingdom tend to be dusted in starch which is left over from the manufacturing process where it is used to aid release from the mould. Jelly Babies of Australian manufacture generally lack this coating.

Like many gummy sweets, they contain gelatin and are thus not suitable for vegetarians.

A popular science class experiment is to put them in a strong oxidising agent and see the resulting spectacular reaction. The experiment is commonly referred to as "Screaming jelly babies".

Each Bassett's Jelly Baby now has an individual name and shape, colour and flavour: Brilliant (red - strawberry), Bubbles (yellow - lemon), Baby Bonny (pink - raspberry), Boofuls (green - lime), Bigheart (purple - blackcurrant) and Bumper (orange). The introduction of different shapes and names was a new innovation, circa 1989, prior to which all colours of jelly baby were a uniform shape.

Jelly Babies are similar in appearance to Gummi bears, which are better known outside of the United Kingdom, though the texture is different, Jelly Babies having a harder outer "crust" and a softer, less rubbery, centre.

In 2007, Bassett's Jelly Babies changed to include only natural colours and ingredients.

In the early 1960s, after Beatles guitarist George Harrison revealed in an interview that he liked jelly babies, audiences showered him and the rest of the band with the sweets at live concerts and fans sent boxes of them as gifts.[citation needed] Unfortunately American fans could not obtain this soft British confection, replacing them with harder jelly beans instead. To the group's discomfort, they were frequently pelted with jelly beans during concerts while in America.

Jelly babies are popular with several of the Doctors in the television series Doctor Who. The Second Doctor was the first to have them in his pockets. The Fourth Doctor had them throughout his time on the show. They also appear briefly with the Tenth Doctor In the 2007 episode "The Sound of Drums", The Master is seen eating them.

Dolly mixture

This is a British confection, consisting of a variety of multi-coloured fondant shapes, such as cubes and cylinders, with subtle flavourings. The mixtures also include hard-coated fondants in "round edged cube" shapes and sugar coated jellies. They are sold together, in a mixture in a medium-sized packet. It is produced by various companies in different countries; the most popular brands are those produced by Trebor Bassett (now a part of the Cadbury's consortium)

Bonbons

The name bonbon (or bon-bon) stems from the French word bon, literally meaning “good”. In modern usage, the term "bonbon" usually refers to any of several types of sweets and other table centerpieces across the world.

The first bonbons come from the 17th century when they were made at the royal court especially for children who were eating them and chanting bon, bon!, French for good, good!.

Bonbon is also a colloquial expression (as in, "She sat around all day eating bon-bons while her husband was at work."). This sweet inspired Johann Strauss II to compose a waltz named, "Wiener Bonbons".

Chewits

Chewits is the brand name of a chewy, cuboid-shaped, soft taffy candy manufactured by Leaf International.

Chewits was launched in the UK in 1965. The sweets were originally manufactured in Southport, but after the closing of the factory in 2006 manufacture was moved to Slovakia. The original flavours consisted of Strawberry, Blackcurrant, Orange and Banana. Over the years more exotic flavours such as Ice Cream, Cola, Rhubarb & Custard, and Blue Mint were introduced as limited edition flavours. New Chewits pack designs, formats and flavours were launched in 2009.

Currently Chewits core flavour range includes Strawberry, Blackcurrant, Fruit Salad, Ice Cream and Orange. Ice Cream Chewits, originally released in 1989, were re-introduced in 2009 following an online petition and demand expressed on Facebook and Bebo.

Chewits were first advertised on television in 1976. The original advertisements featured the 'Monster Muncher', a Godzilla-resembling mascot on the hunt for something chewy to eat. The first ad featuring the Muncher threatening New York was made by French Gold Abbott and created by John Clive and Ian Whapshot. The first ad was so successful the sequel was delayed. The 'Monster Muncher' chomps and tramples humorously local and well-known international landmarks such as Barrow-in-Furness Bus Depot, a London block of flats, London Bridge, the Taj Mahal, the Leaning Tower of Pisa, and the Empire State Building. The 'Monster Muncher' could only be quelled by a pack of Chewits.

A spin-off computer game, The Muncher, was released for the ZX Spectrum in 1988.

