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mtg-cards-hourly · 1 month
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Worn Powerstone
Artist: Henry G. Higginbotham TCG Player Link Scryfall Link EDHREC Link
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dropoutdottv · 1 year
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Lift your glasses, we've got a new season of Dirty Laundry premiering on Dropout on September 12th! With host Lily Du, bartender Grant O'Brien, and a few secret-sharing friends: Vanessa Guerrero, Persephone Valentine, Desmond Chiam, Sam Riegel, Liam O'Brien, Anjali Bhimani, Matthew Mercer, Kassem G, Whitney Moore, Mica Burton, Johnny Stanton, Jess Ross, Hector Navarro, Ally Beardsley, Erika Ishii, Anthony Burch, Beth May, Will Campos, Fiona Nova, Shakira Ja'nai Paye, Brett Maline, Jacquis Neal, Alice Stanley, Kimia Behpoornia, Lisa Gilroy, Eli Gonzalez, Claudio Saavedra, Anna Salinas, Heather Higginbotham, Dylan Adler, Michael Henry, Zac Oyama, Kendahl Landreth, Sarah Schauer, Gina Darling, Paul F. Tompkins, Patrick McDonald, Aabria Iyengar, Katie Marovitch, Oscar Montoya, David Kerns, Ebony Elaine Hardin, Chloe Badner, Kyle Rohrbach, Alaska Thunderfuck, Monét X Change, Jujubee, and Katya!
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lboogie1906 · 6 months
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The Tuskegee Airmen were a group of African-American and Caribbean-born military pilots who fought in WWII. They formed the 332nd Fighter Group and the 477th Bombardment Group of the Army Air Forces. The name applies to the navigators, bombardiers, mechanics, instructors, crew chiefs, nurses, cooks, and other support personnel.
All African American military pilots who trained in the US trained at Moton Field, the Tuskegee Army Air Field, and were educated at Tuskegee University. The group included five Haitians from the Haitian Air Force and one pilot from Trinidad. It included a Hispanic or Latino airman born in the Dominican Republic.
March 22, 1942 - The first five cadets graduate from the Tuskegee Flying School: Captain Benjamin O. Davis, Jr. and Second Lieutenants Mac Ross,
Charles DeBow, L.R. Curtis, and George S. Roberts. They will become part of my the famous 99th Pursuit Squadron. List of Tuskegge Airmen.
Paul Adams (pilot)
Rutherford H. Adkins
Halbert Alexander
William Armstrong
Lee Archer
Robert Ashby
William Bartley
Howard Baugh
Henry Cabot Lodge Bohler
George L. Brown
Harold Brown
Roscoe Brown
Victor W. Butler
William Burden
William A. Campbell
Herbert Carter
Raymond Cassagnol
Eugene Calvin Cheatham Jr.
Herbert V. Clark
Granville C. Coggs
Thomas T.J. Collins
Milton Crenchaw
Woodrow Crockett
Lemuel R. Custis
Floyd J. Crawthon Jr
Doodie Head
Clarence Dart
Alfonza W. Davis
Benjamin O. Davis Jr. (C/O)
Charles DeBow
Wilfred DeFour
Gene Derricotte
Lawrence Dickson
Charles W. Dryden
John Ellis Edwards
Leslie Edwards Jr.
Thomas Ellis
Joseph Elsberry
Leavie Farro Jr
James Clayton Flowers
Julius Freeman
Robert Friend (pilot)
William J. Faulkner Jr.
Joseph Gomer
Alfred Gorham
Oliver Goodall
Garry Fuller
James H. Harvey
Donald A. Hawkins
Kenneth R. Hawkins
Raymond V. Haysbert
Percy Heath
Maycie Herrington
Mitchell Higginbotham
William Lee Hill
Esteban Hotesse
George Hudson Jr.
Lincoln Hudson
George J. Iles
Eugene B. Jackson
Daniel "Chappie" James Jr.
