Podcasts about Moulage

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Best podcasts about Moulage

Latest podcast episodes about Moulage

Vraiment Nature FB Vaucluse
Moulage de traces d'animaux : une activité nature à faire en famille

Vraiment Nature FB Vaucluse

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2025 2:21


durée : 00:02:21 - Moulage de traces d'animaux : une activité nature à faire en famille - par : Nathalie Mazet - Avec les vacances qui arrivent, pourquoi ne pas proposer une activité originale et enrichissante pour les enfants ? Le moulage de traces d'animaux est une excellente manière d'allier découverte de la nature et créativité tout en s'amusant en extérieur.

Pad Wives Assemble
EP.3 Moulage Au Tampon

Pad Wives Assemble

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2024 58:20


Episode 3, All your normal PadCast favourites including; Product, Hack and Ick of the week! This week's topic is How to Cope with a Long Distance relationship! Plus an added segment for Moulage Au Tampon!

Les Carnets d’Igor
VISITE & INTERVIEW: L'Atelier de Moulage de la Rmn-Grand Palais

Les Carnets d’Igor

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2024 21:01


Explorez les secrets de l'atelier de Moulage de la Réunion des musées nationaux-Grand Palais à travers les mots de ses artisans passionnés.

Par Ouï-dire
Façons de Voir : Myriam Louyest à l'Atelier de Moulage – What about Vernacular ?

Par Ouï-dire

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2023 54:57


La plasticienne belge Myriam Louyest investit un lieu chargé d'histoire : l'Atelier de Moulage des Musées Royaux d'Art et d'Histoire de Bruxelles, qui fête ses 130 ans. Ses œuvres – souvent en verre – s'insèrent avec discrétion au sein des grandes allées et entrent dans un dialogue subtil avec le lieu. L'exposition "La traversée de l'or blanc" est à voir jusqu'au 4 novembre (les mardis, jeudis et samedis de 13h à 17h). Les architectes Justine Lajus-Pueyo, Alexia Menec et Margot Rieublanc ont réalisé un voyage d'étude de trois mois dans l'Est américain. Elles ont parcouru des milliers de kilomètres, du Massachusetts à la Louisiane, afin de saisir l'intelligence écologique et le bon sens constructif de l'architecture rurale américaine et d'en tirer des enseignements pour leur propre pratique. Leur récit est à lire dans l'ouvrage "What about vernacular?" (Éditions Parenthèses). Réalisation : Fabrice Kada Merci pour votre écoute Par Ouïe-Dire c'est également en direct tous les jours de la semaine de 22h à 23h sur www.rtbf.be/lapremiere Retrouvez tous les épisodes de Par Ouïe-Dire sur notre plateforme Auvio.be : https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/272 Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement.

On n'est pas obligé d'être d'accord - Sophie Durocher
Moulage de la vulve : célébrez votre vagin en le «transformant en œuvre d'art», conseille la co-créatrice de Vulvette Underground

On n'est pas obligé d'être d'accord - Sophie Durocher

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2023 8:12


Quelle est la démarche artistique derrière le moulage de la vulve ? Entrevue avec Valérie Auclair, co-créatrice de Vulvette Underground.Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr

Sexodio
Moulage de la vulve : célébrez votre vagin en le «transformant en oeuvre d'art», conseille la co-créatrice de Vulvette Underground

Sexodio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2023 8:12


Quelle est la démarche artistique derrière le moulage de la vulve ? Entrevue avec Valérie Auclair, co-créatrice de Vulvette Underground.Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr

The Sim Cafe~
The Intricacies of Medical Simulation: Moulage, Mannequins and Maintenance

The Sim Cafe~

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2023 38:07 Transcription Available


Get ready for a thrilling conversation as we bring David Shablak, an industry expert with a passion for moulage in medical simulation, into the SimCafe. David's love for creating such lifelike injury scenes began during his tenure in the Civil Air Patrol, shaping his career in the medical simulation field ever since. Tune in as we peel back the layers on the SimGeeks podcast and explore how Billy's influence has carved out a unique niche in the industry.As we move along, David delves into his journey within the sphere of emergency medicine residency, highlighting his engrossing work with moulage. Listen closely as he shares insights on crafting hyper-realistic moulage pieces that play a fundamental role in directing medical education objectives. Gain a newfound appreciation for mannequins as we discuss their varied types, the importance of knowing their material composition, and the recent advent of a more diverse range of mannequin skin tones. David also imparts practical advice on developing makeup looks that respect learners' goals while being cost and time-efficient.As we wrap up, the importance of maintenance plans for mannequins and simulators takes the spotlight. Understand more about warranties, the dos and don'ts with mannequins, and the critical role of operations specialists during the purchasing process. David insists on the need for regular checks on mannequins and simulators, and we also delve into the intricacies of firmware updates and the need to keep up-to-date with software levels. Let David's expertise guide you through the fascinating intricacies of the medical simulation world.Innovative SimSolutions.Your turnkey solution provider for medical simulation programs, sim centers & faculty design.

Rádio da Costureira
169 - A importância de ter um manequim de moulage no ateliê com Elaine da Draft

Rádio da Costureira

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2023 107:57


Você sabe qual a importância de ter um manequim de moulage no seu ateliê ou no seu cantinho de costura? Para explicar as vantagens dos manequins, nós convidamos uma autoridade neste assunto. A Elaine Radicetti é fundadora da marca Draft Manequins que está no mercado há mais de 20 anos. A Elaine revolucionou a produção de empresas do mundo da moda ao lançar manequins para modelagem tridimensional, 100 % alfinetáveis, com materiais de alta qualidade, resistência e durabilidade. Ela se formou no Senai-cetiqt, e fez especialização em tecnologia da modelagem no Fit - Fashion Institute Of Technology, em Nova Iorque. Hoje, ela atua como professora de modelagem na PUC Rio e é Diretora da Draft. Na entrevista, a Elaine explica um pouco sobre a história da modelagem tridimensional, que é a modelagem feita no corpo ou com auxílio do manequim, e que está na história da moda há milhares de anos. Utilizando um manequim, você consegue ser mais assertivo na hora de criar os seus moldes. É possível já visualizar como a peça vai ficar no corpo, antes de estar pronta. Também facilita na hora de trabalhar com detalhes de bordados e recortes, por exemplo. O processo de criação também se torna muito mais rápido. Uma vantagem que também faz toda a diferença no trabalho de quem costura, é que ao alfinetar o tecido no manequim e modelar a peça, você já vai conseguir perceber como o tecido irá se comportar na modelagem. Se o caimento ficará bom, se precisará fazer algum ajuste ou ainda, se o tecido não é o mais adequado para aquele modelo de roupa. O manequim pode ser usado em qualquer nicho de costura, não apenas para quem trabalha com confecção de roupas. Por exemplo, você pode utilizar o manequim para provar os ajustes e consertos quem você fez, ou então um bordado. E isso sem precisar que o cliente precise provar a peça várias vezes. No episódio a Elaine também dá dicas de como escolher o manequim ideal e como fazer adaptações. Quer saber mais? Dá o play para assistir!

C3 Podcast: Active Shooter Incident Management
Ep 50: Implementing the ASIM Process