The original adverts used claymation special effects, similar in style to those made famous in the movies of Ray Harryhausen. They also included a voiceover style reminiscent of a 1950s radio serial.

A subsequent advertisement, originally aired in 1995, plays on the over-the-top advertising style of the post-war era. To the tune of bright 50's era orchestration, a salesy narrator exhorts viewers to try a variety of chewy consumer items in the essential guide to a chewier chew. The ad shows the 'Monster Muncher' sampling items such as Wellington boots, a rubber boat and a rubber plant in order to be ready for the chewiest of chews - Chewits.

In the late 1990s, Chewits experimented with ads showing multiple news casting dinosaur puppets. The catchphrase advice at the close of each 'broadcast' was to "do it before you chew it". This style of ads was relatively short-lived for Chewits.

With a change of advertising agencies, the puppets were replaced by colourful 2D animations. The 'Monster Muncher' was re-introduced as 'Chewie' in two popular adverts from this time. In the first, which aired in 2000, Chewie roller skates on two buses through a busy city scene. The second, which went out a year later in 2001, shows Chewie waterskiing at a popular seaside resort. The ads included a rendition of the 1994 hit song 'I like to move it' by Reel 2 Real, with the chorus, "I like to Chewit Chewit."

In 2003, after a further shift in advertising agencies, a new ad was aired showing a wide range of animals auditioning to be the new face of Chewits. The ad announced the return of the iconic dinosaur Chewie mascot, now dubbed 'Chewie the Chewitsaurus'.

In 2009, Chewits introduced the new Chewie the Chewitsaurus look, showing a contemporary, computer-game-style slick design. Chewie the Chewitsaurus features on all Chewits packaging and sponsorship activity.

Fizzy Cola Bottles

Remember that fizzy, sour cola taste you used to get from these? I think these are another sweet you either love or hate. Real cola tasting Giant fizzy bottles.

Milk Bottles

These white milk bottle shaped chewy white sweets are also known as milk gums. They were pretty popular in the UK, and are still selling well today repackaged as retro sweets.

Pacers

These were a kind of Opal Fruits spin-off, but came in peppermint and spearmint flavours. They were discontinued sometime in the 80's.

Sweet Bananas

These yummy sweet bananas, soft, juicy chews with a lovely mellow banana flavour.

Mackintosh's Toffee

Mackintosh's Toffee is a sweet created by John Mackintosh.

Mackintosh opened up his sweets shop in Halifax, Yorkshire, England in 1890, and the idea for Mackintosh's Toffee, not too hard and not too soft, came soon after. In 1969, Mackintosh's merged with rival Rowntree to form Rowntree Mackintosh, which merged with Nestle in 1988.

The product is often credited with being over 100 years old.

The toffee is sold in bags containing a random assortment of individual wrapped flavoured toffees. The flavours are (followed by wrapping colour): Malt (Blue), Harrogate (Yellow), Mint (Green), Egg & Cream (Orange), Coconut (Pink), Toffee (Red). The red wrapped toffees do not display a flavour on the wrapper. The product's subtitle is "Toffee De Luxe" and its motto "a tradition worth sharing".

Space Dust

Space Dust the candy that pops when placed in your mouth.

Bazooka bubble gum

It was first marketed shortly after World War II in the U.S. by the Topps Company based in Brooklyn, New York. The gum was packaged in a patriotic red, white, and blue color scheme. Beginning in 1953, Topps changed the packaging to include small comic strips with the gum, featuring the character "Bazooka Joe". There are 50 different "Bazooka Joe" comic-strip wrappers to collect. The product has been virtually unchanged in over 50 years.

The Topps company expanded the flavors, making them Original, Strawberry Shake, Cherry Berry, Watermelon Whirl, and Grape Rage. The Strawberry flavor is packaged in a pink and white wrapper and the Grape in a purple and white wrapper. Bazooka gum can also be found in a sugar free variety with the standard bubble gum flavor and a "Flavor Blasts" variety, claimed to have longer lasting, more intense taste. Bazooka gum comes in 2 different sizes.