Alexander Jefferson
Buford A. Johnson
Herman A. Johnson
Theodore Johnson
Celestus King III
James Johnson Kelly
James B. Knighten
Erwin B. Lawrence Jr.
Clarence D. Lester
Theodore Lumpkin Jr
John Lyle
Hiram Mann
Walter Manning
Robert L. Martin
Armour G. McDaniel
Charles McGee
Faythe A. McGinnis
John "Mule" Miles
John Mosley
Fitzroy Newsum
Norman L Northcross
Noel F. Parrish
Alix Pasquet
Wendell O. Pruitt
Louis R. Purnell Sr.
Wallace P. Reed
William E. Rice
Eugene J. Richardson, Jr.
George S. Roberts
Lawrence E. Roberts
Isaiah Edward Robinson Jr.
Willie Rogers
Mac Ross
Robert Searcy
David Showell
Wilmeth Sidat-Singh
Eugene Smith
Calvin J. Spann
Vernon Sport
Lowell Steward
Harry Stewart, Jr.
Charles "Chuck" Stone Jr.
Percy Sutton
Alva Temple
Roger Terry
Lucius Theus
Edward L. Toppins
Robert B. Tresville
Andrew D. Turner
Herbert Thorpe
Richard Thorpe
Thomas Franklin Vaughns
Virgil Richardson
William Harold Walker
Spann Watson
Luke J. Weathers, Jr.
Sherman W. White
Malvin "Mal" Whitfield
James T. Wiley
Oscar Lawton Wilkerson
Henry Wise Jr.
Kenneth Wofford
Coleman Young
Perry H. Young Jr.
#africanhistory365 #africanexcellence
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sylvhem · 5 years
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Earlier today, Wizards of the Coast announced on Twitter that the fourth issue of Destroy All Humans. They Can’t Be Regenerated., a manga about Magic players only published in Japan, will be released on March 26th and will contain a promotional Voltaic Key. The card will be foil, written in Japanese and will retain its amazing original art by Henry G. Higginbotham!
The book can be pre-ordered on Amazon Japan.
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dirtylowdown2 · 4 years
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Luis Russell - The New Call Of The Freaks
Luis Russell And His Orchestra 
 Bill Coleman , Henry "Red" Allen (tp) J.C. Higginbotham (tb) Albert Nicholas (as,cl) Charlie Holmes (as,ss) Teddy Hill (ts) Luis Russell (p,ldr) Paul Barbarin (vib) Will Johnson (bj,g) George "Pops" Foster (b) 
 Paul Barbarin (dm) Henry "Red" Allen , J.C. Higginbotham , Louis Metcalf (vcl) Written-By - Barbarin; New York, September 6, 1929 - Matrix - 402938-C
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vorthosjay · 7 years
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Flavor Friday - Powerstones
Worn Powerstone by Henry G. Higginbotham
Today we take a break from the Abridged Magic History to examine the Cool Stuff of Magic. Many of you ask for lore advice for writing fan fiction or original characters, so my intent is to highlight cool things that you might include in your work. Or just because I think they’re awesome. Today we’re going to talk about Powerstones.
Plane of Origin: Dominaria
Creation Method: Artificial Crystals Imbued with Mana in a special process.
Effects: Functions as both a battery and CPU for artifacts, so long as it remains undamaged.
Powerstones were invented by the Thran civilization more than 9,000 years ago in the story. Powerstones are forged crystals infused with mana, and act as both Central Processing Units and Batteries for artifacts. Powerstones can hold their charge for a functionally limitless amount of time, supposing they’re not cracked or damaged. It’s important to note that the process theoretically creates entire new planes inside the powerstones, although that theory hasn’t been followed-up on. Collapsing an entire plane inside a powerstone of sufficient size results in enough energy to power the Weatherlight’s Planeshifting Engines. They come in a variety of shapes and sizes, but wide-spread, long-term exposure seemed causes the wasting disease Phthisis (Note: Phthisis isn’t contagious, it works more like Radiation Poisoning).