C3 Podcast: Active Shooter Incident Management

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2022 48:28


Ep 50: Implementing the ASIM ProcessSheriff Michelle Cook and Police Chief Terry Nichols share their experiences implementing the Active Shooter Incident Management Checklist process and their tips for success. Don't miss this discussion!Bill Godfrey:Welcome to the Active Shooter Incident Management Podcast. It's good to be back with you today. My name is Bill Godfrey. I'm your podcast host, and I have with me today two former C3 instructors as our guest stars today, both of them law enforcement leaders, and hoping that one day when they do retire-retire, we might actually get them back as C3 instructors; hint hint, Chief Nichols, who just retired in the last few weeks. So I have with me Michelle Cook. She is currently serving as the Sheriff in Clay County. She also did ... Michelle was almost 30 years at Jacksonville?Michelle Cook:26 years at Jacksonville, yeah.Bill Godfrey:Yeah, so 26 years at Jacksonville Sheriff's Office Police Department as the operations chief, so she had an awful lot of responsibility there. Did a short stint as the Police Chief at Atlantic Beach, which was kind of a retirement job, but too easy for you. You needed something with more, and so now she's the elected Sheriff at Clay County, which is in north Florida. And we have with us Terry Nichols. Terry was the Assistant Director at Alert from the founding to, what was it? 2018, 20-Terry Nichols:2016, 2016.Bill Godfrey:2016. Left Alert, became the Police Chief in Brownwood, Texas, and then you did, what, a little over three years there?Terry Nichols:Three years there, and then moved to Seguin as chief, and spent three years there, and now I'm retiredBill Godfrey:Like a week and a half ago, two weeks ago? It's been pretty recent.Terry Nichols:It's been a month, it's been a month.Bill Godfrey:So it's exciting to have both of you here. I really appreciate you taking the time. I know the sheriff especially, you have a very busy schedule. But I wanted to have a podcast where we talk about implementing the Active Shooter Incident Management checklist and the process that goes with it. Because it sounds simple on the surface, and when you've gone through training, it's fairly straightforward, but trying to roll that out to a whole organization is a little bit of a logistics machine.And the two of you have each done this, not only in your organizations, but you've done it more than once. So sheriff, you did it at Jacksonville, then did it at Atlantic Beach, now at Clay County, and Terry, you did it at both Brownwood and Seguin. So what I wanted to just get from you guys is, what was it about this process that made you say, "This is the way I want to go," and what were your lessons learned? How did you approach it and go along the way? So sheriff, you want to start us off?Michelle Cook:Sure. First of all, thank you for having me today to talk about this. I'm very passionate about this. You've asked why ASIM, why choose this method of managing an active shooter event, and I will tell you, I'm entering into my 30th year of law enforcement, and I've worked some huge cases, some huge incidents, thousands of them, and for me, being a street cop for so long and then the leader of street cops, the ASIM process, the ASIM methodology, it just makes sense.In our industry, and Terry, correct me if you see differently, we teach young officers, young supervisors, to handle everything themselves. And on 99% of the calls that we handle, that can be done, but on a mass critical incident, like an active shooter event, relying on one person to handle everything is just unrealistic, and that's how things get missed, and unfortunately, that's how people die, is you got one person trying to handle everything.Terry Nichols:Yeah. For me, everything the sheriff said makes perfect sense, and she is spot on. Having been involved with Alert and standing it up from the get go, driving it post-Columbine, and how we were training cops, and then fast-forward several years and get introduced to the ASIM model, and realizing we had been missing the boat early on. When we started first training our officers, we were missing the management piece of this. We were doing good at going in and realizing that we have a different duty. There's no longer sit and wait for SWAT, that we had a different mission on these active shooter events.But there's a whole management piece of this, and like the sheriff alluded to, that we're real good at teaching cops to go handle a problem by themselves, and they do it 9 times out of 10, but these events are catastrophic. They are geographical in nature. It doesn't just happen in a vacuum in one little place, and it takes significant resource management being trained to do that, and that the ASIM, I was just pulled to it and said it makes all the sense in the world.Bill Godfrey:Well, it's very humbling to hear that, and I'm thrilled that you guys ... I was thrilled to have both of you as instructors and as founding members, if you will, of what we were doing a very, very long time ago. Terry, when you were at Alert, you had a hand in helping us get the pilot up and running, and Michelle attended one of the very first pilots. Wait, in fact, I think it was the very first pilot delivery we did for certification, when we did it at Seminole County, so you guys have certainly been on the road with us for a long time. Terry, what was your strategy? So Brownwood, you might want to ... Brownwood was a little more rural, Seguin's a little more suburban. What was your strategy when you wanted to implement it the first time around, and then how did that change for you the second time around?Terry Nichols:I want to back up to something that you said on the intro too, if I can remember what it was now, that it's not just an agency that we implemented these in, it was a geographical area. So it was multiple agencies.Bill Godfrey:Good point.Terry Nichols:Yeah, I may have been the Chief of Brownwood, but I had the Sheriff's Department, and I had two of the law enforcement agencies right there in the county as well, and it was very rural. If you look at Brownwood, Texas on a map, it is in the geographical center of Texas, and I tell people, "You go out to nowhere and turn left, and you're in Brownwood," and not a lot of resources out there.Our closest big city is Abilene, Texas, and that's an hour away. But I knew, A, the need when I got there. I saw the quick needs assessment that we had no active shooter training. We had nothing. We had zero partnership with our fire and EMS partners, we had a third-party EMS provider, we were not working with our Sheriff's Department who was in the same building as us, so a lot of basic leadership stuff.And it was fun to bring the ASIM stuff to us, and we did it through Counterstrike first. That's how we introduced it to the organization, but we brought in the Sheriff's Department and other law enforcement agencies in the county. And that brought us all together, where they weren't playing in the sandbox prior to me getting there for multiple reasons, but this was something we could all gather around and actually embrace.And that really helped build relationships and, "Hey, we're not that bad. Hey, the people across the hall, hey, they're not that bad. They wear a brown uniform, we wear a blue uniform." So but it's also a rule. What we had is what we had, and help was a long way away. So we introduced it through Counterstrike, and then we did ASIM and the checklist, and we recurred training on it, and it was a success.Bill Godfrey:Sheriff, your first implementation was at Jacksonville, which, contrasting to Brownwood, is about as big as ... it's a big job. What was your strategy there? I know you had to play the long game. It took a while, but talk a little bit about what you did at Jacksonville.Michelle Cook:Sure. So in Jacksonville, the Jacksonville Sheriff's Office actually, at the time, was the 25th largest agency in the country, so a large agency. And what we decided to do is offer the ASIM class to those who wanted it first, because we thought if we could get those folks who are interested in it to buy into it, then they could go out and help sell it to the rest of the agency. And that really, for us, worked out good, because we ended up with ASIM disciples, is what I call them, and those are folks who were all in, who, on the street, if somebody had a question, they could speak to what ASIM was, and the benefits of it, and stuff like that.So it took us several years. We had to get through about 1,400 people trained, so it took us several years, several training cycles, to get everybody through. Contrast that to ... Let me go back. In Jacksonville, we also had a really close relationship with the fire department, and so they were in on the training from the beginning with us, and that was very, very beneficial.In fact, I think it was in Jacksonville, we started using rescue task forces at special events, and that was a chance for us to practice a concept with our police and fire working together on all of our pre-planned special events, so when the the day did come that we had an active shooter, we would be prepared to ... and we wouldn't have to stop and explain to people what a rescue task force was, so that worked out really well.And we had the active shooter incident at The Landing, and we got fortunate that day because there was actually a fire department unit training a block away. But if you go back and you listen to the radio broadcast, and you listen, and you read the after-action reports, it was very clear that not only the active shooter tactical training that we had been practicing and training so hard for worked, but also, the Active Shooter Incident Management portion of that trained, and people fell right into place.And so it was really ... I had just left when that happened, but it was very gratifying to see all that hard work going into saving people's lives. So move forward to Atlantic Beach, again, much like Terry, a very small agency. We had 30 people total, including myself, and for me, I incorporated not only some of the fire department folks again in this, but public works. Our public works folks had a big presence out there in the city of Atlanta Beach, and so they were pulled into some of the safer jobs, and we trained with public works on these things, and safety...Bill Godfrey:Okay, well, we're not going to let you get away with that that easy. You're going to have to tell a little bit about what you did, and why, and how it worked out.Michelle Cook:So what we did is we got the public works guys because ... specifically the school, but other locations as well, we had ... Atlantic Beach is a beach town, so there's lots of roads leading in, and one of the concerns we had is that when something happened, that traffic would be backed up and blocked so bad that we would not be able to get mutual aid or fire rescue into the scene.So we train the public works guys on how to use their big trucks to hold traffic positions until relieved by a law enforcement officer, and again, they were instrumental and vital to our plan out there, and talking about building relationships and everybody being on the same page. So that worked out really good. Small agency, limited resources. We-Bill Godfrey:Did you get any pushback from the public works guys and gals, or were they pretty excited about it?Michelle Cook:Oh, they were having a blast. We also incorporated them, just on a side note, in our search for missing people. As soon as we had a missing person call go out in the city of Atlantic Beach, our publics works people would getting notified on their phones that we were looking for missing persons, and so they would also help us look for missing people. So it was really just, you go back to, if you have limited resources, if you're in a jurisdiction then you have limited resources, there are other groups that you can pull in safely to help augment or supplement your agency.Bill Godfrey:Sure, sure.Michelle Cook:Yeah, so that...Bill Godfrey:So how did your approach ... Other than the public works, what was the big glaring differences for you implementing it at Atlantic Beach, versus implementing ASIM at the Atlantic Beach versus Jacksonville?Michelle Cook:You know, Jacksonville, there was always the potential for over-convergence just from get go, just because of the sheer number of resources in Duval County. In Atlantic Beach, it was the exact opposite. How long do we have to wait until help gets here, and then how do you manage so much mutual aid? Because in Atlantic Beach, we would have Neptune Beach, Jacks Beach, Jacksonville, Mayport police, all potentially responding, all with different communication, radio channels.And so we had to make sure that when we developed our plan in Atlantic Beach, that all those surrounding agencies knew what our plan was, so that if and when something did happen, they would know what radio frequency to go to. Where would staging be? We preset all those ahead of time so that would be no question day of, and that's the value of a smaller jurisdiction, is you can do a lot of that ahead of time.Bill Godfrey:Yeah, you really regionalized your approach, which Terry mentioned even at Brownwood and bringing some of the others in. Terry, when you went over to Seguin, what did you do a little bit differently there at that one? And talk a little bit about how you stepped outside of the city to bring in your regional partners, similar to what Michelle was just talking about.Terry Nichols:Yeah, pretty much the same thing. The good news is we had a great relationship with the fire department there. It's a larger organization. I say larger. We had 60 sworn at the time, but we're a lot closer ... San Antonio's, a rock throw away, Austin's an hour away, San Marcos is close. So we have a lot of resources, and in the Braunfels real close to us if we need them.One thing that this community had lived through was Sutherland Springs. We had first responders ... Sutherland Springs was literally 15 miles, 20 miles, from Seguin, so we had first responders that actually went down there that day. So it was very close to Seguin, meaning and close to their heart. They did not have ASIM, though. They did not have any training. Most of them had been through Alert or some level of tactical training. The tactical piece of it, the sheriff mentioned, but nobody had the management piece.So I took what I did in Brownwood, and we invested in the Counterstrike and they ran everybody through Counterstrike first. Then we brought in an ASIM advance class, and that's when we really got the buy-in. There were already a group going on countywide, they met monthly. An integrated response group, it was run by the county Fire Marshal's Office, and they would meet monthly, and they would meet, and they would sit around and talk about the same thing over and over and over. And then I became chief there, and they all look at me like, "Oh my God, look what just walked in the door. We've got somebody that"-Bill Godfrey:Fresh meat.Terry Nichols:"That knows what they're doing, that'll come rescue us." So we started getting some synergy going there with that, and then the ASIM advanced that we hosted not long before I left, we were lucky enough to get really solidified, because we filled that class. It was great to see so many people.And I got a text on July 4th from the assistant fire chief saying that, "We have a huge parade July 4th in Seguin," and that's largest one in Texas. But, just what the sheriff mentioned, they had rescue task forces stood up, an IEP, the whole thing that ... I'd been walking them through, doing this slowly, baby steps, but they had done it for the parade, and he was so proud of himself, and I'm so proud of them.He said, "Look at your legacy, what you've left behind." I was like, I didn't do anything. I just came and got the ball rolling. You guys now go with it. But it's come time for both places to test, and that I think that, we'll talk about some challenges in a minute, but it's come time to start to test it. Don't wait for game day. We need to start testing these things.Bill Godfrey:Yeah, and it's funny, both of you have talked about opportunities to exercise and practice, I shouldn't use the word exercise, but to practice some of these concepts in your special events and pre-planned events, and I know that that's a huge part of socialization and absolutely a best practice.And before I move on, I do want to comment for the audience, if you're wondering why these two both had ASIM advances, they were both leaders who contacted us and said, "If you ever have a last-minute cancellation, all I need is two weeks notice and I can make it work," and that's how both of them got ASIM classes. They picked up cancellation slots that came in from others on short notice.But sheriff, I know that you started off by doing the RTFs, and the idea of contact teams in your IEPs for special events, and for the football games, and things like that in Jacksonville, but not too long after that, you took that a step further, certainly at clay county, I know you've began incorporating some of these practices into other calls not active shooter. Can you talk a little bit about that?Michelle Cook:Sure. So it actually ... the guys in Atlantic Beach started it, and it's carried forward to Clay County, and I really think this is going to end up being a best practice. And so what we've done is, on priority-one calls, where we have an active scene that's dynamic and fluid, whoever is tactical declares tactical, and they have command of the hot zone.So whether it's a burglary in progress to a store, or a fire at a house, or a gas leak, the person that's going to drive the resources to specific tasks based on an overall strategy declares tactical, and then our incident commander goes down the road and declares command, and then supports tactical.And this is really ... like I said, this happened organically in both agencies, but I think it's going to end up being a best practice for us, is this allows the men and women in uniform to use the terminology, use the concepts, and it won't be foreign to them, God forbid, if something ever happened. So they're using it on priority-one calls now.Bill Godfrey:I think that's fabulous, and the history of the fire service, and I know we all like to make fun, the fire department will set up incident command on a barking dog call. And yeah, true, but that's actually how we got everybody to understand it. When the ICS structure first started coming out in the late 70s and then rolled into the 80s, and people started stepping up and taking notice, the way we got it indoctrinated culturally was we used it on everything.Overkill? Yeah. Was it necessary? Probably not, but did it expedite the cultural integration and locking that in? And it really did. And I know we've had some conversations about the idea of morphing the Active Shooter Incident Management checklist process into something that's a little more generic, like a generic response posture to violent events or potentially-violent events, and I wonder if you could comment on that?So on the fire service, we have alarm levels. So what we send to a residential structure fire is different than what we send to a commercial structure fire, and when we escalate that and call for more resources, and so that's that standard package. And it seems to me like there might be a real good argument and a logical application for something like that, a standard response protocol for hostile events or potentially-violent events on law enforcement. What are the two of you think about that?Terry Nichols:You know, I can agree. I think that's a great best practice, sheriff, and I commend you for it. I think Seguin, we could have certainly done that in Seguin, and hopefully a little more naturally; like you said, organically. What I think we saw that the cops have been missing, the officers have been missing, is the actual practical application of ICS. Everybody's done the 100, the 200, 300, all of the classes, and we all...Bill Godfrey:Nobody shared answers.Terry Nichols:Yeah, they never share answers, but they never seen the practical application of it, and that's what ASIM brings you, or that's what the Counterstrike tool brings them, is a practical application? "Okay, I see how this is supposed to work now," but you've got to go out and now practice it, and if you can incorporate it into your priority-one-type calls or something like that, I think that's brilliant to be able to do something like that, because it just further ingrains that it should be second nature. when the big one, when that day happens, it's already ingrained in the organizational culture.Bill Godfrey:Good point. Sheriff, what are your thoughts?Michelle Cook:You know, I would agree. The challenge we have in law enforcement is ... because every call that we go on is so different, and to broad brush, saying, "Okay, all of these types of calls, you have to do this," it can be a double-edged sword. So I liked the fact that, at least in my agencies, it happened organically, and when the troops buy in, then you don't have to ram it down their throat; it's better all the way around.But I would love to see some sort of standardization, maybe at each state level, and using the lingo of each state to implement a standard hostile encounter response, or priority-one response, or whatever you want to call it. The challenge for us is, a priority-one call can be somebody shot, to a burglary in progress, to a car crash, to ... So I like it. I'm just not quite sure on how to execute it yet.Bill Godfrey:Yeah, I think it's one of those ideas that we ... Let's face it. Both of our industries are not necessarily known for changing quickly. In the fire service, and you guys have heard me say this before, we have a saying, "200 years of tradition unimpeded by progress," and we mean that. But I think this is one of those places where it's an idea, but we need to take time. I think we need to see what begins to develop organically, what works. Where's the stickiness in an organization? What types of incidents or responses does it make sense, and where doesn't it make sense?think we just have to take our time with it, but it's an interesting idea that I want to keep talking about as we move forward. So let me ask both of you this. What, if anything, when you were implementing the ASIM process at any of either of your agencies, what caught you by surprise, or were some lessons learned, or advice that you would give to other law enforcement leaders like yourself, who are wanting to go down this path? Sheriff, you want to start?Michelle Cook:Sure. My advice would be find ASIM disciples first. Let them buy in and help sell it, versus forcing everybody to go to classes right off the bat. Understand that ASIM is