Bazooka bubblegum is sold in many countries, often with Bazooka Joe comic strips translated into the local language. Bazooka gum is sold in Canada with cartoons in both English and French, depending upon the city. In Israel, manufactured under license to Elite, the cartoons are written in Hebrew. The gum was also sold in Yugoslavia and later in Slovenia until the local licensee allowed their license to expire in 2006. The "Bazooka Joe" cartoons are about "Bazooka Joe" and his friends. There are also "Bazooka Joe" t-shirts in return for 15 Bazooka Joe comics and .99 while supplies last. But the offer has been discontinued.

In May 2009 it was announced that the Bazooka Joe comic was to be adapted into a Hollywood movie.

Traffic Light lollies

These were a red yellow and green lolly that was a childhood favourtite sweet for many.

Black Magic Chocolates

What a huge disappointment these chocolates are!! A few years ago Nestle made an almighty mistake by doing away with THE best brand of dark chocolates, favourites of many thousands of people, and replacing them with cardboard pretend chocolate squares which tasted cheap and nasty. Most boxes ended up in the bin. Last year I had a letter from Nestle saying they were bringing the classics back, fantastic, I was straight to the shop for some, so bad was my addiction, but horribly they are nothing like the originals.

The dont taste or smell the same, the centres are hard and taste of chemicals, like long gone off chocolates. The bottom line is this, why change them in the first place? and when you realised you had made a mistake why not bring back the originals instead of these tacky replacements. very sad, and I still havent found any chocs like Black Magic, I still have original boxes with ribbons from the 1950's, now they were class.

Texan

Ultra-chewy, chocolate-covered nougat bar launched in the mid-70s; disappeared in the mid-80s.

Banjo

Boring two-fingered wafer bar, lasted for most of the 80s.

Callard & Bowser Creamline Toffees

A 2001 casualty; they were better than Toffos.

Amazin Raisin

1971-78 - the sweets equivalent of rum'n'raisin ice cream.

Freshen Up

Chewing gum with a liquid centre, an 80s innovation.

Bluebird Toffee

A classic, but a recent casualty of confectionery industry takeovers.

Jap Desserts

These old coconut sweets (coconut was often known as 'Jap') died a death in the early 2000s.

Counters (Galaxy)

Harmless chocolate beans cruelly cut off.

Pink Panther

Extraordinary strawberry-flavoured chocolate bars, thin like Milky Bars. An acquired taste.

Bandit

Wafer biscuit - a challenger to Penguins.

Club bars

From Jacobs. The full range has been withdrawn, but Orange is still available. Symbol guide: plain = jack of clubs; milk = golf ball; mint = green leaf. Bog-standard but likable for thick chocolate.

Nutty Pure

80s bar, with a smoky brown see-through wrapper. Peanuts encase a fudge-type caramel log centre.

Double Agent

Extremely artificial blackcurrant- or apple-flavoured boiled sweets, with a sherbet centre and spy questions on the wrapper. Classic cold war confectionery.

Mighty Imp's

Mighty Imps were really old fashioned licquorice and menthol pellets that used to turn your tongue black... lovely!

They were sugar free and were marketed to help you keep a clear voice and protect against a sore throat (due to the menthol content I suspect).

Zoom

This ice lolly on a stick was shaped like a rocket and was made up of three sections, each with its own distinct flavour. In sequence this was lime, lemon and strawberry.

Refreshers

Fruit flavour fizzy sweets in a roll. Raspberry, lemon, lime and orange flavours. Refreshingly fizzly.

White Chocolate Mice

These white chocolate mice were cream flavoured and are silky smooth on your tongue. You certainly will not want the cat to get these sweet mice!!

The top 10 Best Sales - Through the ages

1966

1 Mars bar
2 Cadbury's Dairy Milk
3 Wrigley's Spearmint Gum
4 Milky Way
5 Polo
6 Kit Kat
7 Crunchie
8 Wrigley's Arrowmint Gum
9 Rowntree's Fruit Pastilles
10 Maltesers

1978

1 Mars bar
2 Kit Kat
3 Cadbury's Dairy Milk
4 Twix
5 Yorkie
6 Milky Way
7 Bounty
8 Maltesers
9 Aero
10 Smarties

1988

1 Mars bar
2 Kit Kat
3 Marathon
4 Wispa
5 Polo
6 Extra Strong Mints
7 Fruit Pastilles
8 Flake
9 Rolo
10 Double Decker

1997

1 Kit Kat
2 Mars bar
3 Cadbury's Dairy Milk
4 Roses
5 Twix
6 Wrigley's Extra
7 Quality Street
8 Snickers
9 Maltesers
10 Galaxy

2004

1 Cadbury's Dairy Milk
2 Wrigleys Extra
3 Maltesers
4 Galaxy
5 Mars bar
6 Kit Kat
7 Celebrations
8 Quality Street
9 Haribo (total sales)
10 Roses

Can anyone add to the list?

