Official image
1 Black Olives Printable This one is a great looking botanical print circa 1887. Featured is a branch of Mission Olives, which are a dark black color. The leaves are a nice dark green social networks. Wouldn’t this look great in a Tuscan Style Kitchen?
Victoriana is inspired by the decorative arts and design styles of the Victorian period. Because the Victorian period spanned 60 years, the Victoriana style is broad, and the look can be achieved by referencing very diverse design styles.
1 Fabulous Monkey This antique natural history print, features such a gorgeous looking monkey! This cute monkey is climbing on a branch. He is in dark brown, with what looks like grey stripes on his face, and deep brown eyes. Be sure and click to view details on this amazing print, it’s amazing how the individual hairs of his fur are drawn in.
2 Grapes This antique pair of free prints vintage pictures shows a bunch of plump juicy looking green grapes with a dark green leaves and some coordinating Purple Grapes. The backgrounds are a nice aged sepia tone. I think they would look great in a kitchen, or displayed near bottles of great wine!
Film graphic
There’s no getting away from the fact that getting a job in the film industry is still notoriously difficult. A Google search presents very little opportunities, so it appears the film industry is still as much about who you know as what. But don’t let that put you off, there are still ways to get that proverbial foot in the door.
Creativity is a singularly solitary process. Sitting alone in your creative space, trying to imagine something out of nothing can become overwhelming; the thoughts running in your head can get quite loud. In such moments, take a break from this noise and find your creative flow again with the help of Paterson.
While handmade scrolls and newspapers go largely unnoticed in a show like The Tudors or Penny Dreadful, they take center stage in a Wes Anderson movie where every frame is a perfectly symmetrical painting and the camera often zooms in and lingers on objects of importance. That sort of attention welcomes scrutiny, which we will talk about more later, but it’s a good place to jump into our interviews with other designers who, like Atkins, have gotten their hands dirty on the big and small screen and have useful insights into how it all works.
There’s no getting away from the fact that getting a job in the film industry is still notoriously difficult. A Google search presents very little opportunities, so it appears the film industry is still as much about who you know as what. But don’t let that put you off, there are still ways to get that proverbial foot in the door.
Creativity is a singularly solitary process. Sitting alone in your creative space, trying to imagine something out of nothing can become overwhelming; the thoughts running in your head can get quite loud. In such moments, take a break from this noise and find your creative flow again with the help of Paterson.
While handmade scrolls and newspapers go largely unnoticed in a show like The Tudors or Penny Dreadful, they take center stage in a Wes Anderson movie where every frame is a perfectly symmetrical painting and the camera often zooms in and lingers on objects of importance. That sort of attention welcomes scrutiny, which we will talk about more later, but it’s a good place to jump into our interviews with other designers who, like Atkins, have gotten their hands dirty on the big and small screen and have useful insights into how it all works.
Empire of the Sun artwork
Conflict, Time, Photography brings together photographers who have looked back at moments of conflict, from the seconds after a bomb is detonated to 100 years after a war has ended. Staged to coincide with the centenary of the First World War, this major group exhibition offers an alternative to familiar notions of war reportage and photojournalism, instead focusing on the passing of time and the unique ways that artists have used the camera to reflect on past events.
Researching her series, Dewe Mathews worked closely with academics to locate the forgotten places along the western front where these unfortunate combatants had been shot. She then travelled to each spot and set up her camera there at dawn, recording whatever could be seen a century after the executions had taken place.
Conflicts from around the world and across the modern era are depicted, revealing the impact of war days, weeks, months and years after the fact. The works are ordered according to how long after the event they were created: images taken weeks after the end of the American Civil War are hung alongside those taken weeks after the atomic bombs fell on Japan in 1945. Photographs from Nicaragua taken 25 years after the revolution are grouped with those taken in Vietnam 25 years after the fall of Saigon. The exhibition concludes with new and recent projects by British, German, Polish and Syrian photographers which reflect on the First World War a century after it began.
Visual
Open source command line interface for Visual Studio Team Services from Windows, Linux, and Mac. Manage pull requests, builds, work items, and more directly from a command prompt or from scripts. See the docs for more information. For manual download and install steps check out these links – Windows, Linux, Mac.
The IntelliTrace stand-alone collector lets you collect diagnostic data for your apps on production servers without installing Visual Studio or redeploying your application. Use of this tool requires a valid Visual Studio license.
Visual Studio Code is a lightweight but powerful source code editor which runs on your desktop and is available for Windows, macOS and Linux. It comes with built-in support for JavaScript, TypeScript and Node.js and has a rich ecosystem of extensions for other languages and runtimes (such as C++, C#, Java, Python, PHP, Go, .NET).
VS Code predicts your next move as you code. Use the Tab key to accept AI-powered suggestions right in your editor. It intelligently recommends what to change — and where — based on the edits you’re already making.
Windows is a popular operating system and it can also be a great cross-platform development environment. This section describes cross-platform features such as the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) and the Windows Terminal.