Stardust Is The Best Fantasy Movie You’ve Never Seen

Put simply, Stardust is the best movie no one has seen. It managed to slip under a bunch of people’s noses, most likely because of its name (it does sound pretty cheesy). Fortunately for you, that means this little treasure is something you can discover now. I hope you like fantasy.

In the same tongue in cheek style of cult classic The Princess Bride, Stardust approaches fantasy knowing the cliches and tropes. And it does everything it can to make use of each and every one. The world Stardust takes place in is an awesome and well-developed one, where a small English town is bordered by a wall that separates our world from a fantasy world where all magical things are possible.

Directed by Matthew Vaughn, of Kick Ass fame, the film stars many of the actors that Vaughn worked with on his earliest (and best) films, like Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels and my personal favorite, Layer Cake. But the real star of the show is Neil Gaiman, the famous comic book storyteller behind the original work–a novel also by the name Stardust, though it varies from the film. And if that doesn’t tickle your fancy there’s plenty else to watch. [Netflix]

via Gizmodo
Stardust Is The Best Fantasy Movie You’ve Never Seen

Watching lasers cleaning stuff is one of the most satisfying things ever

Watching lasers cleaning stuff is one of the most satisfying things ever

I wish I could go through life with one of these lasers that can remove any substance from most surfaces. Accumulated dirt, steel rust, bronze patinas, plastic residues, oil… anything. Above you can see oxide being remove from a steel plate (source video) but check out this collection I just made. So satisfying.

Rubber residue from tire mold

Watching lasers cleaning stuff is one of the most satisfying things ever

Source video

Patina from bronze eagle

Watching lasers cleaning stuff is one of the most satisfying things ever

Source video

Paint from car

Watching lasers cleaning stuff is one of the most satisfying things ever

Source video

Residue from titanium nitride-coated molds

Watching lasers cleaning stuff is one of the most satisfying things ever

Source video

Dirt from stainless steel

Watching lasers cleaning stuff is one of the most satisfying things ever

Source video

Pencil from paper

Watching lasers cleaning stuff is one of the most satisfying things ever

Source video

Ink from anilox roller

Watching lasers cleaning stuff is one of the most satisfying things ever

Source video

Rubber from steel

Watching lasers cleaning stuff is one of the most satisfying things ever

Source video

Dirt from marble

Watching lasers cleaning stuff is one of the most satisfying things ever

Source video

Area specific removal

Watching lasers cleaning stuff is one of the most satisfying things ever

Source video


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via Gizmodo
Watching lasers cleaning stuff is one of the most satisfying things ever

NASA High-Res Photos Organized Into A Huge Creative NASA Pack (First Of A Series)

If you are like me and just LOVE space images this is going to be some very sweet news. Creative Reid Southen  went through the tedious job of organizing the many photos NASA releases into a creative Pack. This is a huge pack consisting of 2,400 high-res photos from the Expeditions 30-42 to the International Space Station. […]

The post NASA High-Res Photos Organized Into A Huge Creative NASA Pack (First Of A Series) appeared first on DIY Photography.


via DIYPhotography.net -Hacking Photography, One Picture At A Time
NASA High-Res Photos Organized Into A Huge Creative NASA Pack (First Of A Series)

How the Smithsonian Is Restoring the Original USS Enterprise Model 

The USS Enterprise is, in popular imagination, a futuristic spaceship. The actual USS Enterprise model used on the Star Trek show is, in reality, a 50-year-old creaker that has endured at least one misguided new paint job. The Smithsonian is hard at work restoring the model, though, and they’ve even got the National Zoo’s vet techs involved.

In an interview with TrekCore, the Smithsonian’s conservator Margaret Weitekamp dropped some fascinating hints about how the restoration is going. The model was donated to the Smithsonian five years after the show was canceled, and it had been on display at the Air and Space Museum. Earlier this year, they started to restore the sagging, stress-fractured model in earnest, boldly going where no conservator has gone before.

One of the first things the conservators did was bring in X-ray vet techs from the Smithsonian’s National Zoo. Weitekamp explains TrekCore:

The Enterprise has been X-rayed before, but that was done by sending it out for analysis. This is an opportunity – since the Zoological Park team had a portable radiography unit – to bring the equipment in house and save us the trouble of having to move the model an additional time.

It was really interesting. You can get a good sense of the interior; all of the little penny nails and things like that. I’m excited to get some of that imagery back. It comes in very large files that are specific to the scanning system that they have; they are in the process of converting them to a more standardized image file that we can use when working with the model.

How the Smithsonian Is Restoring the Original USS Enterprise Model 

Ultraviolet photo of the spaceship model. Credit: Smithsonian’s National Air & Space Museum.

In the 90s, an earlier attempt to restore the model led to new detailing and paint, which is a big no-no in modern conservation. So now, the museum also has to figure out how to undo its own mistakes. More from Weitekamp at TrekCore:

The museum has been doing its own work and evaluation which has included using UV light to analyze the paint, and to figure out where we have clearly repainted areas and where we have areas that seem to be more uniform in their paint. The top of the saucer section, for example, leads us to believe that it is original paint – it all fluoresces in the same way.

There’s plenty more to nerd out over at TrekCore. As for the model itself, expect to see it on display again in its former glory in 2016, just in time for the original series’ 50th anniversary. [TrekCore]

via Gizmodo
How the Smithsonian Is Restoring the Original USS Enterprise Model