2010-06-23 Ron Mueck - Wild Man 2005 - 40
australian baby products

Image by Degilbo on flickr
Wild Man (2005), mixed media. A nine-foot sculpture of a naked, bearded, fearful man clutching the stool he is seated on. (McLelland Gallery and Sculpture Park, Langwarrin, Victoria, Australia). Ron Mueck (born 1958) is an Australian hyperrealist sculptor working in the United Kingdom. Mueck's early career was as a model maker and puppeteer for children's television and films, notably the film Labyrinth for which he also contributed the voice of Ludo, and the Jim Henson series The Storyteller.

Mueck moved on to establish his own company in London, making photo-realistic props and animatronics for the advertising industry. Although highly detailed, these props were usually designed to be photographed from one specific angle hiding the mess of construction seen from the other side. Mueck increasingly wanted to produce realistic sculptures which looked perfect from all angles.

In 1996 Mueck transitioned to fine art, collaborating with his mother-in-law, Paula Rego, to produce small figures as part of a tableau she was showing at the Hayward Gallery. Rego introduced him to Charles Saatchi who was immediately impressed and started to collect and commission work. This led to the piece which made Mueck's name, Dead Dad, being included in the Sensation show at the Royal Academy the following year. Dead Dad is a rather haunting silicone and mixed media sculpture of the corpse of Mueck's father reduced to about two thirds of its natural scale. It is the only work of Mueck's that uses his own hair for the finished product.

Mueck's sculptures faithfully reproduce the minute detail of the human body, but play with scale to produce disconcertingly jarring visual images. His five metre high sculpture Boy 1999 was a feature in the Millennium Dome and later exhibited in the Venice Biennale.

In 1999 Mueck was appointed as Associate Artist at the National Gallery, London. During this two-year post he created the works Mother and Child, Pregnant Woman, Man in a Boat, and Swaddled Baby. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ron_Mueck

Scanned from original print made from negative captured on Ilford FP4 Plus 125 120 film in Rolleicord Va.

2010-06-23 Ron Mueck - Two Women 2005 - 47
australian baby products

Image by Degilbo on flickr
Two Women (2005), mixed media. Two diminutive, clothed, elderly women, standing as though gossiping. (National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia). Currently on exhibition at Brisbane's Gallery of Modern Arts. Ron Mueck (born 1958) is an Australian hyperrealist sculptor working in the United Kingdom. Mueck's early career was as a model maker and puppeteer for children's television and films, notably the film Labyrinth for which he also contributed the voice of Ludo, and the Jim Henson series The Storyteller.

Mueck moved on to establish his own company in London, making photo-realistic props and animatronics for the advertising industry. Although highly detailed, these props were usually designed to be photographed from one specific angle hiding the mess of construction seen from the other side. Mueck increasingly wanted to produce realistic sculptures which looked perfect from all angles.

In 1996 Mueck transitioned to fine art, collaborating with his mother-in-law, Paula Rego, to produce small figures as part of a tableau she was showing at the Hayward Gallery. Rego introduced him to Charles Saatchi who was immediately impressed and started to collect and commission work. This led to the piece which made Mueck's name, Dead Dad, being included in the Sensation show at the Royal Academy the following year. Dead Dad is a rather haunting silicone and mixed media sculpture of the corpse of Mueck's father reduced to about two thirds of its natural scale. It is the only work of Mueck's that uses his own hair for the finished product.

Mueck's sculptures faithfully reproduce the minute detail of the human body, but play with scale to produce disconcertingly jarring visual images. His five metre high sculpture Boy 1999 was a feature in the Millennium Dome and later exhibited in the Venice Biennale.

