Showing posts with label Brenda Aurora Ysaguirre Gill supermama poet poems writer director Educator teacher ccc ace Abel Desestress prehispanico Belizean Belize Mexico Mexican. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brenda Aurora Ysaguirre Gill supermama poet poems writer director Educator teacher ccc ace Abel Desestress prehispanico Belizean Belize Mexico Mexican. Show all posts

Friday, May 9, 2008

WHO INVENTED SILICON CARBIDE?



In the Beginning
No other company in the world has more expertise with silicon carbide than Saint-Gobain. We invented it, developed numerous variations of it and make more of it for high-performance components than anyone else in the world.
It started about 100 years ago. A struggling scientist, once employed by Thomas Edison, dreamed of becoming wealthy. What better way to riches, he reasoned, than by making artificial diamonds?
The determined young man attached one lead from a dynamo to a discarded plumber's bowl, filled the bowl with clay and powdered coke, inserted the other lead into the mix and threw the switch. Nothing seemed to happen. He was disappointed until he noticed a few bright specks on the end of the leads. When he drew one lead across a pane of glass, it cut like a diamond.
This young scientist, Dr. Edward Goodrich Acheson, had invented silicon carbide (SiC), the first man-made abrasive and substance hard enough to cut glass. Acheson's discovery became Carborundum, the trademark for silicon carbide and the name given to the company he started.

Today
Today Saint-Gobain has earned a reputation for providing advanced, high-tech ceramic components to worldwide markets. These markets span multiple industries, requiring materials that are resistant to extreme temperature, thermal shock, abrasion and corrosion.

Thursday, May 8, 2008

WHO INVENTED THE HYDRAULIC PRESS?



Joseph Bramah Stainborough, (1749 - 1814) Bristish Inventor. Mechanic by profession, made a large number of practical inventions: a security lock, a hydraulic press, the water- closet or toilet, a printer to number bank bills, etc.

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

WHO INVENTED THE ROLLER BLADES IN 1979?



The idea of putting wheels on shoes to create the first roller skate goes back to a London inventor in 1763. But it wasn’t until the 1860s that the introduction of skate wheels with separate fixed and moving axles and that remarkable Industrial age invention, ball bearings, made for a smoother ride. Soon, roller-skating was a popular pastime for Victorians. Figure roller-skating became fashionable in the 1920s flapper era and continued right up until the disco era as a fun thing for couples to do together, or as a chance to meet someone. Rollerblades, or inline skates, invented by two hockey-crazed Minnesota brothers in 1979, changed everything with their 4 or 5 wheels arranged in a line. Imitating ice skate blades, they revolutionized the sport and, as host Jeff Douglas finds, visiting experts and fans in Toronto, Mississauga, Thornhill, Cambridge, and Decatur and Stone Mountain, Georgia, have led to an explosion of skating sports and pastimes, including figure roller-skating and inline dancing, trick blade, in-line speed skating, inline hockey, and even the re-emergence of the women’s roller-derby.

Monday, May 5, 2008

WHO INVENTED LITHOGRAPHY IN 1798?



Lithography: The Process
The following is an introduction to the process of making original, fine art lithographs and the methods used to care for them. Standards may vary at different workshops.
what is a lithograph? Basically, it is a print made by using a press to transfer an image that was created initially on stone or metal plate to paper.

Aloys Senefelder, who invented lithography in 1798, preferred to call it "chemical printing", since the process depends on the chemical interaction of grease, nitric acid, gum arabic, and water, rather than the stone from which the name lithography is derived.
Although the term can refer to commercially reproduced images, such as those on posters or in magazines, at Tamarind a lithograph is an image made by an artist who works closely with an artisan printer.

What 's the difference between a "print" and a fine art print? "Print" is the generic tem for an image produced in multiple. There are many different kinds of prints, including reproductions made from an image that already exists.
A truly "original" print, however, directly involves the artist, who uses the special qualities of the printmaking process--whether it is etching, engraving, serigraphy (or silk screen), woodcut, mezzotint, or lithography--to express his or her ideas.
Some artists print their images themselves. Others work collaboratively with a skilled printer, who discusses ideas and materials with the artist, and carries out all the technical requirements such as processing and printing.
In each case, what distinguishes the print as original is that the artist participated directly in the creation of the image and approves all impressions.

How does a lithograph differ from other fine art prints? Lithographs differ from etchings, engravings, serigraphs, and woodcuts in materials and process. As opposed to many other print processes which depend upon incised or carved lines, lithography is a planographic process that depends upon the mutual repulsion of grease and water.
For example, etchings and engravings are printed from a metal plate with incised lines while a lithograph is made from a chemically treated, flat surface. A serigraph is a silkscreen print, and woodcuts are printed from blocks of wood carved in relief.

How do you make a lithograph? To make a lithograph, the artist first draws an image, in reverse, on a fine-grained limestone or aluminum plate. For a one-color lithograph, this will be the only drawing. Each additional color will generally require a separate stone or plate.
Artists use the same kinds of tools they would for images on paper or canvas. However, since the basic principle of hand lithographic printing is the natural repulsion of grease and water, the crayons, pencils, and washes used in lithography have a high grease content.
Once the artist has finished drawing with the greasy black pigments, an artisan printer takes over and chemically treats the stones and/or plates to stabilize the image for printing.