When the Thran fell, the remaining powerstones became rare and valuable commodities. About 4,000 years ago, the Brothers Urza and Mishra used what remained to wage war on one another. Just 1,000 years ago, Urza discovered the Mana Rig to make Thran Metal (more on that later). Jhoira and Teferi discovered that the Mana Rig was also capable of producing new powerstones.
Today, powerstones are still rare but obtainable. Most will be found damaged in some way, but perfectly intact ones are still available.
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katybirdy95 · 7 years
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Hello! I wasn't sure if you're the right person to ask but I've seen you post a lot about the Wars of the Roses so, I was wondering if you know anything about Edmund Beaufort, 4th Duke of Somerset? There doesn't seem to be much info on him, less than Anne Neville even. Is he portrayed in historical fiction much?
Hey there!!
Unfortunately, I don’t know that much on Edmund Beaufort, apart from the basics, which is not that much sadly. Some of the main things I know about him was that he was opposed to the idea of Margaret of Anjou and Henry VI coming back on to the throne and refused to cooperate with them, his failure to hold London against Edward was a decisive moment, which lead to the death of the Earl of Warwick. He was also dragged out of Tewkesbury Abbey, on the orders of Edward IV and was executed at the cross in the centre of Tewkesbury. Although, if you have already studied him you probably already knew that.
An interesting piece of information I have learned (be it true or not is still to be decided) is that there was a possibility of a love affair between Edmund’s brother, Henry, and Edward IV. Again I have no way of knowing if this is true (I am kind of on the side of it being some made up propaganda) but apparently some historians believe this - John Ashdown-hill being one of them - mainly for the fact that both men were said to be extremely handsome and shared a bed together, although back in those times it was said to be a great honour if the king offered his bed to you, but I would have to study that info a little more further.
Edmund has been featured in the white queen were he was played by Nick Hendrix - the series shows him being dragged from the church by Edward IV and Richard III.
Sources:
Mark Ballard, “’Du sang de Lancastre je suis extrait…’ Did Charles the Bold remain a loyal Lancastrian?” Publications du Centre Européen d’Etudes Bourguignonnes, vol. 35 (1995).
William Campbell, ed., Materials for a History of the Reign of Henry VII. London: Longman and Co., 1877.
Anthony Gross, “Lancastrians Abroad, 1461-71,” History Today (August 1992).
P.W. Hammond, The Battles of Barnet and Tewkesbury. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1990.
M. K. Jones, “Edward IV and the Beaufort Family: Conciliation in Early Yorkist Politics,” The Ricardian (December 1983).
Michael K. Jones, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry on Edmund Beaufort.
Michael K. Jones and Malcolm G. Underwood, The King’s Mother: Lady Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Richmond and Derby. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995.
G.M. Rushforth, “The Burials of Lancastrian Notables in Tewkesbury Abbey after the Battle, A.D. 1471,” Transactions of the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaelogical Society, vol. 47 (1925).
Cora Scofield, The Life and Reign of Edward the Fourth. London: Frank Cass & Co., Ltd. 1967 (reprint).
I have not read most of these, but Susan Higginbotham recommended these reads that feature Edmund and the Beaufort family.Here is a link to her Edmund Beaufort page. http://www.susanhigginbotham.com/subpages/edbeaufort.html
Sorry I couldn’t be of more use to you anon, but I hope some of the information was at least helpful.
Thanks for the ask!!
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newyorktheater · 5 years
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Below is a selection of New York theater openings in February, organized chronologically by opening date.* There’s just one show opening on Broadway this month, but it’s a doozy: The fifth revival of “West Side Story,” directed by the Belgian avant-garde artist Ivo Van Hoven, has generated oodles of attention, some of it unwanted.
As if to offer a counterweight to that male-heavy musical (see the photo of The Sharks above), Off-Broadway is offering  a wide range of women-centered theater this month — to name just a few, Beth Malone as the Unsinkable Molly Brown; Alice Birch’s award-winning “Anatomy of a Suicide” about three generations of women; Donnetta Lavinia Grays’ one-woman play “Where We Stand”; an evening by and about Lady Gregory, the grand dame of Irish Theatre; Kate Hamill’s feminist take on ‘Dracula’ at Classic Stage Company; and even “She Persisted The Musical.”
