Some recent Star Wars figure.
#starwars #returnofthejedi #starwarsblackseries #hansolo #harrisonford #wicket #ewok #warwickdavis #bibfortuna #starwarsfigures #kenner
#kenner #starwarsfigures #bibfortuna #warwickdavis #ewok #Wicket #harrisonford #HanSolo #starwarsblackseries #returnofthejedi #StarWars
“Yub Nub” I love this little vintage figure of Wicket he’s not much bigger than a Lego mini figure & is super detailed for the size so I to recreate his iconic photo.
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All shot practically using #miniatures
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#wicket #ewoks #starwars #toyphotography #scifiart #MastoArt #photography #cinema #movies #film #creative #artist #art #filmart #popculture #photo #cinemastodon #sciencefiction #fanart #scifi #scifiartwork #miniaturephotography #movieart #creatives #returnofthejedi #80sscifi #miniatureart
#miniatures #Wicket #ewoks #starwars #toyphotography #scifiart #mastoart #photography #cinema #movies #film #creative #artist #art #filmart #popculture #photo #cinemastodon #sciencefiction #fanart #scifi #scifiartwork #miniaturephotography #movieart #creatives #returnofthejedi #80sSciFi #miniatureart
While I've fallen out of love with the #apache #wicket programming model for most types of applications a long time ago, I still love their approach to HTML templating: a template is just valid HTML page with 'wicket:id' attributes which map to the code that determines how to populate those.
In a previous life I heavily used #Apache #Wicket
While I've mostly moved on, I still quite like its approach to templating: a template is valid HTML with some extra wicket-specific HTML attributes and elements sprinkled in. There is no 'non-HTML' syntax, and giving 'meaning' to them happens in code.
That makes it easier to work together with web designers without requiring them to have the whole development environment configured.
Are there 'modern' templating engines that use this style?