Why don't the artists do the printing themselves? In general, although some artists print their own lithographs, many have neither the time nor inclination to learn about the complex chemistry of the medium.
At Tamarind, artists are free to concentrate on creating their images while collaborating printers attend to the technical requirements. Here, artists-in-residence work with highly skilled printers who have been trained in the technical and collaborative aspects of printing for artists. Often, artists rely on the printers' expertise to achieve their aesthetic goals.

How does the printing process work? After the artist has finished drawing on the plates or stones, the printer sprinkles rosin on the surface to protect the drawing. Then he or she powders the surface with talc which helps the chemical etch lie more closely to the tiny grease dots which compose the drawing.
The etch, which is a solution of gum arabic and nitric acid, is then applied to the stone and left for about an hour to combine with the greasy particles and the calcium carbonate of the stone.
The printer then removes the original drawing materials with a solvent, leaving the greasy image barely visible on the stone. The printing inks, which are also greasy, will adhere to the image area. The stone's surface is kept wet, which prevents the ink from adhering to non-image areas.
At the press, the printer sponges the stone or plate with water, rolls it with ink, and prints a series of "trial proofs": the same image with different color and paper combinations. When the artist is completely satisfied with the result, the final proof is signed by the artist as the bon à tirer ("good to pull"). With this as a standard, the printer is ready to pull the edition. At Tamarind, editions usually have fewer than thirty impressions.
Once the edition has been printed, the stone or plate is destroyed or erased, ensuring that no more impressions can be printed. The curator checks each impression against the bon à tirer, and the prints are embossed with Tamarind's chop (identifying symbol) and the collaborating printer's chop. Then the artist signs and numbers the impression.

What does "pull an impression" mean, and why do you refer to prints as "impressions"? To pull a print simply means to print an impression, and impression refers to any one of a number of nearly identical images pulled from the same printing elements.
in a multicolor print, how does the printer get the colors in exactly the right places? Generally the same piece of paper must pass through the press as many times as there are different colors. This process requires exact registration with each run, or pass, through the press.
Registration ensures that each color or component of an image is printed in exactly the nght area. The printer makes tiny pencil marks on each sheet of paper to be printed and lines them up to correspond with marks on each stone or plate. This way, each impression in the edition is consistent.

What is an "edition" of prints? Edition refers to all impressions of a particular image that are printed after the artist has given an approval to print. At Tamarind, the edition includes all numbered prints, the artist's proofs, the bon a tirer, which is given to the printer, and three impressions for the Tamarind archives. All impressions, including the trial proofs, color trial proofs, and artist's impressions, are documented.

What are artist's proofs? Artist's proofs (sometimes designated A.P.) are impressions just like those in the numbered edition. They are set aside for the artist's personal use. Tamarind limits the number of artist's proofs to a maximum of five or up to ten percent of the signed and numbered impressions.

Who determines how many prints will be made? Generally the artist and a printshop representative decide together before the edition is printed. At Tamarind, the number is rarely more than fifty numbered impressions and is often considerably smaller.
if all the prints in the edition are sold, do you print more? Never. After the artist signs and numbers each impression in the edition, all stones and plates are effaced. Stones are then resurfaced for future use.

Sunday, May 4, 2008

THOMAS EDISON AND THE PHONOGRAPH

A CLOSE UP OF THE FIRST EVERY RECORD PLAYER AKA THE PHONOGRAPH


The Record Player
By Sam Schalman-Bergen
Before 1877, the only way to hear something was to listen by person. But in 1877, a new luxury was created. The record player was invented. It was invented by Thomas Edison in 1877. Edison invented it in West Orange, New Jersey at Menlo Park Labratories. The record is unlike the C.D. player, because it can not only play, but it can also record. The record player was a mouthpiece consisting of a stylus that was attached to a diaphragm. In order to record, the mouthpiece would be lowered onto the cylinder, covered with tinfoil. One would turn the cylinder with a handle and talk. The talking would cause vibration that pressed the stylus down to the foil. So, as the cylinder turned, it created a pattern, that when played, sounds like the recorder's voice. In order to play, one would put the stylus back to the beginning of the recording and turn the crank. The force of the stylus moving over the pattern caused the diaphragm to vibrate, which recreated the sound of a voice. In 1888, the record player was improved by Amiel Berliner. He changed he tinfoil that had the recording into a flat disk. Now, this one-time phonograph has been changed into a C.D. player. The record player was a huge success and it was all thanks to Thomas Edison.




10 Facts about the Record Player
Invented in 1877
Invented by Thomas Edison
Invented in Menlo Park Laboratories, in West Orange, NJ
It could record and play
The first recording, by Edison, was Mary Had a Little Lamb
Bet 2 dollars and a pack of cigarettes with the head of the machine shop, that the phonograph would work and it did
It consists of a grueled cylinder wrapped with tinfoil and a mouth piece consisting of a stylus attached to a diapragm
It was Edison's favorite invention
The sound waves would press down on the diapragm and stylus, causing vibration that pressed the stylus into the foil
To play back, all you had to do was put the stylus back at the beginning, and turn the crank All the information was taken from The Genious of Edison C.D. ROM