Beth Malone in Unsinkable Molly Brown
Alice Birch
Donnetta Lavinia Grays, playwright and star of “Where We Stand”
Lady Gregory, grand dame of the Irish theater
Kate Hamill
Chelsea Clinton, author of the children’s book “She Persisted”
Lauren Yee, “Cambodian Rock Band”
Young Jean Lee, “We’re Gonna Die”
One show I’m especially looking forward to: Lauren Yee’s “Cambodian Rock Band.”
Each title below is linked to a relevant website. Color key: Broadway: Red. Off Broadway: Black or Blue.. Off Off Broadway: Green. Theater festival: Orange. Immersive: Magenta. Puppetry-Brown
February 1
Stew (Page 73 at Walkerspace) 
Tensions simmer with three generations of Tucker women under one roof, but things come to a boil as the violence hovering around the periphery of their lives begins to intrude upon the sanctity of Mama’s kitchen.
February 2
Beyond Babel (The Gym at Judson)
A new dance-theater piece inspired by Romeo and Juliet
February 3
Border People (A.R.T./NY) A one-man show by Dan Hoyle based on conversations with immigrants, refugees, asylum seekers, and border crossers of all kinds at both the Northern and Southern borders. In March, he’ll be taking this play to the boroughs.
February 4
Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice (The New Group at Signature)
A musical by Jonathan Marc Sherman (Book), Duncan Sheik (Music, Lyrics) and Amanda Green (Lyrics) based on the 1969 movie about two married couples who decide to join the sexual revolution
Whisperlodge (“secret location” in Boerum Hill)
The return of this unusual mix of immersive therapy and therapy (aka “live ASMR“) in which “six guides lead 6 guests through one-on-one treatments designed to relax the body and mind, expand awareness, and heighten the senses.The show will run in a private home in Boerum Hill, Brooklyn and features a brand new one-on-one scene, inspired by the family that lived there.””
  February 7
Riddle of the Trilobites (New Victory)
In this live, original musical, set 500 million years ago, all life dwells in one sea and trilobites rule the ocean floor. When young Aphra discovers that the fate of the entire trilobite kingdom rests on her shelled shoulders, she and her arthropod pals must solve the a riddle before a sea change of epic proportions destroys their home.
February 10
Darling Grenadine (Roundabout’s Black Box)
A musical in which charismatic songwriter Harry falls for clever chorus girl Louise, But what happens when the sparkling fantasy begins to dissolve?
Fandango for Butterflies and Coyotes (EnGarde at La MaMa)
Inspired by interviews with undocumented immigrants from Latin America living in New York, the piece will take the form of a fandango, a community celebration
February 11
Where We Stand (WP Theater at McGinn/Cazale) In a town running low on compassion, an exile seeks forgiveness, forcing the community to decide between mercy or justice. A solo play written by Donnetta Lavinia Grays, who also stars in it, alternating with David Ryan Smith
  February 17
Dracula & Frankenstein (CSC )
Kate Hamill’s new, feminist adaptation of the classic horror tale about an elegant vampire performed in repertory with Tristan Bernays’ athletic adaptation  of Mary Shelley’s novel using only two actors.
  February 18
Anatomy of a Suicide (Atlantic)
Winner of the 2018 Susan Smith Blackburn Prize given annually to a woman playwright, this play by Alice Birch (Revolt, She Said, Revolt Again) explores three generations of women whose stories unfold simultaneously onstage. Directed by Lileana Blain-Cruz (“Marys Seacole“).
  February 19
Lady G Plays and Whisperings (Irish Rep)
A showcase of the personal writings and rarely seen plays of Lady Gregory, the grand dame of Irish Theatre, remembered today as co-founder of The Abbey Theatre in Dublin
Mack and Mabel (Encores at City Center)
The weekend concert series presentation of the late Jerry Herman’s musical about one of silent film’s first great pioneers, Mack Sennett, starring Douglas Sills (“War Paint”) and Alexandra Socha (“Head Over Heels”).
