Forum Logikmemorial
Comment fonctionne notre forum => Accueil => Discussion démarrée par: MethrenRaf le Janvier 16, 2025, 08:24:32 am
-
Zvtp MP3-Playing Mouth Gear Makes Headphones Obsolete
1 Are these strange clouds over Mount Fuji real Lenticular clouds sure are cool looking. But the image on the left is just a Photoshop job. This fake image has been around for at least a couple of years now, but it keeps getting passed around as real again and again. Stop it, guys. Just stop. Fake image via @BrilliantPosts 2 Are these the founders of Harley-Davidson In the early 1900s William Harley, his friend Arthur Davidson and many of Davidson family members all teamed up in Milwaukee to create one of the most iconic companies of 20th century America: Harley-Davidson motorcycles. But is the stanley kubek (https://www.cup-stanley.pl) photo above really of William Harley and Arthur Davidson in 1914 Nope. The always amazing PicPedant did a little research on this photo only to discover that surprise! surprise! it not what so many people on the internet claim it to be. Turns out the photo is just two random motorcycle enthusiasts from Minnesota. From a Harley-Davidson fan page where the image first appeared online: I was enjoying your page with all the old Harleys and remem stanley cup (https://www.stanley-cups.us) bered that I have a photo of my cousin grandfather and his grandfather brother each sitting on the brand new 1914 Harleys that they purchased in 1914. I am not sure, but I believe the p borraccia stanley (https://www.cup-stanley.it) hoto may have been taken at the dealership probably not realy a dealership back then, but the guy must have been an HD distributer in Wanamingo, MN. Below we have a photo of William S. Harley right and William A. Davidson Lipq An Astronaut And His Robot Companion Are Photobombed By A Watery Planet
The 7 ft 2.1 m wide house was built in 1830. via Patricia Barden and Adam Fagen The 10.4 ft 3.16 m wide Skinny House in the North End of Boston, Massachusetts Photos by John Stephen stanley cup (https://www.cup-stanley-cup.de) Dwyer 1 2 The Gap House on an eight-foot-wide 2.5 m site by Pitman Tozer Architects, London, 2007 Photos by Nick Kane, via Pitman Tozer Architects Lucky Drops, by Yasuhiro Yamashita, Atelier Tekuto, Tokyo, Japan, 2005 It is a long, narrow trapezoid with a lower base of 3.2m as the frontage, height of 29.3m as the depth, and upper base of 0.7m at the very end of the site. 鈥?according to the architect website. via Atelier Tekuto A 12.5 ft 3.8 m wide little house on West 46th Street in New York City via Scouting New York Silver House, by Boyarsky Murphy Architects, London The street frontage is less than 10 ft 3 m wide, but it widest room is only 25 ft 7.5 m broad. via Boyarsky Murphy The 47 inch wide Wedge in Milport, on the island of Great Cumbrae in Scotland, United Kingdom via Bruce McAdam and Go stanley cup (https://www.cups-stanley.fr) ogle Maps City Lights, by Sculp IT in Antwerpen, Belgium, 2006 The almo stanley cup (https://www.cups-stanley.pl) st 8 feet wide 2.4 m wide house made from shipping containers has four floors for various uses: downstairs for work, dining on the first, relaxing on second, sleeping on third, and the roof is for enjoying the view from the giant bathtub. the-greatest-homes-made-from-shipping-containers-around-453393451 via Sculp IT and OpenBuildings A glass house by Fujiwarramuro