a perishable skill, so if you're not using it on the street for your priority-one calls, you have to find other ways to continue the dialogue.And that can include using some of the concepts on pre-planned events. For us, it includes ... we have written out manuscripts, responses, for some of our larger churches and mall, and our personnel read them. And we got this idea from, actually, the Blue Angels, and before every flight, they sit down and they verbally talk about what they're going to do during flight. And so we sit down and we verbally articulate, "If my role is tactical, this is what I'm doing. If I'm a contact team, this is what I'm doing," and that seems to keep the skills fresh.We've also put together some PowerPoints where we have little pieces moving, kind of like the Counterstrike board moving, and then we have people talking about what's happening; again, pushing the concepts out. So my advice would be find ASIM disciples, then push it out to everybody, and then find creative ways to keep the conversation going regularly. And before we get off this podcast, Bill, I want to talk about something exciting that's happening in Clay County right now as we speak, so don't let me forget that.Bill Godfrey:Okay, I'm going to make myself a note. Terry, how about you? What were the surprises or lessons learned or advice that you would offer something to another law enforcement leader?Terry Nichols:In Brownwood, I walked into, I mentioned earlier, a, I won't say adversarial community, but everybody wasn't getting along, and I used it as a tool to bring everybody together. So I thought it was very useful that way. Now see, the fire department, they got along, but they didn't work together. They knew each other, but they didn't get ... that was it. They was the fireman, we're the police officers. But I used it as a unique tool to bring everybody together, and I thought that was unique.I agree with the disciples, or ambassadors, as I often refer to them, as somebody that will go out there and carry that brand. They're passionate about it. They're just passionate as I am, as you are, as the sheriff is, and so many other folks around. Our new ... Our. The city's new assistant fire chief is one of those ambassadors. He was a hire about eight months before I left, and he came from a neighboring agency, and he is an absolute ambassador.He told me at my retirement reception, he's like, "You're part of the reason I came over here, and now you're leaving." He's relating, "I'm passionate about this Active Shooter Incident Management stuff, and you were here, and I was like, 'All right, what a great opportunity.'" I said, "Sorry, dude, it's that time. 33 years is enough time."And I have to agree with you, we did not have the practice at either organization down, like the sheriff explained. We did not have that ongoing, and I learned that the hard way in Brownwood. When we get to that story, I'll tell you that later on, that it is a perishable skill, and you've got to figure out some ways, some unique ways, to continue to get the information out and rehearse, refresh, that going on. And with the events in Texas in the past couple months, I don't think that's going to be hard to do to get that refresher stuff going.Bill Godfrey:Yeah, do you want to go ahead and talk about what you learned in Brownwood about the retention in perishable skills?Terry Nichols:Yeah, so we ran Counterstrike. We did not have the ASIM yet, but we ran Counterstrike. Everybody through the Sheriff's Department, third-party ambulance provider, the hospital, staff attended, everybody. And then a month later, we held an exercise at the school. No SIMS, nothing like that, it was all moulage. We had actually role-players, Moulage, and the hospital was involved.So we did transports, they tested their MCI surge capability. It worked great, and I think our out-the-door time for the first patient was like 20 minutes. It was remarkable. For having only done it, and we had just trained the month before, so it was great, the sad part, we had lost an officer the week before that to an off-duty traffic collision, and I almost canceled the event simply because of that. We had a lot of trauma we were going through as an organization. We didn't, I'm glad we didn't, because it really brought us all back together focused on our mission.The next year, my intentions are always great, but you're not judged by your intention. My intention was to do followup training the following year, that spring, and do another exercise at the school, change it up slightly, and get the hospital, everybody, involved. We never got around to the refresher training. This happened, the world happened, everything happened, but we still did the exercise. My fire chief had pretty much checked out mentally. He just wasn't that engaged. Our out-of-the-building time for our first casualty was like 50 minutes. It was 50 minutes.Bill Godfrey:50? Five zero?Terry Nichols:Yeah, five zero, which, to me, was absolute failure, catastrophic failure. It's like, what happened? And it was a lack of recurring training, is what boils down to. People had forgotten their roles, they'd forgotten ... they had the checklist, they had in front of them, but they'd forgotten how to do the basic fundamental things, the basic fundamental piece of this.So the good lesson learned, keeping that buy-in from those ambassadors, especially the agency heads, I would think that I could sit across from my fire chief, and I could in Seguin, and have a very candid conversation. It was not quite that same way in Brownwood, as it turned out to be. That was part of the issue I faced.The other issue is my own, I had to own it, that I did not continue to push the training. Life happened, other things happened, and I did not make it a top priority as it should have been, and we saw the outcome of that during that exercise, and I was just as mad as a hornet. I was just absolutely furious at myself, not at the performance of my troops, because they did the best they could. It was at me for not doing that refresher training.Bill Godfrey:Powerful story. Sheriff, anything that you want to add on that before I come back to what's going on there at Clay County?Michelle Cook:I'm with Terry. This is a perishable skill all day long, and you've got to find creative ways to continue the conversations. To think that you're going to bring in a class one time, and somehow people are going to retain it, that's just not going to work. You got to continue the conversations, whether it's the Counterstrike board. For us, it's reading scripts and PowerPoints, and handling priority-one calls using ASIM concepts. Also, the preplanned events, using as many concepts as we can during the preplanned event, and that's how you keep the conversations fresh.Bill Godfrey:Yeah, I completely agree. So tell us a little bit about what's going on there at Clay that you're excited about.Michelle Cook:So really thrilled about this. We were actually having these conversations before Uvalde, and Uvalde really just cemented our commitment to them. So in Clay County, like all school districts across America, our school board came up with a reunification plan, which sounded great on paper. It looks fantastic in this big ring binder that nobody's ever going to look at. So I brought in the county emergency manager, the safety director for the school board, and the school board police chief, and said, "Guys, we have our plan, you have your plan, the schools have their plan. None of us know each other's plan."So right now, what we're doing is we're hosting, I think we're up to 51 meetings. We're bringing school administrators in; the superintendent; fire rescue; the police agency if it's in a municipality, and we bring that jurisdiction in; the school resource officers; the school board police; the safety director for the school board; my patrol division; my special events division, and my traffic division. And we'll have anywhere from 20 to 30 people in the room, and we put the school up on the board and we say, "Okay, this is Clay High School. All right, so school administrators, what is your lockdown ... what is your policy?"So they tell us what their policy is, and then we talk about what to expect from us. "You're going to have solo officer response. You may see something called a contact team. What do you ... We've made an agreement on where we're going to keep extra weapons and other items locked in the school, so where is that location? How do we turn off your alarms in your school?" And then we challenge our traffic guys, "What intersections do you have to own to lock this school down?"And then to the school people, "How are we going to ... Let's talk about reunification. What does that look like?" And then we tell them, "Hey, this is what our contact teams are going to be doing. This is what our rescue task forces are going to be doing. There's a position called tactical, and if you can find that person safely and provide information on who the suspect is, where they're at, go find that person. This is what's going to be happening at the command post."So we tell them all of that, and really, what we've done is we've taken the individual school plans, we've taken the school board police response plan, we've taken the fire response plan, we've taken our plan. We've really molded it into a document, and since I've been driving the conversations from the beginning, they're very ASIM-centric. And the documents are just a few pages, and I could literally ...We've identified, for example, all the intersections in the area that we need to control. "I'm not telling you on game day which direction to push traffic, but these are the intersections that we have to control." So we have a single sheet of paper, it lists each intersection, and then how many deputies it takes to control that intersection. So if Terry's coming in for mutual aid, and I can pull off this sheet of paper and hand it to Terry and say, "You've got traffic."So we've done this with our schools. We're about 12 or so schools in now that we've been holding these meetings, and I tell you, the sense of cooperation, coordination, the understanding of ASIM, because we tell them, "You guys locking down and us neutralizing the bad guy is really just the beginning. There's going to be so much more that has to happen," and opening their eyes of what to expect from us, what we can expect from them, and we're calling it the Clay County CHIRP plan, CHIRP, Clay Hazard Immediate Response Plan, and it just gets all the special interests together in a room to talk about each individual school individually, instead of trying to cover all the schools with one giant plan.Bill Godfrey:That is so fantastic, and more than I've heard going on in other organizations. Once again, you're always on the cutting edge of making new stuff happen. So I-Terry Nichols:It is, it's brilliant. I'm sorry, Bill.Bill Godfrey:No, go ahead, Terry.Terry Nichols:It's great. It's absolutely brilliant, it really is, especially countywide. One thing I left out of the Brownwood, the exercises we did, the school district did their own little reunification exercise once we finished. So we did our piece of it, but they had staff that was working through the summer, and they worked on their reunification process. They actually brought up school buses, and took them to another facility, and worked and walked through the standard reunification method that they utilize.So again, we did not get involved in that because we were taxed already, as far as the number of bodies we were pulling from the street through the tactical piece of all this, but they were doing it themselves. So it was nice to see them doing that. I know the superintendent out there, I know he's continuing that kind of stuff. It's very important to them. Seguin will be very similar, I'd have no doubt in my mind.Bill Godfrey:That's fantastic. So here's my last question for the two of you. Just within the last two weeks, NTOA, the National Tactical Officers Association, has announced that they're endorsing the Active Shooter Incident Management checklist as a national standard. And as I said on one of the previous podcasts, for our fire-EMS audience, NTOA is to law enforcement what the NFPA, the National Fire Protection Agency, is to the fire service. How do the two of you see that changing the conversation as we try to get people aware, trained, and implementing ASIM?Terry Nichols:It would certainly help. Having their endorsement and their stamp of approval is huge. I've been an NTOA member for years, got on their training, I've been to their active assailant training, active shooter training many years ago, back in the early days of Alert. It adds a lot of validity to it, not that it didn't already have it, because it does, but you may be reaching a whole different audience that, especially for your larger agencies that have full-time SWAT teams, and they say, "If we don't do an active shooter training, we've got this stuff done, it's gone ... y'all have to solve long before we get there."But now, they get introduced ugh, or through their structure or their training in the tactical world, they get introduced to the ASIM model and the process that way now. Again, most of the country part-time teams, collateral duty, job, that kind of stuff, but your Los Angeleses, and your New York, and your Houstons, and your Austins and Bostons, and all those big places that may not get ASIM another way, may see it this way now. So I think it's a big deal, Bill.Bill Godfrey:Sheriff, how about you? How does it change things, or does it change things, for you at home there in Clay and in your surrounding areas?Michelle Cook:I'm not sure if it changes things. It doesn't surprise me, though, that NTOA would be one of the first to step up and acknowledge this. The NTOA has trained thousands and thousands and thousands of SWAT operators and SWAT leaders, and on a SWAT call-out, there's a process. And you think about, you call the SWAT team when it's really, really bad, and the SWAT team follows a chain of command, there's one talk, there's one commander.So it doesn't surprise me that NTOA would see the value of a checklist like this, and understand that the checklist is really for those dynamic, ongoing ... those calls that are happening right then when we don't have time to wait for the SWAT team. Now, with that being said, my only concern, and this is something that, as a leader, you have to be cognizant of, is the checklist is not the answer. The answer is training with the checklist.Bill Godfrey:Yes, yes.Michelle Cook:So passing the checklist and saying, "Okay, now we have ASIM," that would be my only concern, because I'm thinking firemen are probably like this too, but cops, "Just make it easy for us. Give us a checklist."Bill Godfrey:Yeah, we're all much more alike than we would like to admit.Michelle Cook:Yeah. That would be my only caution, is that the piece of paper is not the answer. It's training to the piece of paper that will help you get to the answer.Bill Godfrey:Yeah, and I think certainly in my conversations with the NTOA leadership, I think they're keenly aware of that, and we're having some very positive conversations about things that we are hoping to do with their organization to begin to push this out. I think we're probably going to start with some webinars, some announcement material, and things like that, but obviously, we've got to get into the training. You got to get into the hands-on training.And I've said this before, and I will say it again, you can sit in a classroom and you can get lectured at, you can watch a video, but until you get up and put yourself in the moment and actually practice this under pressure, you just don't get it. You've got to give responders the opportunity to practice, hot wash it, and then let them practice again, and that's when they they build the competency.I feel like it's a little bit of a trite analogy, but I've said it before, and I don't think there's anything quite better than that, you're not going to get to the Super Bowl with one practice. You've got to practice over and over again, and in a lot of ways, the quarterback on the field is a lot like tactical triage and transport, and then the coaches on the sideline are like the incident command post.Everybody's working together, but how the heck are you going to pull that off on game day if nobody ever bothered to practice? It seems obvious, and when you break it down in those terms, everybody goes, "Oh yeah, I guess that makes sense," but making it a priority for agencies, it's tough. We got, what, 20 pounds of training requirements to fit into a one-pound day? Something's-Terry Nichols:In Texas, you're about to see that get a lot heavier, because again, after Uvalde, I think you're going to see this come to the forefront at the state level. So every state has mandated training for peace officers that we all have to go through every year. You will see we will be heavy on active shooter response, active assailant response, and it'll hopefully give those agencies that already bought in, that have ASIM training, that have the knowledge of it, to give them a chance to actually go out and practice it now, to check that box with the state, as it were.And one of my leadership mentors, Dave Anderson, he says about working out, "How can you expect to go in the gym and squat 500 pounds if you've never squatted 100 pounds? So yeah, you got to practice, practice, practice, repetition, repetition, repetition. So what you said is spot on, but we've got to ... To have a piece of paper, laminated or not, just to pull out of your zipper shirt or out of your visor, is not the answer. You've got to use it.Bill Godfrey:Or on your phone. We've got it as the phone app too. Yeah, I completely agree, and the one thing I would say, in a perfect world, we would get everybody trained so competently and so passionately, and that, God forbid, the day comes that they're called upon, they would nail it and perfect it, and that would be wonderful. But a little goes a long way. A little bit of organization, a little bit of incident management, having a handful of leadership who understands the process and understand what needs to get done, to be able to organize the rest of the troops or the mutual aid people coming in, a little can go a long way. And yes, one day I would like to believe that we'll get every law enforcement, firefighter, EMT, and paramedic in the United States fully trained and competent in this material. But in the meantime, let's do a little something, because as we've seen more than once, a failure on the incident management side can just produce an unacceptable result.Terry Nichols:It's catastrophic, it's catastrophic, and witnessed recently, unfortunately, and it just ... and you're right, small pieces, and the sheriff's got it right. She's hitting it on the head, using it the priority-one calls, and get it ingrained, indoctrinated. And before we went live and started recording, I was joking with you, Bill, about, we have so much to learn from the fire service; we, being law enforcement.Yeah, we may joke all day long about this incident command stuff. There's a cat up in a tree, and y'all set up incident command, there's no one-shot. But there's something to be said for this, and I tried it. I think both Seguin and Brownwood are better ... they are today than when I got there when it comes to this type of stuff. Not just the tactical piece of it, but the incident management piece of it. I hope they are. And it was a great challenge, and I'm an ambassador of it, and hopefully we got much more to learn, even if it's one at a time, one person at a time.Bill Godfrey:Yeah, and I think, Terry, between you and, certainly, Michelle, who is a very, very strong leader in the law enforcement community, and very sophisticated and forward-looking, I'm optimistic. I think we're going to get there. I think that this can happen, and we can get it done. And I'll share this one story with you, Terry, in fairness, coming back on the other side, because making fun of the cat in the tree, I always make fun of you law enforcement guys for the 540 degrees of coverage. I'm like, "Yeah, how does that math work? It's 360, and you start over again."And I was teaching a class one day with ... and I make that joke on a fairly regular basis, which I should have known. And one of our other instructors, Adam, he was waiting for it, and as soon as I said it, he goes, "Okay, let me explain it to you, Bill. You get in the recliner, you spin around 360 degrees, and then you pull the lever to kick your feet back and you look up over your head. That's 540 degrees of coverage," and I said, "Okay, I got it. I deserve that."Terry Nichols:I owe him a beverage. I owe him a beverage.Bill Godfrey:Sheriff, you have any other closing words or thoughts that you want to offer before we wrap up for today?Michelle Cook:Just wanted to say thank you for the opportunity, and if any law enforcement leader out there, anybody in law enforcement, is looking for any ideas, or suggestions, or support, or how to lead your organization or your agency through the the beginnings of ASIM, obviously, C3 Pathways is the expert in the training, but I can definitely help people navigate the politics of it if needed. So always available to assist.Bill Godfrey:Yeah, that's very, very gracious of you. I have a feeling we're going to have people reaching out wanting your contact information. Terry, any final thoughts?Terry Nichols:I echo exactly what the sheriff said, Bill. Thank you so much for the opportunity to come to share my story, anyway, what I've experienced, but same way. I've done it in a rural community with very limited resources, and now in a larger, not near as large as the Sheriff for Jacksonville, but in a larger agency with ... And there are politics to navigate, there are egos to navigate.Bill Godfrey:Always.Terry Nichols:They're in ... I don't have all the answers, but I'll certainly give you my experience. So yeah, C3 Pathways is the point. Anybody listening or watching, reach out to C3, and if you want to talk to me directly, obviously, Bill will gladly share my contact information, and I will answer any question with anybody at any time about any issue as it relates to this, and my successes and my obvious failures as well.Bill Godfrey:Well, Terry, Michelle, thank you both so much for taking the time out of your day. I think what you've shared can be extremely valuable to those that need to walk in the same footsteps that you guys have already forged ahead, and I just can't thank you enough for continuing to support and be ambassadors, and for the work that both of you have accomplished. So thank you for being with us today on the show. Ladies and gentlemen, that's a wrap for our show today. Thank you for tuning in, and until we talk to you next time, stay safe.