Frigid Festival
This annual festival begins today with the opening of eight shows.
February 20
West Side Story (Broadway Theater)
The fifth Broadway production of the musical adaptation of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, transposed to warring street gangs in 1950s New York. Belgium avant-garde theater artist van Hove has cut the intermission and the song “I Feel Pretty” and added many videos. Thirty-three members of the cast are making their Broadway debuts.
Generator (La MaMa)
The first musical theater piece in a three-part series entitled Pestilence, conceived, written and directed by Jack Waters
February 21
Mother Leeds (Under St. Marks) Set in the early 1900’s Pine Barrens, we are in the shoes of a curious & fearful child of a religious single mother.  Part of Frigid Festival
February 22
She Persisted The Musical (Atlantic)
In this musical based on Chelsea Clinton’s children’s book, Naomi’s field trip to a Women’s History Museum turns into a time travel adventure, where she meets great women from history who…persisted.
February 24
Cambodian Rock Band (Signature)
This play by Lauren Yee that won the 2019 Steinberg/ATCA New Play Award (for which I served on the jury) tells the story of the survivor of the Khmer Rouge bloodbath by toggling back and forth in time between his youth as a member of a rock band in Cambodia, and the present day when his grown daughter has traveled back to Cambodia from America to help prosecute one of Cambodia’s most infamous war criminals. A live band plays contemporary Dengue Fever hits and classic Cambodian oldies.
  All The Natalie Portmans (MCC) In this play by C.A. Johnson, lonely, 16-year-old misfit Keyonna escapes into a world of rom coms, red carpets and all the iconic characters played by her muse, Natalie Portman. But then they start talking back to her.
  The Headlands (Lincoln Center)
In this contemporary noir by Christopher Chen (the terrific trickster playwright of “Caught”), Henry (Aaron Yoo) is an amateur sleuth and true crime aficionado who sets out to solve the ultimate case: the unsolved murder of his father.
Artisanal Intelligence (Kraine’s) A comedy about a hipster customer service robot named Barry. Part of Frigid Festival.
  February 25
We’re Gonna Die (2nd Stage)
Written by Young Jean Lee (Straight White Men) and choreographed by Raja Feather Kelly, the show stars Janelle McDermoth in a kind of existential cabaret that hopes to demonstrate that “being alive is about more than just awaiting the inevitable.”
  Dana H. (Vineyard)
An unusual work of documentary theater by Lucas Hnath in collaboration with Steven Cosson of The Civilians about a chaplain of a psych ward who was captured and held captive by one of the patients for five months.The victim was Hnath’s mother, Dana Higginbotham, and Hnath had Cosson tape-record an interview with his mother. Hnath edited the tape, and now Deirdre O’Connor lip-syncs the words while the actual tape plays.
  February 26
Unsinkable Molly Brown (Transport Group at Abrons)
Beth Malone (Fun Home) stars in this “revitalized” version of the Broadway musical playing Molly “as she really was: vibrant, progressive, and ready to fight for the underdog as a champion of women’s rights, labor rights, and immigration reform.”
February 29
Mirrors (Next Door at NYTW)
In this play by Azure D. Osborne-Lee, 17-year-old Alma Jean finds her mother dead, and must pack up her life and move in with her mother’s ex-lover, a woman she doesn’t know who is the town pariah of the tiny town of Etheridge, Mississippi in 1960.
