1,211 research outputs found

    The Art of Costuming: Interpreting the Character Through the Costume Designer\u27s Eyes

    Get PDF
    Creating a believable illusion through costume design is a very important aspect in a theatrical production. Every production in theater is the culmination of a collaboration of creative individuals who each have a very explicit role to play. Part of the success of a production depends on set designers, lighting coordinators, directors, producers, props masters, actors, etc. The idea is to create a believable new world that relates to the audience. The costume designer’s job is to use all of the tools that are within their grasp to both research the best option for costuming and to actually construct the costumes. In order to do this, they must conduct research while working with the needs of the production team and the constraints that their products place on the costumes. The relationship between research, construction tools, and the abilities of creative peers gives the costume designer all that is needed to help define the characters in a production. All of these tools are used by the costume designer to polish off the character which helps to ensure the audience’s correct interpretation of a production

    Sheds for Antarctica: the environment for architectural design and practice

    Get PDF
    This work frames the architectural practice of Antarctica; a young practice environment characterised by loose collaboration and participation in diverse design activities. The architectural projects forming this research have surfaced three central propositions; about a mode of design practice, a type of architectural space, and an ethical position towards architecture. Each of these share the impulse to be immersed environmental influences affecting architecture. This document reflects on these ideas through the lens of a series of themes: noise, junk, longevity, and participation. Each of these themes describes the environment and context in which architectural design takes place. Through these designs, the architectural model of the shed is examined; a form which is characterised by loose and robust space. Together these reflections form a position towards sustainability that is applicable to architecture. That position foregrounds participation in the breadth of the imperfect environment for building; accommodation of change in that environment, and an open robust design process. In doing this it seeks to contribute to debates which span between architectural composition and the social forces on architecture, re-engaging the two with each other. The design projects, and the position elaborated through them, set out a territory for Antarctica’s ongoing design research and collaborative methods

    New Montana Exemptions to Securities Registration

    Get PDF
    Securities Registratio

    Surveillance for Toxoplasma gondii in the white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) in Ohio

    Get PDF
    Author Institution: Department of Entomology, The Ohio State UniversitySerum samples from 147 white-tailed deer, Odocoileus virginianus, were collected at deer-check stations and Columbus area metropolitan park deer hunts during November and December of Ohio's 1996-97 and 97-98 hunting seasons. These samples were tested for Toxoplasma gondii antibodies using a modified direct agglutination assay. Forty-four percent (65/147) of the samples tested positive. Sixteen percent had a titer of 25, 16% had a titer of 50, 3% had a titer of 250 and 9% had a titer of >500. Percentage of positive deer varied greatly between geographical locations. Fifty-five percent of 45 serum samples collected from Hocking County were positive while only 6% of the 18 deer sampled from Franklin County tested positive. No significant differences in infection rates were observed between sexes. This is the first report of T. gondii antibodies from a game animal in Ohio. Pregnant women should thoroughly cook venison before it is consumed to avoid complications from this pathogen

    Wood and Paper Properties of Vacuum Airlift Segregated Juvenile Poplar Whole-Tree Chips

    Get PDF
    Whole-tree chips from a hybrid poplar clone (Populus 'Tristis #1') grown under short rotation, intensive culture (SRIC) were separated into three fractions using vacuum airlift segregation (VAS). The fractions were: accepts, which was predominantly a woody fraction; rejects, which contained less wood and more bark and twigs; and fines, which consisted mostly of bark particles. The raw material quality was evaluated and kraft pulp and paper properties were determined on the whole-tree chips and each VAS fraction as well as on a 50:50 mixture of the accepts: rejects fractions. A 50:50 mixture of VAS accepts and 55-yr-old mill-run jack pine was also studied. Pulp and paper properties of the whole-tree chips, the VAS accepts and rejects, and a 50:50 mixture of accepts:rejects were similar and were only slightly lower in quality than those of mature aspen chips. The 50:50 mixture of VAS accepts and mill-run jack pine was acceptable by industrial standards. These results suggest that whole-tree chips from SRIC poplar stands can be mixed with conifer chips to supplement furnishes for kraft pulping

    Dewetting of Glassy Polymer Films

    Full text link
    Dynamics and morphology of hole growth in a film of power hardening viscoplastic solid (yield stress ~ [strain-rate]^n) is investigated. At short-times the growth is exponential and depends on the initial hole size. At long-times, for n > 1/3, the growth is exponential with a different exponent. However, for n < 1/3, the hole growth slows; the hole radius approaches an asymptotic value as time tends to infinity. The rim shape is highly asymmetric, the height of which has a power law dependence on the hole radius (exponent close to unity for 0.25 < n < 0.4). The above results explain recent intriguing experiments of Reiter, Phys. Rev. Lett, 87, 186101 (2001).Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, RevTe

    T-Cell Responses to the M3 Immune Evasion Protein of Murid Gammaherpesvirus 68 Are Partially Protective and Induced with Lytic Antigen Kinetics

    Get PDF
    DNA vaccination with the M3 gene, encoding an immune evasion molecule expressed during both the acute lytic and persistent phases of murid gammaherpesvirus 68 infection, yielded a significantly lower titer of virus in the lung than controls. The protection seen was dependent on T cells, and we mapped an epitope recognized by CD8 T cells. The immune response to this epitope follows the same kinetics as lytic cycle antigens, despite the fact that this gene is expressed in both lytic and persistent stages of infection. This has important implications for our understanding of T-cell responses to putative latency-associated gammaherpesvirus proteins and how vaccination may improve control of these viruses
    corecore