RMC Bonjour !
La petite info Culture : Un moulage du pénis de Jimi Hendrix au Musée d'Islande - 16/06

RMC Bonjour !

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2022 0:56


Chaque matin, Anaïs Castagna enrichit votre culture générale artistique en vous donnant une infirmation Culture. Chaque matin dans "Charles matin", écoutez un show radio/télé unique en France. Un rendez-vous exceptionnel mêlant infos, débats, réactions et intervention d'experts. En simultané de 6h à 8h30 sur RMC Story. En simultané de 8h35 à 9h sur BFMTV. RMC est une radio généraliste, essentiellement axée sur l'actualité et sur l'interactivité avec les auditeurs, dans un format 100% parlé, inédit en France. La grille des programmes de RMC s'articule autour de rendez-vous phares comme Apolline Matin (6h-9h), les Grandes Gueules (9h-12h), Estelle Midi (12h-15h), Super Moscato Show (15h-18h), Rothen s'enflamme (18h-20h), l'After Foot (20h-minuit).

ACTUALITES - AZUR FM
Sundhouse : Percez les mystères des vergers, mais aussi de l'apiculture et du rémoulage

ACTUALITES - AZUR FM

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2022 2:00


Des portes ouvertes vous sont proposées ce dimanche 19 juin, de 11h à 18h, du côté de Sundhouse. C'est avec l'association Vergers et jardins, qui vous propose de découvrir son verger école, composé de 26 arbres fruitiers divers. Deux intervenants, un rémouleur, mais également un apiculteur seront présents au cours de cette journée pour vous parler de leur activité. David, membre de l'association, est venu nous parler de la première édition de cet événement.  Le lien vers l'article complet : https://www.azur-fm.com/news/sundhouse-percez-les-mysteres-des-vergers-mais-aussi-de-l-apiculture-et-du-remoulage-800 

BX1+ - Bruxelles vit!
Bruxelles vit ! – L’atelier de moulage du Musée Art & Histoire

BX1+ - Bruxelles vit!

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2022 99:33


Ce mardi, dans Bruxelles vit !, Charlotte Maréchal est en direct du Cinquantenaire et plus précisément de l'atelier de moulage du Musée Art - Histoire, un artisanat qui existe depuis le XIXe siècle. Elle fait découvrir les coulisses de cet atelier d'un autre temps.