      February 2020 New York Theater Openings Below is a selection of New York theater openings in February, organized chronologically by opening date.* There’s just one show opening on Broadway this month, but it’s a doozy: The fifth revival of "West Side Story," directed by the Belgian avant-garde artist Ivo Van Hoven, has generated oodles of attention, …
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auctionarray228 · 6 years
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68 old books CLOCK watch making WATCHMAKING Horology LEARN to REPAIR pocketwatch
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                    Clock and Watchmaker’s    
  Reference  Library  
     68 Books on CD-ROM  
          American horological journal, devoted to practical  horology (1869) Author: Miller, George B – Volume 1  
  American horological journal, devoted to practical  horology (1869) Author: Miller, George B – Volume 2  
  American horological journal, devoted to practical  horology (1869) Author: Miller, George B – Volume three  
  American horological journal, devoted to practical  horology (1869) Author: Miller, George B – Volume four  
  The American watchmaker and jeweler; an  encyclopedia for the horologist, jeweler, gold and silversmith  (1891) Author: Abbott, Henry G., 1858-1905 – 335 pages  
  The American watchmaker and jeweler  (1868) Author: Stelle, J. Parish (James Parish) 75 pages  
  An analysis of the lever escapement  (1910) Author: Playtner, H. R. [from old catalog] – 71 pages  
  Bangerter’s inventions; his marvelous time  clock (1911) Author: [King, Everett Lincoln], 1863- ed. [from old  catalog] – 98 pages  
  A catalogue of books, manuscripts, specimens  of clocks, watches and watchwork, paintings, prints, &c., in the library  and museum of the Worshipful company of clockmakers : deposited in the Free  Library of the Corporation of the City of London (1875) Author:  Worshipful Company of Clockmakers; Guildhall Library (London, England); Overall,  William Henry, 1829-1888 – 181 pages  
  [Catalog of clocks and bronzes]  (1882) Author: John Wilson’s Sons (New York, N.Y.) 102 pages  
  Chats on old clocks ([1917]) Author:  Hayden, Arthur, 1868-1946 – 310 pages  
  The clock jobber’s handybook: a practical  manual on cleaning, repairing and adjusting; embracing information on the  tools, materials, appliances and processes employed in clockwork  (1889) Author: Hasluck, Paul N. (Paul Nooncree), 1854-1931 – 180  pages  
  Price lists of American movements silver and  gold cases (1877) Author: Levy Bros. & Sheuer (Firm) 8  pages  
  Clocks and watches (1922) Author:  Overton, George L one hundred fifty five pages  
  Collection of watches loaned to the Metropolitan  museum of art of the city of New York (1907) Author: Hearn, George  A., Mrs; Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, N.Y.); Howard, Wendell Stanton,  1867-; Buck, John H., d. 1911  
  Description of the universal time dial regulator  (1874) Author: Niehaus, Frederick. [from old catalog] 15 pages  
  Directions for using Bottum’s patent improved  universal lathe chucks and improved lathes, for turning and finishing every  description of watch pivots, pinions, staffs &c .. (1852) Author:  Bottum, James M.  
  The evolution of automatic machinery as applied  to the manufacture of watches at Waltham, Mass. (1896) Author:  Marsh, Edward A.  159 pages  
  Friction, lubrication and the lubricants in  horology (1896) Author: Lewis, William T. 101 pages  
  Gold and Silversmiths Catalogue 1911  (1911) Author: United Watch and Jewelry Company  
  History of the American clock business for  the past sixty years, and life of Chauncey Jerome, written by himself  (1860) Author: Jerome, Chauncey, 1793-1868; Barr, Lockwood – 1511  pages  
  A history of Simon Willard, inventor and  clockmaker, together with some account of his sons–his apprentices–and  the workmen associated with him, with brief notices of other clockmakers  of the family name (1911) Author: Willard, John Ware – 225  pages  
  Isochronism of balance-springs (1862)  Author: Frodsham, Charles – 40 pages  
