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While generally not considered to be a machine element, the shape, texture and color of covers are an important part of a machine that provide a styling and operational interface between the mechanical components of a machine and its users. Machine elements are basic mechanical parts and features used as the building blocks of most machines. [2]
Menomonee is a public artwork by artist Hilary Goldblatt located on the former Emmber Foods, Inc. grounds on the south side of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States.The Cor-Ten steel piece is a horizontal constructivist abstract form composed of beams forming angles and open spaces.
A parts kit is a collection of weapon (notably firearm) parts that, according to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF), "is designed to or may be readily be assembled, completed, converted, or restored to expel a projectile by the action of an explosive."
Burt Goldblatt (né Burton George Goldblatt; 11 December 1924, in Dorchester, Massachusetts – 30 August 2006, in Boston) was an American art director, graphic designer, photographer, and author. He was best known for designing the covers of jazz albums.
A cube and its greebled version Greeble effects on a Lego spaceship model. Greebles, also greeblies (singular: greebly), [1] or "nurnies", are parts harvested from plastic modeling kits to be applied to an original model as a detail element.
In 1935, he married Bernice Goldblatt; they had two children, Stanford Goldblatt and Merle Goldblatt Cohen. [5] As his brother Nathan died of cancer in 1944, Maurice was a strong supporter of research to fight cancer and was seminal in establishing the University of Chicago Cancer Research Foundation in 1947; and donated $3.4 million facility to the University of Chicago Medical Center.
Goldblatt is a surname, meaning "gold leaf" in the German language.Notable people named Goldblatt include: David Goldblatt, South African photographer; Harry Goldblatt, American physician internationally known for his research in high blood pressure
Hilda Goldblatt Gorenstein (1905–1998) was an American oil painter and watercolorist. [1] A native of Montreal , Canada, who grew up in Portland, Oregon , U.S. Gorenstein started painting as a teenager at a time when women artists weren't very well received. [ 2 ]