Simulcast
140 Moulage with Jess Stokes-Parish

Simulcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2021 29:13


Jess and Vic talk about the topic of moulage - a French word meaning "to mould", but more commonly known as the use of special effects makeup techniques to replicate illness and effects. Jess talks about her PhD journey and her (shock horror!) moulage scepticism that drove her to studying the topic. We discuss some of the theories that relate to moulage use, new research and where the future of moulage might be heading (Jess might have mentioned her obsessive watching of google scholar for moulage papers...).   Links and resources   Shiner et al 2019 Radiography and moulage https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1078817418302153   Bauer et al 2021 T attoos and moulage https://bmcmededuc.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12909-021-02763-z   Stokes-Parish 2020 Engagement and moulage in med students https://advancesinsimulation.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s41077-020-00142-0   Stokes-Parish et al 2019 Authenticity in moulage https://advancesinsimulation.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s41077-019-0103-z  

Rádio da Costureira
109 - Moulage a técnica de infinitas possibilidades com Francys Saleh

Rádio da Costureira

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2021 80:46


Sin eden sublime
#32 - Le moulage corporel intime

Sin eden sublime

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2021 29:47


Dans ce tout nouveau podcast on va parler Moulage corporel intime avec Jean, fondateur de "Moulages intimes" qui propose des ateliers de moulages corporels autogéré! Nous allons voir en quoi ça consiste. Pourquoi son fondateur met-il le corps à l'honneur et en particulier les parties considérées comme les plus intimes ? Quel résultat en découle ? Comment se passe une séance avec le modèle ? Et si vous aussi vous souhaitez mouler vos parties intimes, comment faire ? Le retrouver ici : @moulagesintimes Retrouvez tous les podcasts sur Sin eden sublime : ► Spotify ► Apple podcast ► Youtube ► www.sinedensublime.com ► @sinedensublimepodcast ------ Sin eden sublime - Le podcast des sexualités #podcast #podcastfrancais #podcasts #podcastaddict #podcastlove #amour #intimité #corps #moulage #art #nudité #moulageintime #moulagesintimes #atelierdemoulageintime #ateliercorps #bodyart #proudofyourbody #LGBTQIA #sinedensublime --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sinedensublime/message

Knitmoregirls's Podcast
Complicated Explanations for Simple Things - Episode 624 - The Knitmore Girls

Knitmoregirls's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2021 52:33


This week's episode is sponsored by:     Carry your creativity with Erin Lane Bags! Whether you show your fiber fandom with the woolly wonder Sheepleverse, or dive into history with the Curiosities collection, our project bags, totes, and hook and needle organizers are at the ready to keep your hobby happy.         When was the last time your knitting yarn was a work of art? Infinite Twist produces one-of-a-kind semi-solid gradients featuring speckles, high-lights, low-lights, and gorgeous color transitions. From 700 y Giant Gradients to 200 y matching sock sets, Infinite Twist Gradients will hold your interest from cast on to bind off. See the currently available gradients at infinitetwist.com, or be the first to know when new colors are posted by signing up for our newsletter at infinitetwist.com/newsletter-signup       Have you ever had to frog because you forgot a step several rows back? Or lost your spot because you dropped your magnet board or lost track with your highlighter tape? Instead of wrestling with paper, use the knitCompanion app. It keeps you on track so you can knit more and frog less. knitCompanion works with ALL your patterns and is available for Apple, Android, and Kindle Fire Devices         Are you feeling dis-GRUNT-eled about your stash? Are you browsing Insta-HAM looking for knitting inspiration? Is color "kind of a PIG deal" in your life? Oink Pigments offers over one hundred forty PIG-ture perfect colorways to make you SQUEAL with delight. For a limited time only, bring home the bacon with code KNITMORE and get fifteen percent off in-stock yarns and fibers at oinkpigments dot com. Shop soon, because these pigs will FLY!     On the Needles:(0:39) Gigi knitted to the toe of the 2nd Xmas sock Jasmin is into the body shaping on her worsted sock arms cardigan in Knitcircus Yarn Ringmaster in “We scare because we care”. She’ll be using the “Monstropolis” gradient for the sleeves. Gigi got to the toe of Andrew’s 2nd sock. Genevieve wound the yarn for : Jasmin finished the knitting on her the Odds and Ends test knit for Tina Tse in the Knitmore Gradient from Black Trillium Fibers held together with a strand of Diptera from LolaBean Yarn Co. Jasmin mentions her box of bulb shaped stitch markers. Jasmin put the sleeves on holders and is about 1” into the body on Sam’s Gramps Cardigan (by TinCanKnits) in Magpie fibers Nest Worsted in “Twilight Dark”   Genevieve wound the yarn for : Jasmin swatched Magpie Fibers Swanky DK in “Bougie Beaver” for the “Modern Art” pullover (cover sweater from the Art of Circular Yokes) for the Magpie #Beavalong Genevieve worked on her hat/beanie. Genevieve worked on the Schacht Cricket loom Jasmin is working on (RAVELRY LINK!) Sam's Gramps Cardigan   In Stitches:(11:56) Jasmin wore her handspun effortless cardigan (actually the [RAVELRY LINK] Breezy Cardigan) Genevieve wore her (RAVELRY LINK) Hearthstone pullover, red and gold woven scarf and hat, her (RAVELRY LINK!) Anna cardigan, Griffindor scarf and hat, her beanie and her Shrunk Payne pullover, and the Pippi Longstocking stockings. Gigi stopped wearing knit socks every day Wore the (RAVELRY LINK) Treppenviertel cowl at night as a hat  (RAVELRY LINK)    Flickering Shawl Flannel shirt from clothing construction class  Camp shirt from beginning clothing construction    Events:(16:26) Knitgirllls Fail - Along is ongoing Stash Dash in May  2020 Summer Olympics will begin on Friday, July 23, 2021 [Beijing Winter Olympics start ] Tour de Fleece in July (Sat, Jun 26, 2021 – Sun, Jul 18, 2021) Discussion for  a new name for what used to be the Knitting Olympics Pan-Athenic Games? Mother Knows Best:(25:03) From KrisLuvsWool: “I learned to sew on a sewing machine when I was younger. We purchased patterns, cut out the fabrics, and sewed it all up… so I have had some rudimentary experience with sewing, but would still consider myself a beginner. That said, as a knitter who has gained an understanding of fit and ease, etc., I’ve got an interest in sewing garments again, but am a little overwhelmed about where to start and how FAR to jump into sewing and drafting patterns. I’m working on padding out my dress form to be more of a real “double”-- but at what stage should I bother trying to make a sloper? A Moulage? Where would you recommend getting started. I checked at our local CC but it’s not offering classes of that nature; and even with Craftsy, I’ve been overwhelmed by the choices that don’t seem curated to guide me into levels of “making”. How does someone “level up” with sewing?” Vogue 1003, Vogue 1004  LINK Craftsy check Suzie Furrer, the bodice  Palmer Pletsch When Knitting Attacks:(36:00) Genevieve was yarn barfed on. Gigi was working on the stripy sparkly Xmas socks. Vanilla is the new Black. Straw into Gold:(40:01) Jasmin does a little spinning on the Acadia spinning wheel for her Incredibles family sweaters  She mentions Sheepspot and Dr Gemma Knits in Space:(42:12) GODZILLA VS KONG private theater viewing!!! And Sew On: (47:12) Classes at Cañada continue, the classes  are recorded.  Did Full Bust Adjustment, had to cut a new front  Set in sleeves were miserable, front of sleeves was terrible  Bust darts need to be backed off. Threads magazine article on pressing during construction (article is no longer available).    

Wiener Blut
Moulage & Chinchilla-Pelz (Der Mord im Lainzer Tiergarten)

Wiener Blut

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2021 47:40


Wien, 1928: In einem bekannten Erholungsgebiet wird eine verbrannte Frauenleiche gefunden. Lange Zeit herrscht Unklarheit über ihre Identität. Die Polizei versucht auf vielerlei Art herauszufinden, wer das Opfer des offensichtlichen Verbrechens sein könnte. Dann, endlich - ein Durchbruch!

Knitmoregirls's Podcast
Cake Theory - Episode 620 - The Knitmore Girls

Knitmoregirls's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2021 56:27


This week's episode is sponsored by:     Carry your creativity with Erin Lane Bags! Whether you show your fiber fandom with the woolly wonder Sheepleverse, or dive into history with the Curiosities collection, our project bags, totes, and hook and needle organizers are at the ready to keep your hobby happy.       When was the last time your knitting yarn was a work of art? Infinite Twist produces one-of-a-kind semi-solid gradients featuring speckles, high-lights, low-lights, and gorgeous color transitions. From 700 y Giant Gradients to 200 y matching sock sets, Infinite Twist Gradients will hold your interest from cast on to bind off. See the currently available gradients at infinitetwist.com, or be the first to know when new colors are posted by signing up for our newsletter at infinitetwist.com/newsletter-signup     Have you ever had to frog because you forgot a step several rows back? Or lost your spot because you dropped your magnet board or lost track with your highlighter tape? Instead of wrestling with paper, use the knitCompanion app. It keeps you on track so you can knit more and frog less. knitCompanion works with ALL your patterns and is available for Apple, Android, and Kindle Fire Devices     Are you feeling dis-GRUNT-eled about your stash? Are you browsing Insta-HAM looking for knitting inspiration? Is color "kind of a PIG deal" in your life? Oink Pigments offers over one hundred forty PIG-ture perfect colorways to make you SQUEAL with delight. For a limited time only, bring home the bacon with code KNITMORE and get fifteen percent off in-stock yarns and fibers at oinkpigments dot com. Shop soon, because these pigs will FLY!   On the Needles:(0:38) Jasmin is a good ways down the body on her (RAVELRY LINK) Tectonic pullover in La Bien Aimée’s Aran in “Aimée’s Sweater” Gigi: worked on the striped, sparkly, fun sock she started around Xmas,  Jasmin is past the curved hems on her worsted sock arms cardigan in Knitcircus Yarn Ringmaster in “We scare because we care”. She’ll be using the “Monstropolis” gradient for the sleeves. Jasmin mentions Amy Herzog's knit to fit books. She mentions Elizabeth Doherty's curved hem pattern, (RAVELRY LINK) Archer. Gigi keeps working on the leg of the Revuers socks from the Operation Sock Drawer book, available at Hicklebee's. Jasmin finished the knitting on the $27 sweater test knit for KnitBoop in Little Skein Targhee Sweater; it just needs blocking and photographing. Gigi is working on two socks for Andrew  Jasmin finished the first sleeve, and started the body on her sideways fade cardigan preview knit for Ellie Skeinanigans in a Frost Yarns DK gradient Jasmin has swatched THRICE  for the Odds and Ends cardigan Test Knit for Tina Tse in the Black Trillium Fibers (no longer dyeing) Knitmore Gradient held together with LolaBean Yarn Co Diptera.  In Stitches:(17:48) Jasmin wore her (RAVELRY LINK) Mariah hoodie, giant pompom christmas hat, (RAVELRY LINK) Namu sweater, (RAVELRY LINK) Calligraphy cardigan, (RAVELRY LINK)weekender Genevieve wore her (RAVELRY LINK) Hearthstone pullover, red and gold woven scarf and hat, (RAVLERY LINK), colorblock pullover, (RAVELRY LINK) Anna Cardigan, (RAVELRY LINK)Oliver sweater Gigi wore the (RAVELRY LINK) knitmore cowl  2.0, and socks every day  And (RAVELRY LINK) Cat Bordhi’s wristers. (RAVELRY LINK) Pointed Firs shawl  Events:(21:54) Knitgirllls Fail - Along Stash Dash in May Gigi mentions Chaharshanbe Souri We are wondering about Olympics  (2020 Summer Olympics will begin on Friday, July 23, 2021) Tour de Fleece in July (Sat, Jun 26, 2021 – Sun, Jul 18, 2021) Mother Knows Best:(26:09) Give someone their flowers! (compliment freely, from Adella of LolaBean Yarn Co) Gigi mentions the Sewing Out Loud podcast Jasmin duplicate stitched something  When Knitting Attacks:(28:48) Gigi: Working on the Xmas socks, and the revers socks. Neko angled DPNS Gigi repaired her (RAVELRY LINK) Carli   Knits in Space:(43:49) Raya and the last dragon, movie night for Sam’s birthday Gigi is reading Girl, Serpent, Thorn  And Sew On: (50:31) Classes at Cañada continue, the class meetings  are recorded. Moulage for Jasmin is sewn, teacher gave feedback on sleeve, next step is to sew the sloper  Mood fabric 10 lb mystery box 