In 1999 Mueck was appointed as Associate Artist at the National Gallery, London. During this two-year post he created the works Mother and Child, Pregnant Woman, Man in a Boat, and Swaddled Baby. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ron_Mueck

Scanned from original print made from negative captured on Ilford FP4 Plus 125 120 film in Rolleicord Va. I purposely left the portion of a spectator on the right as an indication of the size of this sculpture.

Advance Australia Fair Audio

April 19th, 2011 admin No comments



advance australia fair audio

Not long ago, I was talking to a very nice lady who had been an administrator in a Corporation at one of the local branches. She was upset because new people had come into the company, and they had advanced quickly up through the ranks into upper management, while he was still running the front office. She explained to me that he basically ran the whole company and that other people were making more money than her and actually trying to tell her what to do.

Whenever these other individuals who had advanced past her position got into trouble they always came to her to ask for advice. She thought that was rather hilarious, and she knew she was very much needed in the Corporation, but because she did not have an MBA she was never looked at for upper management, and even though the Corporation generally hired from within, and moved people up through the ranks, she was stuck in a position which paid less, even though she was practically running the whole branch.

She decided to take some ongoing education classes at the local community college and she got her associate degree in business, and was ready to go perhaps get an MBA. Unfortunately, she noticed how much it would cost, and since he is 45 years old, she wondered if you have the student loans paid off by the time she retired in 15 years. The cost of the MBA program when it was all said and done, would be over $40,000. She didn't think that was fair, and she asked if I thought it was worth it.

I told her that some online MBA courses gave credit for experience, but they might make her take a test before they would give them the credit for previous experience. And I told her that some of those online courses could be applied towards for-profit college MBA degrees, or as prerequisite courses to get into the MBA program at the local university. In fact, that might save some additional money, and I let her know that she did the right thing by going to the community college first to get all the lower division classes completed.

She indicated to me that it was quite boring to get all those classes completed, and she explained how many night school classes she went to over the last four years. She wasn't sure she could take another four years or more of going to night school to get her MBA. And she wanted to know if I thought it would be worth it.

That depends, but she would have a higher pay, and a better pension when she was completed for retirement, and that too needs to be taken into consideration. I hope you will please consider this discussion, when you are deciding if you are going to get an MBA so you can advance your company.

Lance Winslow is a retired Founder of a Nationwide Franchise Chain, and now runs the Online Think Tank. Lance Winslow believes writing 21,500 articles was a lot of work - because all the letters on his keyboard are now worn off.

Advance Australia Fair


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Adelaide Australia People Search

April 18th, 2011 admin No comments



adelaide australia people search
Holden drives to $112m profit
HOLDEN is back in the black after five years of losses on its carmaking operations in Australia.
"At the Fringe of the Festival" Mzfitz's photos around Adelaide, Australia


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Australia Rock Art

April 13th, 2011 admin No comments



australia rock art

Aboriginal Art May be the Last Great Art Movement Ever to be Discovered

Without a doubt, Australian Aboriginal Art is a form of art with huge significance. Renowned art critic and long time writer for Time Magazine Robert Hughes described Aboriginal Art as “the last great art movement”.

What makes his statement so significant is Australian Aboriginal Art in fact is one of the oldest forms of Art anywhere on the planet yet as an commercially art style it happens to be one of the newest.

Ancient Rock Art in remote parts of Australia dates back approximately 30,000 to 40,000 years. However, as a saleable commodity, this form of art has only really been available since the 70’s.

The union between ancient custom and practice and the originality of Aboriginal Art emerging on the international art market, has brought a huge reaction through the art world as it is realized as a discovery that will never be seen again.

Aboriginal Artists have actually been selling their unusual artwork since before the 1930’s, not yet known to the international market it remained contained within Australia seen only by those who happened to be travelling through the remote parts of the country and discovered it for themselves.

Generally back in these days the Aboriginals created their artwork on bark. It is generally accepted that Aboriginals began painting on canvas in an organised manner in the early 1970's when a school teacher and graduate of the National Art School by the name of Geoffrey Bardon took up a posting to teach at the primary school at Papunya, a remote Aboriginal settlement 250 km west of Alice Springs.

