Bob the Builder has an all new look! After entertaining kids for 16 years, he's launching his new CGI animated show on Channel 5's Milkshake from September 1st at 7.20am - perfect for breakfast time
Discover high-quality 3D visuals and animations from a leading CGI studio. Our expert team delivers stunning 3D CAD visuals and CGI production services.
Set in a forbidding and spectacular landscape in central Victoria, this house is built from Core Ten Steel, ICF blocks and SIPS panels to provide a high level of thermal insulation. The owner/builder approached Robert Harwood Architects in 2013.
Set in a forbidding and spectacular landscape in central Victoria, this house is built from Core Ten Steel, ICF blocks and SIPS panels to provide a high level of thermal insulation. The owner/builder approached Robert Harwood Architects in 2013.
Contemporary architecture the Sight Smart House (Vision Greenhouse Villa). Vision villa project is located in a rectangular site in Kordan, Karaj area and considering the client's needs, the villa consists of 3 main spaces on 3 floors.
Senior 3D Animator required at Ubisoft Annecy with In-depth knowledge of Keyframe and Mocap on Motion Builder and graphic tools.
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Bob the Builder is a British children's television show that first aired in 1998 Bob the Builder Wendy Mr. Bernard Bentley Scoop Muck Dizzy Roley Lofty Pilchard Bird Farmer Percy Pickles Travis Spud Scruffty Scrambler Mr. Beasley Mrs. Barbara Bentley Mr. Dixon Mr. Ellis JJ Molly Mrs. Percival Mrs. Potts Tommy Angelo Sabatini Robert Dorothy David Dixon Mr. Fothergill Hamish Jenny Pam Goody Tom Lennie Lazenby Skip Trix Benny Scrambler Scratch Neil Morrissey as TBA Rob Rackstraw as TBA Kate Harbour
Yu Cheng Hong is a talented artist based in Taipei, Taiwan who specializes in creating game art. Here's a stunning series of avatar character design and
The picture that has taken Transformers forums by storm is of the soon to be released Movie Leader Bumblebee. The figure has made the bar a little higher for toy designers.
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If you have been a reader of my blog for a while, you will know that I love houses. In fact, I have a life-long fascination with buildings and architecture of all sorts. So I was enchanted when I found some illustrations from a little book titled The Architect and Builder's Miscellany, or Pocket Library, Containing Original Picturesque Designs in Architecture, for Cottages, Farm, Country, and Town Houses, Public Building, Temples, Green Houses, Bridges, Lodges, and Gates for Entrances to Parks and Pleasure Grounds, Stables, Monumental Tombs, Garden Seats, etc. I found the drawings in the New York Public Library Digital Gallery, a terrific resource for anyone interested in period pictures of all types. With a little research, I discovered that the author of the book, and its illustrator, was Charles Middleton [1756-c.1818]. He was an architect and a surveyor, and had done work for the Prince of Wales on Carlton House. He presented designs over several years at the Society of Artists and the Royal Academy. Middleton published at least four books of designs and this was one of his most popular, first published in 1799, and still advertised, in the Edinburgh Review, in 1827. I found a copy of the book at Sims Reed Rare Books. It was available for purchase at £1800 and it seems to have sold! A rare book indeed... The illustrations at NYPL are all house plans, and they run the gamut from classic architecture to the cottage ornee to the downright eccentric. Here is a little folly with five rooms on the main floor, and an unknown number above. I love the conical thatched roof, and just look at the way the rooms are fitted in the circular space! Then there is the classic design of a small home at the top of this post (its most attractive feature, I think, is the lovely fanlight over the door) and a larger classical house below. This rather austere house has a standard floor plan except for the 'Dressing Room' which connects to the Dining Room and the Library. What is that about? The cottage ornee below seems to have a charming ground floor plan that offers all the neccessities of space, and the upper rooms must have been very interesting. Unfortunately the scan is a little pale, but again there is a 'Dressing Room' to the right of the front entrance just before you enter the Study. Is this the equivalent of our 'powder room'? The elevation of the last house that I will offer is, I think, less than pleasing but the floor plan has its merits. The small room labelled "Cabinet" has distinct possibilities for reading, writing and retreat. I notice that each floor plan offers an "Anti-room" on the Ground Floor. I am wondering if this was an innovation that only Charles Middleton included in his houses, or if it was a well-known addition to the Georgian house. My copy of "Georgian and Regency Houses Explained" does not mention such a thing. I wish that there were plans of the upper floors in this book, but there were only 60 aquatint plates, and I expect space was at a premium given the quantity of structures listed in the extended title of the book. I would love to see the other types of illustrations--Monumental Tombs? Gates for Entrances to Parks and Pleasure Grounds? Nothing fires my imagination like a building which my characters can inhabit. Am I alone in this? Do you love houses? 'Til next time, Lesley-Anne