Knitmoregirls's Podcast
Indoorswoman - Episode 619 - The Knitmore Girls

Knitmoregirls's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2021 50:25


This week's episode is sponsored by:                 Carry your creativity with Erin Lane Bags! Whether you show your fiber fandom with the woolly wonder  Sheepleverse, or dive into history with the Curiosities collection, our project bags, totes, and hook and needle    organizers are at the ready to keep your hobby happy.   Go to HelloFresh dot com slash knitmore12 and use code knitmore12 for 12 free meals, including free shipping!             When was the last time your knitting yarn was a work of art? Infinite Twist produces one-of-a-kind semi-solid gradients featuring speckles, high-lights, low-lights, and gorgeous color transitions. From 700 y Giant Gradients to 200 y matching sock sets, Infinite Twist Gradients will hold your interest from cast on to bind off. See the currently available gradients at infinitetwist.com, or be the first to know when new colors are posted by signing up for our newsletter at infinitetwist.com/newsletter-signup             Have you ever had to frog because you forgot a step several rows back? Or lost your spot because you dropped your magnet board or lost track with your highlighter tape? Instead of wrestling with paper, use the knitCompanion app. It keeps you on track so you can knit more and frog less. knitCompanion works with ALL your patterns and is available for Apple, Android, and Kindle Fire Devices Are you feeling dis-GRUNT-eled about your stash? Are you browsing Insta-HAM looking for knitting inspiration? Is color "kind of a PIG deal" in your life? Oink Pigments offers over one hundred forty PIG-ture perfect colorways to make you SQUEAL with delight. For a limited time only, bring home the bacon with code KNITMORE and get fifteen percent off in-stock yarns and fibers at oinkpigments dot com. Shop soon, because these pigs will FLY!         On the Needles:(0:41) Jasmin finished the collar increases on the (RAVELRY LINK) Gramps cardigan for Sam Jasmin has made more progress on her (RAVELRY LINK) L’escargot Bleu shawl  Gigi: picked up striped, sparkly, fun sock I started around Xmas, turned the heel, working on the foot  Jasmin is past the armholes on the (RAVELRY LINK) Tectonic pullover in La Bien Aimée’s Aran in “Aimée’s Sweater” Jasmin started her worsted sock arms cardigan in Knitcircus Yarn Ringmaster in “We scare because we care”. She’ll be using the “Monstropolis” gradient for the sleeves. Jasmin finished the body and first sleeve $27 sweater test knit for KnitBoop in Little Skein Targhee Sweater; she’s more than halfway done with the second sleeve Gigi is working on two socks for Andrew    In Stitches:(11:38) Jasmin wore her (RAVELRY LINK) Barberry hoodie, new hat with giant pom pom, gold college hat, octopus sweater, grey sweater from mom Genevieve wore her (RAVELRY LINK) Hearthstone pullover, red and gold woven scarf, (RAVLERY LINK), colorblock pullover, (RAVELRY LINK) Anna Cardigan,  Gigi wore the (RAVELRY LINK) knitmore cowl  2.0, and socks every day  And (RAVELRY LINK) Cat Bordhi’s wristers. (RAVELRY LINK) Pointed Firs shawl  Jasmin talks about the convertible outdoor table/bench    Events:(16;13) Knitgirllls Fail - Along is ongoing Stash Dash in May Commuter Knitter is back! Mother Knows Best:(20:15) Just do it. Do that repair. Watch that tutorial video. Yell at that squirrel. Always Lots of Heinies at the Zoo  When Knitting Attacks:(28:48) Trying to knit in bed with dogs. Knits in Space:(32:48) Blossom bathing at Masumoto Family farm And Sew On: (50:45) Classes at Cañada continue, the classes are recorded. Love that, one can go back and follow step by step.  Moulage for Jasmin is sewn, teacher gave feedback on sleeve  Mood Mood fabric 10 lb mystery box 

Knitmoregirls's Podcast
Knitt's Creek - Episode 618 - The Knitmore Girls

Knitmoregirls's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2021 38:48


This week's episode is sponsored by:               Carry your creativity with Erin Lane Bags! Whether you show your fiber fandom with the woolly wonder  Sheepleverse, or dive into history with the Curiosities collection, our project bags, totes, and hook and needle    organizers are at the ready to keep your hobby happy.               When was the last time your knitting yarn was a work of art? Infinite Twist produces one-of-a-kind semi-solid gradients featuring speckles, high-lights, low-lights, and gorgeous color transitions. From 700 y Giant Gradients to 200 y matching sock sets, Infinite Twist Gradients will hold your interest from cast on to bind off. See the currently available gradients at infinitetwist.com, or be the first to know when new colors are posted by signing up for our newsletter at infinitetwist.com/newsletter-signup             Have you ever had to frog because you forgot a step several rows back? Or lost your spot because you dropped your magnet board or lost track with your highlighter tape? Instead of wrestling with paper, use the knitCompanion app. It keeps you on track so you can knit more and frog less. knitCompanion works with ALL your patterns and is available for Apple, Android, and Kindle Fire Devices   Books plus knitting plus happy memories. That’s Little Skein in the Big Wool. We make kits, yarn and project bags that bring your favorite stories to life. Find *your* favorite story at littleskein.com     Are you feeling dis-GRUNT-eled about your stash? Are you browsing Insta-HAM looking for knitting inspiration? Is color "kind of a PIG deal" in your life? Oink Pigments offers over one hundred forty PIG-ture perfect colorways to make you SQUEAL with delight. For a limited time only, bring home the bacon with code KNITMORE and get fifteen percent off in-stock yarns and fibers at oinkpigments dot com. Shop soon, because these pigs will FLY!       On the Needles:(0:20)   Jasmin finished the collar increases on the (RAVELRY LINK) Gramps cardigan for Sam Gigi knitted the ribbing for the (RAVELRY LINK) Rêveurs socks (from the Operation Sock Drawer book available at Hicklebee's) in from Lolabean Yarn Co in Knuckle Sandwich  Jasmin has made more progress on her (RAVELRY LINK) L’escargot Bleu shawl  Genevieve helped with the (RAVELRY LINK) Barberry sweater Gigi: picked up striped, sparkly, fun sock she started around Xmas, heel increases are done for the (RAVELRY LINK) Vanilla is the new Black Jasmin finished(RAVELRY LINK) Boob Window test knit for (RAVELRY LINK) Majestitch Designs in Oink Pigments Dapper in “Dill with it” Gigi: finished two (RAVELRY LINK) socks for Andrew  Jasmin started the (RAVELRY LINK) Tectonic pullover in La Bien Aimée’s Aran in “Aimée’s Sweater” Gigi is working on the funambulus socks from the #operationSockDrawer book  Jasmin swatched for a worsted (RAVELRY LINK) sock arms cardigan in Knitcircus Yarn Ringmaster in “We scare because we care”. She’ll be using the “Monstropolis” gradient for the sleeves. Jasmin finished the collar increases on the (RAVELRY LINK) Gramps cardigan for Sam Gigi Finished the knitting on the (RAVELRY LINK) Alaska hat Jasmin started the $27 sweater test knit for KnitBoop in Little Skein Targhee Sweater Gigi had two naked needles. Cast on two socks for Andrew    In Stitches:(15:12) Jasmin wore her (RAVELRY LINK) Barberry Cardigan , new hat with giant pom pom, looped loop cowl and the Lazer Sheep Sheepicorn hat (RAVELRY LINK) Urchin Hat. Genevieve wore her (RAVELRY LINK) Hearthstone pullover, red and gold woven scarf, (RAVLERY LINKS), Barberry Cardigan , Anna Cardigan, Coronation cardigan, and her Beanie and her (RAVELRY LINK) Tea leaves cardigan Gigi wore the (RAVELRY LINK) knitmore cowl 2.0 and socks every day  And (RAVELRY LINK) Cat Bordhi’s wristers. (RAVELRY LINK) Firs shawl    Events:(19:33) #FinishItFebruary #Fiberuary on instagram both are over next thing; Stash Dash will start in May Mother Knows Best:(23:57) What to do when life gives you lemons We recommend the Mark Bittman recipe from the New York Times for Lemon Souffles.   Knits in Space:(28:40) United States vs Billie Holliday  Strange Fruit  Audra MacDonald version of “Lady Day at Emerson's Bar and Grill” And Sew On: (32:40) Classes at Cañada continue, the class is recorded. Love that, one can go back and follow step by step.  Evening gown class: bustier is drafted and sewn, Gigi had a fitting  Moulage for Jasmin is sewn, teacher gave feedback 

Knitmoregirls's Podcast
Two Hundred Years Since Last Year - Episode 617- The Knitmore Girls

Knitmoregirls's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2021 58:56


This week's episode is sponsored by:               Carry your creativity with Erin Lane Bags! Whether you show your fiber fandom with the woolly wonder  Sheepleverse, or dive into history with the Curiosities collection, our project bags, totes, and hook and needle    organizers are at the ready to keep your hobby happy.               When was the last time your knitting yarn was a work of art? Infinite Twist produces one-of-a-kind semi-solid gradients featuring speckles, high-lights, low-lights, and gorgeous color transitions. From 700 y Giant Gradients to 200 y matching sock sets, Infinite Twist Gradients will hold your interest from cast on to bind off. See the currently available gradients at infinitetwist.com, or be the first to know when new colors are posted by signing up for our newsletter at infinitetwist.com/newsletter-signup               Have you ever had to frog because you forgot a step several rows back? Or lost your spot because you dropped your magnet board or lost track with your highlighter tape? Instead of wrestling with paper, use the knitCompanion app. It keeps you on track so you can knit more and frog less. knitCompanion works with ALL your patterns and is available     Are you feeling dis-GRUNT-eled about your stash? Are you browsing Insta-HAM looking for knitting inspiration? Is color "kind of a PIG deal" in your life? Oink Pigments offers over one hundred forty PIG-ture perfect colorways to make you SQUEAL with delight. For a limited time only, bring home the bacon with code KNITMORE and get fifteen percent off in-stock yarns and fibers at oinkpigments dot com. Shop soon, because these pigs will FLY!       WoolenWomenFibers produces indie-dyed yarn, “down to a science!” Dyed by a molecular scientist, WoolenWomenFibers is a family and women-owned business that blends the laboratory with the dye studio to bring one-of-a-kind vibrant works of art to your needles! This dynamic trio is made up of a mother and her twin daughters. You can check out their one-of-a-kind kits, fibers and more on Woolenwomenfiber.com. Free shipping on US orders over $35. Stay up-to-date with the latest colors, knit nights, discounts and more by signing up for our newsletter or check out PhDyer on Patreon!   On the Needles:(0:42) Gigi started the (RAVELRY LINK)  Rêveurs socks (from the Operation Sock Drawer book available at Hicklebee's) in from Lolabeans in Knucklesandwich Jasmin has made more progress on her (RAVELRY LINK) L’escargot Bleu shawl  Gigi finished the second  Pippi Longstocking tube socks for Genevieve. The cuff is black Patons Kroy, leg in Opal Zebra.  Jasmin started the (RAVELRY LINK) Boob Window test knit for (RAVELRY LINK) Majestitch Designs in Oink Pigments Dapper in “Dill with it” Gigi: picked up a striped, sparkly, fun sock she started around Xmas, leg is done Jasmin finished the second sleeve of her (RAVELRY LINK) Philosopher’s Wool Kilim sweater, and started the body. Gigi feel like she needs to start a bigger project, something that she bought yarn for at Stitches Gigi: put a few rows on the (RAVELRY LINK) excavation blanket Jasmin started the first sleeve on a sideways fade pullover in Frost Yarn’s DK “Saturated Rainbow Jasmin started the (RAVELRY LINK) $27 sweater test knit for KnitBoop in Little Skein Targhee Sweater Gigi is working on the (RAVELRY LINK) funambulus socks from the #operationSockDrawer book  and Finished the knitting on the (RAVELRY LINK) Alaska hat Jasmin is nearly at the armholes on the (RAVELRY LINK) Gramps cardigan for Sam In Stitches:(15:23) Jasmin wore her cashmere (RAVELRY LINK) Mariah hoodie, (RAVELRY LINK) Barberry hoodie, new hat with giant pom pom Genevieve wore her (RAVELRY LINK) Hearthstone pullover, (RAVELRY LINK) red and gold woven scarf, (RAVLERY LINK), Barberry Cardigan , (RAVELRY LINK) Anna Cardigan, (RAVELRY LINK) Coronation cardigan Gigi wore the (RAVELRY LINK) knitmore cowl2.0. and socks every day  And (RAVELRY LINK) Cat Bordhi’s wristers. (RAVELRY LINK) Pointed Firs shawl  Events:(28:22) #FinishItFebruary #Fiberuary on instagram Mother Knows Best:(30:30) Everything is better with a friend. When Knitting Attacks:(35:30) Jasmin can’t count or measure gauge after dark. Gigi has a hard time with a very easy pattern. Knits in Space:(42:17) The Truth Is  South Bay Musical Theater; the SBMT eStudio And Sew On: (50:07) Classes at Cañada are ongoing and being recorded. Love that, one can go back and follow step by step.  Evening gown class: bustier is drafted and mostly sewn Moulage for Jasmin is drawn, teacher ok'ed it, now it needs to be put it on muslin  We said corner stone, the word we needed was key stone. The textbook we are using is The Moulage by Kenneth D. King from the Cañada College bookstore

Darf's ein bisserl Mord sein?
Episode 59: Mord im Lainzer Tiergarten

Darf's ein bisserl Mord sein?