Bardon noticed that the Aborigines at Papunya would tell their stories by images and stories in the sand. He persuaded young as old to do the same but to record it various materials, such as paper, the doors at the school and eventually canvas.

Bardon worked alongside the Aboriginal painters and, in the early 70’s, the Papunya Tula painting movement was founded. Bardon dedicated many years of his life to recording and supporting the art he respected so much. He had an active role in setting up the art centre at Papunya and with and it is from here that the last great art movement began.

The artistic movement unleashed at Papunya spread over Central Australia as well as the Kimberley region of Western Australia and throughout the north of Australia in Arnhem Land as well as the Tiwi Islands. Now recognized all over Australia, Aboriginal communities all over the country share their history and culture through art to anyone who is interested.

There is a huge difference in Aboriginal Art styles as each area of Australia is distinctive and totally separate from other parts of the country, each community has their own unique history, traditions, culture and stories to tell.

Aboriginal Art is not only the leading art style in Australia today, but also one of the most significant globally with major works of art by Aboriginal artists hanging in famous art galleries, auction houses and private collections.

Since its emergence commercially in the 70’s, Aboriginal Art has burst onto the international Art landscape.

As demand rises and international art fanatics start to understand its unique history as one of the oldest and youngest styles of art at the same time, the realization that it just may be the last great art movement ever discovered is remarkable.

About the Author

Michiel van Kets provides article services for Scott Linklater, one of four family members who make up the team from Artlandish Aboriginal Art gallery in Kununurra Western Australia. The company has the largest online Aboriginal Art gallery in the world. For information on Aboriginal artists and paintings please visit the website.

The Rock Art of Arnhem Land: Part I

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AUSTRALIA'S GREATEST ROCK ART by Grahame L Walsh-RARE


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Original vintage poster AUSTRALIA AYERS ROCK SUNSET c70


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Wallmonkeys Peel and Stick Wall Decals - Lichen on Rock, Bay of Fire, East Coast Tasmania, Australia. - Removable Graphic


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Riding high on the phenomenal success of A Rush of Blood to the Head, Coldplay is in peak form on Coldplay Live 2003. This CD/DVD two-pack was filmed (on Super-16mm film) and recorded in Sydney's Horden Pavilion on July 21 and 22, 2003, during an exhaustive year-long world tour, and the medium-sized arena provides a fitting stage for the London-based rock quartet, not so grand as to overwhelm the ...

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Rock Formations in the Sea, Australia Wall Decal by Panoramic Images . Product size approximately 24 x 72 inches. Available at Art.com. Embrace your Space - your source for high quality fine art posters and prints.

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 Aboriginal Art of Australia: Exploring Cultural Traditions


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Used - Describes the art of the Australian Aborigines including rock painting and engraving as well as sand and bark painting; also discusses the symbolism found in these works.

 Aboriginal Art of Australia: Exploring Cultural Traditions


Aboriginal Art of Australia: Exploring Cultural Traditions


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Used - Describes the art of the Australian Aborigines including rock painting and engraving as well as sand and bark painting; also discusses the symbolism found in these works.

 Aboriginal Sydney


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Both a manual and an alternative social history, this valuable reference explores the ancient past of Sydney, Australia, and celebrates its existing Aboriginal culture. Informative and authoritative, this travel guide exposes the vibrant culture and turbulent history hidden within the burgeoning city landscape through photographs and revealing narratives. With clear maps and traveling instructions to varied locations, from museums to rock art sites, this handbook will interest tourists and locals alike.