  Jeweled bearings for watches; (1911)  Author: Higginbotham, Charles T. (Charles Thomas), b. 1840; Higginbotham,  Paul, – 65 pages  
  Modern methods in horology (1904)  Author: Hood, Grant – 265 pages  
  New and complete clock and watchmakers’ manual  .. (1860) Author: Booth, Mary L. (Mary Louise), 1831-1889 – 364  pages  
  Old clocks and watches & their makers,  being an historical and descriptive account of the different styles of clocks  and watches of the past, in England and overseas, to which is added a listing  of ten thousand makers (1904) Author: Britten, F. J. (Frederick  James), 1843-1913 – 758 pages  
  On the springing and adjusting of watches  … (1898) Author: Britten, F. J. (Frederick James), 1843-1913  – 156 pages  
  Peace year catalogue 1919-1920.  — (1919) Author: A.W. Smith & Sons – 36 pages  
  Peter Lightfoot, monk of Glastonbury, and  the old clock at Wells ; a poem with an illustrated account of the clock  (1922) Author: Howgrave-Graham, R. P. (Robert Pickersgill), b.  1880 – 79 pages  
  A practical course in horology  (1944) Author: Kelly, Harold Caleb -196 pages  
  Practical lessons on the lever escapement,  its tests, errors, their detection and correction (1916) Author:  Wilkinson, T. J. (Thomas Jessop), b. 1864 – 267 pages  
  P.W. Ellis & Co. Limited, the jewellery  headquarters of Canada : 1915-1916 illustrated catalogue : importing and  manufacturing, gold and silversmiths, makers of Ellis watch cases  (1915) Author: P.W. Ellis & Co. Limited – 145 pages  
  A rudimentary treatise on clock and watch  making; with a chapter on church clocks; and an account of the proceedings  respecting the great Westminster Clock (1850) Author: Denison,  Edmund Beckett – 308 pages  
  Rules and practice for adjusting  watches (1920) Author: Kleinlein, Walter John, 1876  – 125 pages  
  The story of Edward Howard and the first American  watch (1910) Author: Dyer, George Lewis, 1871- 29 pages  
  “The watch.” Hand work versus machinery, their  merits and defects explained and compared. History of watch making by both  systems. By Henry F. Piaget .. (1877) Author: Piaget, Henry F –  56 pages  
  Time telling through the a while (1919)  Author: Brearley, Harry Chase, 1870-; Ingersoll, Robt. H., & Bro – 396  pages  
  Time and time-tellers / by James  W. Benson (1875) Author: Benson, James W – 206 page  
  U.S. patents covering time keeping mechanisms  (1892) Author: United States. Patent Office – 809 pages  
  The watch adjuster’s manual; (1904)  Author: Fritts, Charles Edgar. – 390 pages  
  The watch balance and its jeweling  (1912) Author: Higginbotham, Charles T. (Charles Thomas), b. 1840 – 40  pages  
  The watch and the clock (1883) Author:  Taylor, Alfred, 1831-1899 29 pages  
  Watch and clock escapements; (1904)  Subject: Clocks and watches – 198 pages  
  Watches at wholesale prices. —  (1890) Author: McFarlane and Company – 32 pages  
  The watch factories of America, past and present.  A complete history of watchmaking in America, from 1809 to 1888 inclusive  .. (1888) Author: Abbott, Henry G., 1858-1905 – 157 pages  
  The watch factories of America, past and present.  A complete history of watchmaking in America, from 1809 to 1888 inclusive..  (1888) Author: Hazlitt, George Henry Abbott, 1858-1905 – 158  pages  
  The watch; its construction, its merits and  defects, how to choose it, and how to use it (1860) Author: Piaget,  Henry F – 74 pages  
  Watchmaker’s and jeweler’s practical hand  book. A reliable compendium of valuable receipts and suggestions ..  (1892) Author: [Hazlitt, George Henry Abbott], 1858-1905, [from  old catalog] comp – 145 pages  
  The watchmaker’s and jeweler’s hand-book:  (1866) Author: Hopkins, C – 56 pages  
  Watchmakers’ and jewelers’ practical receipt  book. A workshop companion .. (1892) Author: [Walker, C. E.],  watchmaker – 135 pages  
  The watchmakers’ lathe, its use and abuse;  a story of the lathe in its a variety of forms, past and present, its construction  and proper uses (1903) Author: Goodrich, Ward L. – 298 pages  
  Watch makers tables; a collection of useful  information about the teeth of wheels and pinions; the trains of watches  and clocks; lengths of pendulums; quick methods of regulation; methods of  finding the number of teeth in missing wheels, etc (1914) Subject:  Clock and watch making – 74 pages  
