Monday, September 16, 2024

Me at work today. And why do these guys always look cross-eyed?

 


There's catnip involved here

 




Wouldn't want to absorb a hit from any of those

 


Back seat roomy like you never see today, outside of a van, maybe.

 


Life will not be denied

 


 





Couple of these in the truck would be a good idea

 




Hmmmm

 


Ow! Direct hit!

 


Slicing through the water

 


Wow!

 


Not who I would want to see

 


So far, anyway

 


Haven't seen one of these for a while, but I sure remember them.

 


 


Sunday, September 15, 2024

Sally Mansfield as Vena Ray - Rocky Jones, Space Ranger (1954)


 

The TV is almost as old as the Dinosaurs

 




I Like

 


Another Flying Arrowhead

 




Medusa or ????????

 


Submarine v. Dragon

 




He's got wood

 


Multi colored Lizard grip

 


Haitians better not be coming to Whiskers town

 


It's gonna reach over and take a bite out of one of them.

 


Heh

 


Nope

 


"Dad, don't feed me to that monster!"

 


USA Made

 






The Classic

 



The Land of Smokes

 






Autumn Cat

 


Oooof!

 


Dodge Madness

 




Hmmm


 

Lions in LA. Don't let your little yap-dog out at night.

 


Nailed it

 


Looks like something from Lord of the Rings.

 


Saturday, September 14, 2024

The Lion of Venice was made in China, mostly.

 


The winged lion that stands on the column in St. Mark’s Square in Venice that is an icon of the city was made in China. A new metallurgic study of the bronze has discovered a large part of it originated from 8th century China and after making its way to Venice, was mixed with other parts and reconstructed in to fit the standard iconography of the winged lion, symbol of Mark the Evangelist and of Venice itself.

Based on research done after a 1980s restoration, the statue was believed to have been made in Anatolia during the early Hellenistic era (4th century B.C.), but a study of the lead isotopes in the metal alloy found they came from mines in the lower basin of the Yangtze River in southeastern China. Armed with the hard science, researchers reexamined the lion’s design and found characteristic features of Tang Dynasty (618-907 A.D.) sculptures in the head, mane and chest.

This style of creature had a specific function in Tang Dynasty sculpture as tomb guardians. Known as zhenmushou figures, they were fantastical beasts ferocious in demeanor that were placed at tomb gates to scare away evil spirits and protect the spirits of the dead. By the 7th century, they were typically placed in pairs, one with a human-like face, one with a lion or beast-like face.

Some of the characteristic features shared by St. Mark’s lion and zhenmushou figures include wide nostrils with a moustache pointing up on each side, a wide open mouth with a pair of wide-set canines in the top jaw and more narrow set ones on the bottom, a flat plate of teeth between them and prominent orbital sockets in which horns were mounted. The orbitals are truncated in the lion, indicating that it too had once had horns or antlers, but they were amputated to make him look more lionine. His ears also appear to have been trimmed and rounded, as the original zhenmushou ears were higher and pointed.

The lion likely made its way west over the Silk Road through India and Afghanistan, which had a very active flow of trade during the Tang Dynasty.

Gásadalur, Faroe Islands

 


Gilling Sword, Anglo-Saxon sword dating from the late 9th to early 10th centuries AD.

 


Smoothly Done

 


I could find uses for this.

 



The orange cat has the high ground

 


Meanwhile, in South America somewhere.....

 


Kids these days

 


Well played indeed!