 Archaeological Sites in Australia: Aboriginal Sites of New South Wales


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Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Excerpt&#58; Aboriginal sites of New South Wales consist of a large number of places in the Australian state of New South Wales where it is still possible to see visible signs of the activities and culture of the Australian Aboriginesor Indigenous Australianswho occupied these areas before the arrival of European settlers in 1788. These sites are comparable with the petroglyphs of Native Americans and the Rock Art found elsewhere in Australia, but are not restricted to rock carvings. Many of the sites are on the Register of the National Estate. The Aboriginal Australians arrived in the north of Australia around 50,000 years ago. Sites over 22,000 years old have been found in the Blue Mountains area west of Sydney, while sites going back 40,000 years exist at Lake Mungo. There are some thousands of known sites, many but not all located in national parks. Some sites are also found in more suburban settings; rock carvings can be seen in the Sydney suburbs of Bondi and Tamarama. It is worth noting that Indigenous Australians were not interested in "art for art's sake" as understood by Westerners. Art was not something that was separated from daily life and restricted to a gallery. The art they developed was an integral part of day-to-day life and would normally have a purpose. One such purpose is thought to have been what some people call "wish fulfilment magic" &#151; or sympathetic magicin which the act of creating the magical work is thought to bring about the event depicted in the work. For example, a hunting scenea common subject in rock carvingswould be aimed at bringing about the desired reality of good hunting. There were also many artworks that were created for specific ceremonial purposes and which were not intended to last after the ceremony was over... More&#58;

 Around the World in 220 Days: The Odyssey of an American


Around the World in 220 Days: The Odyssey of an American


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This book, resulting from a lifetime dream of circumnavigating the world, consists of travel memoirs written during a 21-country 220-day global backpacking odyssey in 1988 offering unique insights and fascinating experiences from a 37-year-old American; whether picking mangos on Bora-Bora, hiking New Zealand's beautiful Fox Glacier, climbing Australia's Ayers Rock, visiting forbidden Angkor Wat and war-torn Cambodia, trading on Burma's flourishing black market, seeing Bahrain's fabled Garden of Eden, re-discovering astonishing Italian art treasures, crawling in Vietcong tunnel in Cu- Chi, riding Swiss train in breathtaking Alps, or island-hopping fabulous Greece; a must-read for any avid traveler or anyone who dreams of exotic places.

 Around the World in 220 Days: The Odyssey of an American Traveler Abroad


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This book, resulting from a lifetime dream of circumnavigating the world, consists of travel memoirs written during a 21-country 220-day global backpacking odyssey in 1988 offering unique insights and fascinating experiences from a 37-year-old American; whether picking mangos on Bora-Bora, hiking New Zealand's beautiful Fox Glacier, climbing Australia's Ayers Rock, visiting forbidden Angkor Wat and war-torn Cambodia, trading on Burma's flourishing black market, seeing Bahrain's fabled Garden of Eden, re-discovering astonishing Italian art treasures, crawling in Vietcong tunnel in Cu- Chi, riding Swiss train in breathtaking Alps, or island-hopping fabulous Greece; a must-read for any avid traveler or anyone who dreams of exotic places.

 Australian Music History: Music of Australia


Australian Music History: Music of Australia


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Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Excerpt&#58; ArchitectureCinemaComic booksCuisineDanceLiteratureMusicTelevisionTheatreVisual arts The music of Australia ranges across a broad spectrum of styles and genres. Some modern trends in Australian music is based on, or concurrent with, similar trends from the United States or United Kingdom and elsewhere, and the music is generally influenced by cross pollination of music from elsewhere; traditional indigenous Australian music, however is unique, as it dates back more than 60,000 years to the prehistory of Australia and continues the ancient songlines through contemporary artists as diverse as&#58; Jimmy Little, Warumpi Band, Yothu Yindi, Tiddas, Wild Water, Christine Anu, Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu, Saltwater Band, Nabarlek, Nokturnl, the Pigram Brothers, Coloured Stone, Blekbala Mujik, Kev Carmody, Archie Roach and Ruby Hunter. A folk club movement developed in Australia under the influence of those in Great Britain. A number of British singers have spent periods in Australia and have included Australian material in their repertoires, e.g. A. L. Lloyd, Martin Wyndham-Read and Eric Bogle. Traditional Aboriginal instrument, the DidgeridooIndigenous Australian music refers to the music of Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders. Music forms an integral part of the social, cultural and ceremonial observances of these peoples, and has been so for over 60,000 years. Traditional Indigenous music is best characterised by the didgeridoo, the best-known instrument, which is considered by some to be the world's oldest. Archaeological studies of rock art in the Northern Territory suggest people of the Kakadu region were playing the instrument 15,000 years ago. Contemporary Indigenous Australian music has covered numerous styles, including rock and roll, countr... More&#58;

Australia Decorations For Classroom

March 31st, 2011 admin No comments


50000 Names (carved in the wall)


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Australia


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