  Wholesale pocket price list of the largest  watch house in America. Also leading and staple styles of diamonds, jewelry,  silverware, clocks, and other goods pertaining to the jewelry trade.  (188-?) Author: M.C. Eppenstein 152 pages  
  Time : a struggle for precision /  William Henry Watkins (September sixteen, 1939) Author: Watkins, William Henry  – 37 pages  
  A Model Factory in a Model  City  
  A treatise on watch work past and  present  
  Clock and watch work  
  Former Clock Watchmakers and Their  Work  
  History of the American Waltham Watch  Co  
  On the construction and theory of the dead  escapement  
  On the Springing and Adjusting of  Watches  
  The Evolution of Automatic  Machinery  
  The Watch Clock Makers Handbook  Dictionary  
  The Watch and Clockmakers  Handbook  
  The watchmakers hand book  
  Treatise on Clock and Watch  Making  
  Watch and clock making
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                             Can I print the books?
 YES,  you can print a single page or the entire book.
 Can I regulate the page size?
 YES,  the page size can be increased many times larger or smaller to fit your reading  style, or to examine illustrations in more detail.
 Can I copy pictures and illustrations  from the books?
 YES,  you can copy images from the e-book for use in other  programs.
 Do I need A web connection to use the  ebook?
 NO,  the e-book is self -contained and does not require A web  connection.
Does the ebook every  “expire”?
NO,  the e-book does not expire, once you buy it it’s your’s.
       The post 68 old books CLOCK watch making WATCHMAKING Horology LEARN to REPAIR pocketwatch appeared first on The best deals on the web delivered around the world!.
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mtg-cards-hourly · 6 months
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Worn Powerstone
Even a fragment of a powerstone contains within it not just energy, but space—vast dimensions trapped in fragile crystal.
Artist: Henry G. Higginbotham TCG Player Link Scryfall Link EDHREC Link
25 notes · View notes
mtg-cards-hourly · 5 months
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Claws of Gix
When the Brotherhood of Gix dug out the cave of Koilos they found their master's severed hand. They enshrined it, hoping that one day it would point the way to Phyrexia.
Artist: Henry G. Higginbotham TCG Player Link Scryfall Link EDHREC Link
18 notes · View notes
mtg-cards-hourly · 1 year
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Tumblr media
Worn Powerstone
Even a fragment of a powerstone contains within it not just energy, but space —vast dimensions trapped in fragile crystal.
Artist: Henry G. Higginbotham TCG Player Link Scryfall Link EDHREC Link
17 notes · View notes
mtg-cards-hourly · 2 years
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Voltaic Key
The key did not work on a single lock, yet it opened many doors.
Artist: Henry G. Higginbotham TCG Player Link Scryfall Link EDHREC Link
22 notes · View notes
mtg-cards-hourly · 3 years
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Claws of Gix
When the Brotherhood of Gix dug out the cave of Koilos they found their master's severed hand. They enshrined it, hoping that one day it would point the way to Phyrexia.
Artist: Henry G. Higginbotham TCG Player Link Scryfall Link EDHREC Link
23 notes · View notes
mtg-cards-hourly · 4 years
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Tumblr media
Claws of Gix
When the Brotherhood of Gix dug out the cave of Koilos they found their master's severed hand. They enshrined it, hoping that one day it would point the way to Phyrexia.
Artist: Henry G. Higginbotham TCG Player Link Scryfall Link EDHREC Link
8 notes · View notes
mtg-cards-hourly · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Worn Powerstone
Even a fragment of a powerstone contains within it not just energy, but space—vast dimensions trapped in fragile crystal.
Artist: Henry G. Higginbotham TCG Player Link Scryfall Link EDHREC Link
3 notes · View notes