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2021 45:58


In einem Wald wird die Leiche einer Frau gefunden, der Täter steht ganz in der Nähe. Dann ist er verschwunden. Die Suche nach der Identität von Täter und Opfer hält ein ganzes Jahr lang Österreich in Atem. TRIGGER: Suizid Dein 30-Euro Amazon Gutschein von CLARK: Anmeldung mit dem Code „CRIME“ Darf's ein bisserl Mord sein? unter www.clark.de (Deutschland), www.goclark.at (Österreich) oder direkt in der App . Neukunden bekommen 15€ pro jede in die App hochgeladene bestehende Versicherung (ausgeschlossen Gesetzliche Krankenkasse, Altersvorsorge, ADAC-Mitgliedschaften). Der Gutschein wird in 4-6 Wochen per E-Mail versendet, nachdem die Versicherungen als gültig bestätigt worden sind. Teilnahmebedingungen auf https://www.clark.de/de/teilnahmebedingungen/podcast15 und https://www.goclark.at/de/teilnahmebedingungen/podcast15 https://www.geocaching.com/geocache/GC8H5GZ_cold-case-der-mord-im-lainzer-tiergarten https://anno.onb.ac.at -> Freiheit! Vom 7.10.1930, Illustreirte Kronen zeitung vom 24.3.1931 und 8.10.1930, der tag vom 12.7.1929, https://medienundzeit.at/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/MZ_digital_1991-02_ocr.pdf https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfons_Poller https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moulage https://www.nature.com/articles/130684a0

Rádio da Costureira
66 - Moulage: a linguagem da moda com Ana Laura Berg

Rádio da Costureira

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2020 59:33


Se você é apaixonada pelo universo da moda sob medida, então a Rádio da Costureira é para você! Neste episódio, a nossa convidada é a professora Ana Laura Berg especialista em moda, referência em modelagem e autora dos livros "Corset: interpretações da forma e construção" e "Técnicas de Modelagem Feminina: construção de bases e volumes". Está NO AR a Websérie Gratuita Segredos da Moulage Francesa:

Rádio da Costureira
58 - Vantagens e benefícios da moulage para quem costura com Francys Saleh

Rádio da Costureira

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2020 67:31


Neste episódio da Rádio da Costureira vamos aprender como a técnica de moulage é intuitiva, econômica, fácil e traz várias vantagens e benefícios para profissionais da moda sob medida. A moulage é um tipo de modelagem classificada como tridimensional porque é feita sobre o manequim. Para explicar tudo sobre essa técnica muito usada em casas de Alta-Costura, convidamos a professora Francys Saleh que é expert em moulage. Dá o play! Gostou do episódio? Então comenta e compartilha! :)

The ACN Podcast with Ben Jenkins MACN
Dr Jessica Stokes-Parish MACN - Simulation Australasia & Use of Moulage

The ACN Podcast with Ben Jenkins MACN

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2020 22:12


Welcome back to another episode of The ACN Podcast! On today's episode, I interview Dr Jessica Stokes-Parish. Dr Stokes-Parish has over 10 years experience as a registered nurse; and is heavily involved in the Simulation community. Dr Stokes-Parish holds positions as Officer to the Board, and Chair of the Women in Simulation Committee for Simulation Australasia; and has also recently completed her PhD in Medicine, with the title: 'Does authenticity and moulage matter? How does authenticity impact learner engagement?'. On today's episode, Dr Stokes-Parish talks about her transition into education and use of simulation; provides an outline of the outcomes of her PhD; we talk about the future of simulation; and Dr Stokes-Parish concludes by providing some advice for those looking at incorporating simulation, and use of moulage, into their teaching practices. Hope you enjoy! Dr Jessica Stokes-Parish Bio: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jessicastokesparish/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/j_stokesparish

SimGeeks Podcast
#8 Moulage Basics

SimGeeks Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2020 48:22


Join us for a quick review of moulage pigments and application methods in the first episode of a multi-part moulage series.This episode dives into several pigment based makeups that we enjoy using ranging in price from a few bucks up to the professional level products. Application methods are also covered at a variety of price points from cotton swabs to airbrushing. Think we missed something? Let us know your tips, tricks or opinions on moulage! The review:This is the quick and dirty version. There is MUCH more to talk about. Just a quick couple notes to go with what we went over in the show. Safety - Never takes a vacation (Thank you Thingergy)Your safety - Is key. Don’t underestimate it.Role-PlayersCold concrete can cause Hypothermia even in 90+ degreesEmotional Safety is important. Explain everythingImpalements - Dont strap unsafe items to peopleAllergies - Why would you even take a chance? Don’t chance someone’s healthDon’t double dip/Cross Contamination - Especially Cream and RMGBuy from reputable sources. https://www.frendsbeauty.com/frends-with-benefits-registrationLearning objectives are all that matterDon’t be afraid to say no! (amputations) - Don’t “Hide the leg” if the treatment pathway is the same, go with less materials, and time.  Possible upcoming video on some of this to support an upcoming conference - keep an eye out Anatomy matters - Use good reference War Surgery in Afghanistan & Iraq - http://www.cs.amedd.army.mil/Portlet.aspx?ID=0a2c5bb0-6574-4c0c-93d9-cd278271584fSpecial Effects Guide of Real Human Wounds and Injuries:Special Effects Guide of Real Human Wounds and Injuries - https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1977642055/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&psc=1Materials:Cream makeup - Ben Nye, Mehron, Etc. Good but transfers. Good around eyesYou can thin with Isopropyl Alcohol to make washesRMG - Rubber Mask Grease Paint - Cream with castor oil - Sticks well to latexAlcohol Paints - Not cheap, but AWESOME. Doesn’t transfer when dry. Skin Illustrator, EBA, Reel CreationsTinsley Studios Makes great stuff!https://tinsleytransfers.com/shop/injury-fx-makeup-set/

Sewing For The Weekend
Moulage Madness

Sewing For The Weekend

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2019 63:51


In this weeks episode we discuss our experience as we work towards making our own custom bodice slopers using Suzy Furrer's Bluprint course. For photos and a full list of show notes please visit our website at https://www.sewingfortheweekend.com/

City Focus
Prepared, Not Scared - Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) Encore

City Focus

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2019 35:22


In honor of National Preparedness Month, we are rereleasing Episode 16 of City Focus, featuring Emergency Manager for the City of Salem, Greg Walsh and Salem CERT Senior Trainer and Logistics Officer, Terry Pickett. National Preparedness Month is recognized each September to promote family and community disaster and emergency planning now and throughout the year. We discuss how the Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) program trains volunteers to assist communities when a disastrous event overwhelms or delays the community’s professional response. Show notes: National Preparedness Month Email Greg Walsh   Emergency Preparedness PowerPoint Presentation What is Moulage training? https://www.facebook.com/SalemCERT/ https://www.cityofsalem.net/Pages/sign-up-for-cert-training.aspx https://www.fema.gov/ https://www.publicalerts.org/community-emergency-response-teams-cert-neighborhood-emergency-teams-net https://www.co.marion.or.us/PW/EmergencyManagement/CCC/Pages/cert.aspx https://www.ready.gov/community-emergency-response-team

Heavy Lies the Helmet
Episode 39 - Moulage Rouge w/Mike Abernethy

Heavy Lies the Helmet

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2019 44:12


In this podcast episode, we are joined by Flight Physician Mike Abernethy to discuss the importance of high fidelity, simulation training. We discuss common pitfalls of simulation learning, EMS education, and highlight tips and tricks for building successful moulage; the art of applying mock injuries for the purpose of training emergency response teams and other medical and military personnel. Also, Mike advocates for a specific trauma course that seems to be doing things right across the pond. Summary: CREATE THE ENVIRONMENT! ------------------------------------------------  Follow our Twitter @heavyhelmet Follow our Facebook @heavyliesthehelmet Follow our Instagram @heavyliesthehelmet Subscribe to our YouTube @heavyliesthehelmet Visit our website at heavyliesthehelmet.com Contact us at heavyliesthehelmet@gmail.com Disclaimer: The views, information, or opinions expressed during the Heavy Lies the Helmet, LLC podcast are solely those of the individuals involved and do not necessarily represent those of their employers and their employees. Heavy Lies the Helmet, LLC is not responsible for the accuracy of any information contained in the podcast series available for listening or reading on this site. The primary purpose of this podcast series is to educate and inform. This podcast series does not constitute other professional advice or services. ------------------------------------------------  Crystals VIP by From The Dust | https://soundcloud.com/ftdmusic Music promoted by https://www.free-stock-music.com Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en_US

City Focus
EP 16: Community Emergency Response Team (CERT)

City Focus

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2019 35:22


On this episode, I’m joined in the studio by two experts in emergency preparedness for a conversation about CERT and how it partners with cities throughout Oregon. This program was designed as a grassroots initiative and specifically structured so that local and state program managers have the flexibility to form their programs in the way that best suits their communities. My first guest is Emergency Manager for the City of Salem, Gregory Walsh and then in the second half of this episode, I am joined by Senior Trainer and Logistics Officer for Salem CERT, Terry Pickett. We discuss how the Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) program trains volunteers to assist communities when a disastrous event overwhelms or delays the community’s professional response. Show notes: Email Greg Walsh   Emergency Preparedness PowerPoint Presentation What is Moulage training? https://www.facebook.com/SalemCERT/ https://www.cityofsalem.net/Pages/sign-up-for-cert-training.aspx https://www.fema.gov/ https://www.publicalerts.org/community-emergency-response-teams-cert-neighborhood-emergency-teams-net https://www.co.marion.or.us/PW/EmergencyManagement/CCC/Pages/cert.aspx https://www.ready.gov/community-emergency-response-team

Rádio da Costureira
35 - O futuro das costuras e do mercado da moda sob medida com Rodrigo Cunha do Mundo Moulage

