Thursday, 10 September 2015

Flying Raven Bird, red swoosh, metallic-effect Double-Sided Standard Business Cards (Pack Of 100)

A gorgeous best-selling design. Click to customize or personalize. How would it look with your name or monogram on it - why not have a look-see right now?


tagged with: chrome look, metallic effect, wings outstretched, metal look, hrbstslr genbct1f, raven logo, crow logo, flying bird silhouette, swooping raven, swooping corvus emblem

Elegance series: A great business card template with red and black swoosh. Just upload your logo or use the Raven provided. Then customise with your details and give a strap line, quote or personal message for that professional feel.
more items in the Elegance series
This business card template with other artwork


»visit the HightonRidley store for more designs and products like this

Cute ponies for the bedroom and school

Flexible Pony | Alphabet Chart Canvas PrintMonogram X Agile Pony Customised iPad SleevesPony Y Personalized Monogram Messenger Bags

Cute ponies for the bedroom and school

If you know a boy or girl who loves ponies then here's a collection that should give you some gift ideas.
Any boy or girl will love them - some for bedroom and some for school. Which of these would be best?

Click the image for more details and to buy. You'll also see more designs from the artist there.

Watch Molten Glass 3D-Printed From a Kiln at 1900 Degrees

Fun and Random

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In collaboration with the MIT Glass Lab, the Mediated Matter group at the MIT Media Lab has produced a way to 3D print glass, creating intricate patterns from molten glass inside a kiln-like printer and giving a completely modern twist to the 4,500 year-old material. The video produced to exhibit the ways in which the technology works displays the process without words, instead focusing on the mesmerizing way the hot glass stacks upon itself in the machine and ultimately cools into the final vase-like forms.

Glass 3D printing (or G3DP) is based on a dual-heated chamber concept, with the top chamber heating the glass and lower chamber slowly cooling it to prevent internal stresses. The top chamber operates at approximately 1900°F, and funnels the molten material through an alumina-zircon-silica nozzle into its programmable shapes.

The researchers explain the concept of the project as one that “synthesizes modern technologies, with age-old established glass tools and technologies producing novel glass structures with numerous potential applications.” One application of which is beautifully designed vessels created without human error, forms that are mathematically perfect in appearance and design.

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Caustic patterns of a 3D printed glass structure. Photo: Chikara Inamura.

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Caustic patterns of a 3D printed glass structure. Photo: Chikara Inamura.

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Glass 3D printing process. Photo: Steven Keating

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Glass 3D printing process. Photo: Steven Keating

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3D printed glass structure. Photo: Chikara Inamura.

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3D printed glass structure. Photo: Chikara Inamura.

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3D printed glass structure. Photo: Chikara Inamura.

 
#funandrandom 
 » see original post http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/colossal/~3/U_WUQlcpUPE/