7/25/2023 0 Comments Silica gel to preserve flowers![]() ![]() There are so many more reasons you may want dried flowers around your house! If you are interested in learning about epoxy resin, you can learn about resin for beginners here. For photo frames and art (preserving memories or home décor).Drying flowers for craft projects (epoxy resin, DIY jewelry scrapbooking paper, stationery, homemade paper projects). ![]() Drying edible flowers (for cakes, cupcakes, batters).Preserving a special bouquet or flower (wedding bouquet, special single flowers, etc).Let's first look at why people may want to dry preserve flowers. Today, we are going to share how to dry flowers using many different methods, and discuss why you may consider one method over another depending on what you want to do with your dried flowers. There are many flower drying options to consider, based on the look you want and the time you want it in. If you need dried flowers quickly for this project, you may even try a microwave press dryer. ![]() For this project, you will want to preserve their color properly but will need them to be flat, so you may want to press dry the flowers in an acid free paper book for several weeks or in a flower press for several days. You may want to dry your flowers to make scrapbooking paper with them. There are so many reasons why people may want to dry out flowers, and depending on which types of flowers you want to preserve and what use you will have for your dried flowers, you may opt for a different preservation method. When done properly, dried flowers preserve beautifully, and depending on the flower being dried, can almost resemble their fresh versions of themselves. Flower drying has been around for many generations and there is a good reason why. ![]()
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7/25/2023 0 Comments Wild 9 no music![]() ![]() The DVD features commentary from the legendary Roman Polanski. That really adds to his character's tendencies to add a refined mystique to his exterior, while maintaining an impoverished home life. (I have never heard Carpenter acknowledge this, but he must have known of this film.) Props to whoever decided to have Depp smoking Lucky Strikes, the most classy of all known cigarettes. It is very much, plotwise, a precursor to John Carpenter's "Cigarette Burns". A bit long, but not boring - it has a steady stream of suspense, a solid plot, some intrigue, and you want to know more. Polanski is very concerned about "physique" when casting, which is why he wanted Johnny Depp and the actor in the opening scene (who was not an actor at all, but a production designer). I suppose Depp could be called a cult favorite, too - a big star now, he has done his share of horror and weird flicks. The movie stars crowd favorite Johnny Depp alongside cult favorite Frank Langella. He travels to France and Portugal and anywhere else he must, but you never know where you may end up when you're tracking the devil. “Thoughts Fly Free” by J.A.Book detective Dean Corso (Johnny Depp) is hired to track down two copies of a book allegedly written by the devil himself, as a third owner thinks his copy may be a forgery.“Plain to See Plainsman” by Colter Wall.Meanwhile, one family member strays from the herd to strike out on his own fortune. “You Won’t See It Coming” by Kevin Costner & Modern WestĪ brutal attack leaves the Duttons defenseless and with more questions than cattle.“Tell My Mother I Miss Her So” by Ryan Bingham.“Me My Bottle and Nothing but Time” by Gethen Jenkins.“Turtles All the Way Down” by Sturgill Simpson.1 (Origins, Villains, & the Like” by Jomo and the Possum Posse “Straight Up Sideways” by Lainey Wilson.“We Don’t Run” by Kevin Costner & Modern West.“Where Do You Want It” by Whitey Morgan and the 78’s.“Caroline” by Colter Wall, Belle Plaine.“Dark Thoughts Ride” by Kevin Costner & Modern West.This time instead of cowboy hats and leather boots, the villain wears expensive suits when a Fortune 500 company threatens to shatter the family’s legacy. ![]()
7/25/2023 0 Comments Matt rhythm doctor who![]() Each note was individually created by cutting, splicing, speeding up and slowing down segments of analogue tape containing recordings of a single plucked string, white noise, and the simple harmonic waveforms of test-tone oscillators which were used for calibrating equipment and rooms, not creating music. Delia Derbyshire (assisted by Dick Mills) of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop used musique concrète techniques to realise a score written by composer Ron Grainer. The original 1963 recording of the Doctor Who theme music is widely regarded as a significant and innovative piece of electronic music, recorded well before the availability of commercial synthesisers. Most versions of the theme – including the current arrangement by Segun Akinola – have retained the use of the original key, with exceptions being Peter Howell ( F# minor) and Keff McCulloch's ( A minor) arrangements.Īlthough widely listed in reference works, and many series soundtrack albums, under the title "Doctor Who Theme", its official title is "Doctor Who", although its initial sheet music release used the now-deprecated form "Dr. The theme was originally written and arranged in the key of E minor. It is used as the theme for the science fiction programme Doctor Who, and has been adapted and covered many times.Īlthough numerous arrangements of the theme have been used on television, the main melody has remained the same. Created in 1963, it was one of the first electronic music signature tunes for television. The Doctor Who theme music is a piece of music written by Australian composer Ron Grainer and realised by Delia Derbyshire at the BBC Radiophonic Workshop. These results are generally consistent with the hypothesis that rhythm and tempo modulation detection are mediated by contrasting perceptual processes.Problems playing this file? See media help. The following results are observed: (a) the direction of modulation is significant only for tempo modulation, (b) rhythm and tempo modulation exhibit contrasting trends across the musical initial-beat-rate range, (c) metrical location does not affect detection and (d) detection is easier with beat subdivision. To measure perceptual difficulty, a type of reaction-time dependent variable and a modulation-type-identification dependent variable are used. To compare the difficulty of detecting rhythm and tempo modulation under various conditions, certain variables are manipulated: the direction of modulation (whether a change onset occurs earlier or later than expected), the initial beat rate, the metrical location of modulation, and the presence or absence of beat subdivision. This hypothesis is tested in three perceptual experiments. The model generates the hypothesis that rhythm modulation will be detected in the OSCILLATOR BANK, whereas tempo modulation will be detected in the SHORT AUDITORY STORE. ![]() The main thrust of the model is that rhythm perception is mediated by two complementary processes: (1) a so-called OSCILLATOR BANK that entrains to stimulus time-intervals on a note-to-note basis, and (2) a SHORT AUDITORY STORE that is responsible for integrating temporally separated events. Following a review of the pertinent literature, a theoretical model of time-interval perception in music is proposed that attempts to synthesize the findings of previous experimentation. Two approaches are adopted to elucidate how such modulating patterns might be perceived, a theoretical one and an experimental one. ![]() Tempo modulation occurs when the beat rate of a rhythm accelerates or decelerates. Rhythm modulation occurs when an initially even or isochronous rhythm becomes increasingly more uneven. The types of changes of rhythmic patterns examined are "rhythm modulation" and "tempo modulation." These two terms are akin to the musician's concepts of agogics, rubato, accelerando and ritardando, all being common expressive devices in musical performance. Research is presented on the perception of rhythm, specifically, the detection of changing or "modulating" inter-onset intervals in simple musical stimuli. ![]() |