Rádio da Costureira

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2019 59:38


Como você vê o mercado da moda sob medida atualmente? E como você se vê dentro deste mercado? Você se sente valorizada ou não? Você se considera profissional ou aprendiz? Como é a sua relação com seus fornecedores? Para onde você acha que o mercado da moda sob medida está caminhando? Neste episódio vamos trazer uma luz para todos esses questionamentos e descobrir o caminho das costuras e do mercado da moda sob medida no futuro. O nosso convidado Rodrigo Cunha conhece de perto todo o processo de criação e produção dentro de um ateliê e é co-fundador do Mundo Moulage. O Mundo Moulage é um marketplace novo que acabou de chegar para conectar todo mundo que está envolvido no mercado da moda sob medida. Dá o play! Agora você encontra a Maximus Tecidos também no Mundo Moulage! https://www.mundomoulage.com.br/maximus-tecidos-finos Gostou do episódio? Então manda sua mensagem de voz para nós no WhatsApp (45) 99113-8294 contando o que você mais gostou de aprender, qual o seu episódio preferido e claro, o seu recadinho especial para nós! O seu áudio pode aparecer no próximo episódio. :) A Maximus Tecidos Finos tem o propósito de resgatar o hábito de costurar e por isso é mantenedora da Rádio da costureira. Saiba mais: www.maximustecidos.com.br

Rádio da Costureira
20 - Conheça os encantos da técnica de moulage com Anna Grasso

Rádio da Costureira

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2018 65:22


Falar de costura é muito bom, né? Neste episódio vamos falar sobre moulage, aquela técnica de modelagem em que o molde é desenvolvido no manequim. Para falar sobre isso, convidamos a especialista Anna Grasso que trabalha na empresa Manequins Moulage, que é referência nacional em manequins de alta qualidade. Ouve aí! :) Adquira o seu manequim aqui: https://www.maximustecidos.com.br/manequins-moulage-s9105503/ A Maximus Tecidos Finos tem o propósito de resgatar o hábito de costurar e por isso é mantenedora da Rádio da costureira. Saiba mais: www.maximustecidos.com.br

la vie manifeste
Atelier du Regard #06. Pierre Damien Huyghe / Max Charvolen

la vie manifeste

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2017 39:53


Pierre Damien Huyghe est professeur à l'université de Paris I panthéon Sorbonne. il a publié de nombreux ouvrages, dont dernièrement aux éditions de L'incidence éditeur A quoi tient le design? et, aux éditions Circé, la réédition de l'ouvrage Arts et industrie. En feuilletant les 3 volumes du catalogue du FRAC PACA il a été saisi par la reproduction de deux œuvres de Max Charvolen. Trésor des marseillais (2003) et Table et tiroir (1982). Un choix qui s'est fait à partir d'un aperçu de l'oeuvre, d'un voir, et non d'une connaissance du travail de Max Charvolen. La peinture de Max Charvolen ne tient qu'en partie dans le cadre du tableau. Le tableau, dans la mise à plats des objets n'est qu'une étape de l'œuvre. En effet, celle-ci se réalise au moins en trois temps. 1° > Moulage et recouvrement d'un objet ou d'un espace construit, avec un tissu sur lequel il applique de la peinture 2° > Réalisation de cchèma pour la mise à plat des différentes faces de l'objet ou l'espace construit. 3° > Décollement du tissu et dépôt du tissu sur une surface plane. Ces œuvres peuvent être exposées dans chacune des phases. Moulage, schéma, mise à plat. Ainsi l'œuvre se tient à la fois dans chacune des étapes et dans l'ensemble du protocole. Entretien > Emmanuel Moreira Production > FRAC PACA / Radio Grenouille

Simulcast
Ep. 7 - Moulage and Making Stuff

Simulcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2017 33:08


This episode was a ‘mix tape’ of moulage and other techniques to achieve physical realism in simulations – including procedural and anatomy teaching Clare Scott offered her considerable expertise in moulage and making bespoke manikins for trauma simulations. She emphasized keeping in simple, keeping it real and doing your research – online and through networks of interested sim moulage folks (like Behind the sim curtain). Clare offered some practical examples for making ‘Schkin’ for moulding wounds and other skin defects, bile from coke green food colouring, and more. She has a fabulous handout here:   Keri Shafer shared her plans for using 3 D printing hearts to learn about congenital heart disease. Keri (@kerizozo) is a cardiologist from Boston whose clinical and educational work is focused on those tricky plumbing issues. Using a process designed to help surgeons operate better, she went to the 3D printing group within the Boston Childrens Hospital Simulation program and developed models of various forms of congenital heart disease. Fabulous collaboration between clinician educators and engineers. We wait with interest to hear the outcomes of her research in evaluating this educational technique. We asked Andy Buck, of ETM course fame, about his favourite home made part task trainer, and how he makes it. Andy cited better functional task alignment and lower cost as key reasons to ‘make your own’. We chatted about whether 3D printing is ready for prime time for the average simulation educators? For those superkeen Andy is happen to be contacted on Twitter via DM (@edexam) Finally, we spoke to Jessica Stokes-Parish in her minimal spare time between work and convening this year’s Australasian Simulation Congress. She’s just published an article that asks us to reflect of how much ‘bang for buck’ we get from the moulage efforts we make as sim educators. Does Appearance Matter? Current Issues and Formulation of a Research Agenda for Moulage in Simulation. Stokes-Parish, Jessica B. M. Nurs (Adv Prac); Duvivier, Robbert MD, PhD; Jolly, Brian PhD. Simulation in Healthcare February 2017 - Volume 12 - Issue 1 - p 47–50 I enjoyed this article so much I wrote a blog post about it for the International Clinical Educators Network blog.  

Grand Palais
L'atelier de moulage

Grand Palais

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2015 19:48


Explorez les métiers du monde de l'art : cet épisode est axé sur l'atelier de moulage.

Enchanted By Sewing
Ench By Sew-32: Parlez Vous French Pattern Drafting?

Enchanted By Sewing

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2015 32:03


I first signed up for Lynda Maynards' French Pattern Drafting Class to help me improve my fit and alteration of commercial patterns and was surprised to find that Lynda's class opened my eyes to the idea of drafting my own patterns - an aspect of sewing I’d never expected I’d get involved with, and frankly considered beyond my skills. Studying with a teacher like Lynda and being inspired to try new things – that’s the kind of thing that keeps me, enchanted by sewing!1) Pensamientos Primeros – The Art of French Pattern Drafting   My Pattern Work Postings   Early Days in Pattern Drafting Class - Includes Kenneth King Link http://meencantacoser.blogspot.com/2015/02/drafting-my-back-block-learning-pattern.html   More from Class http://meencantacoser.blogspot.com/2015/02/french-pattern-draftingmoulage-first.html  and   http://meencantacoser.blogspot.com/2015/03/fitting-in-sleeve-sloper-pattern-work.html  Using My Sloper and Moulage to Draft Patterns http://meencantacoser.blogspot.com/2015/04/pattern-workparlez-vous-tee-shirt.html   http://meencantacoser.blogspot.com/2015/04/damson-plumm-private-eye-nibbled-that.html        Parlez Vous Flared Skirt? http://meencantacoser.blogspot.com/2015/04/pattern-work-parlez-vous-flared-skirt.html     Pattern Work on Pinterest:Links to many pattern drafting and design resources  https://www.pinterest.com/lrshimer/0-sewing-pattern-work/   2) Technicos  - On Wearing Ease Going from a Moulage to a Sloper and Back Again  http://meencantacoser.blogspot.com/2015/05/parlez-vous-wearing-ease-moulage-to.html   3) Pensamientos Finales – My sloper...A garment for any occasion?  

Métiers d'Art
L'atelier de moulage

Métiers d'Art

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2012 19:48


Explorez les métiers du monde de l'art : cet épisode est axé sur l'atelier de moulage.

Science of War
Special F/X at MUTC

Science of War

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2011


Package about how the 311th Mortuary Affairs Unit performs F/X makeup for Vibrant Response 11.1, Butlerville, Ind. Sound bites include Capt. William H. Craig - Medical Chief for Exercise Control Forward and Stewart Skym - Clinical Instructor. Produced by Spc. David Bonnell. Also available in High Definition.

LaGrotteDuBarbu
LGDB S03E1B - LaGrotteDuBarbu Saison 03 Episode 1B - StickersMaison

LaGrotteDuBarbu

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2011 37:36


LaGrotteDuBarbu [iPhone/iPod Touch]
LGDB S03E1B - LaGrotteDuBarbu Saison 03 Episode 1B - StickersMaison

LaGrotteDuBarbu [iPhone/iPod Touch]

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2011 37:36


LaGrotteDuBarbu [iPhone/iPod Touch]
LGDB S03E10 - LaGrotteDuBarbu Saison 03 Episode 10 - RepRap part 2 | TestDeMoulage

LaGrotteDuBarbu [iPhone/iPod Touch]

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2010 29:34


LaGrotteDuBarbu
LGDB S03E10 - LaGrotteDuBarbu Saison 03 Episode 10 - RepRap part 2 | TestDeMoulage

LaGrotteDuBarbu

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2010 29:34


LaGrotteDuBarbu
LGDB S03E01 - LaGrotteDuBarbu Saison 03 Episode 01 - MarioClone

LaGrotteDuBarbu

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2010 42:40


Fête de la science 2008
Moulage et matériaux nouveaux - Fête de la science 2008

Fête de la science 2008

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2009 1:36


Fête de la science 2008

UPMC Culture scientifique
Moulage et matériaux nouveaux - Fête de la science 2008

UPMC Culture scientifique

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2009 1:36


Fête de la science 2008

Planete Chocolat's Podcast
Planète Chocolat - Homemade chocolate factory in Brussels

Planete Chocolat's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2009 2:33


Welcome into Planète Chocolat Workshop!   This video shows how we make our pralines in 10 steps:   The mould is filled with chocolate. The air bubbles disappear with the vibration. The excess of chocolate is taken out. The mould is put in the fridge for 20 minutes. The filling is put into the pocket. The filling could be flavoured ganache, praliné, caramel or anything else... The shells are filled with the ganache, the praliné, the caramel... The mould is put back in the fridge for another 20 minutes. The filled shells are closed with chocolate. Then, the mould is put again in the fridge for 20 minutes. The pralines are removed from the mould.     Planète Chocolat production team includes six qualified Belgian chocolate makers who work with respect for tradition while developing new ideas to combine the chocolate with new flavours, new forms… They pay particular attention to the choice of the raw materials and to the manufacture of the pralines, true miniature chocolate sculptures, thus guaranteeing the best quality of the Belgian chocolate (100% pure cocoa butter, without GMO or preservatives). Planète Chocolat also organises demonstrations to show visitors how our products are made. We welcome approximately 35,000 visitors per annum. During the demonstration, the history and the origin of the chocolate and cocoa are explained. We also explain how the pralines and the carracks are made. While the visitors attend the demonstration, they have the possibility of seeing our chocolate makers at working through our workshop’s windows.  Chocolate workshops are also organised: the participants come into the workshop to make their own pralines. Demonstrations are organised every Saturday and Sunday at 4 pm. You do not need to book to attend the demonstration. Just make sure you arrive 15 minues before its beginning to buy your tickets. More information on our website http://www.planetechocolat.be   If you want to make your own pralines, do not hesitate to contact us at planetechocolat@skynet.be Our workshop is located at 24 Rue du Lombard in Brussels (just between the Grand-Place and the Manneken-Pis).    Planète Chocolat, simply different. http://www.planetechocolat.be

Exposition Marie d'Orléans (Musée Condé)
094. Moulage de la main gauche de Marie d'Orléans

Exposition Marie d'Orléans (Musée Condé)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2008 0:49


Moulage de la main gauche de Marie d'Orléans

Sewing Out Loud
Sewcabulary 1: Croquis, Sloper, Muslin, Moulage, Pattern, Tailor Tack

Sewing Out Loud

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 1969 25:15


Mallory and Zede clarify these sewing terms to create a more universal sewcabulary for conversing. The post Sewcabulary 1: Croquis, Sloper, Muslin, Moulage, Pattern, Tailor Tack appeared first on sewhere.com.