A film by Front Burner Films for the 2016 Bike Shorts Film Festival. From Lynchburg, VA, USA The one-year anniversary of his wife’s murder arrives. Will redemption come with it, or only more pain? Cast and Crew: Written and Directed by: Josh Sosin; Filmed by: Riley Yeatts and Wesley Newman; Technical Supervisor: Alec Bartell; Actors: Travlyn Pantana, Grace Amato, and Wes Newman; Original Score by: Josh Sosin Screened as part of the 2016 Bike Shorts Film Festival organized by RIDE Solutions. Screened at Roanoke's Grandin Theatre, Lynchburg's Academy of Fine Arts, Martinsville's Rives Theatre, and Blacksburg's Lyric Theatre.

The Bike Shorts Film Festival awards $1,400 in prizes in seven categories: Juried Prize, Best Music Video, Best Local Film, an Audience Choice award for each of our three screenings in Roanoke, Lynchburg and Blacksburg, and a YouTube Award. The Bike Shorts Film Festival screens short films that have something to do with bicycles. Past submissions have included horror films, science fiction features, documentaries, trail rides, original music videos, and more. The Festival is part of our annual celebration of National Bike Month which includes the Clean Commute Challenge, Night Rider's Ball, and other events.

You can submit to the 2017 Bike Shorts Film Festival by visiting. Grandin Theatre: Academy of Fine Arts: Lyric Theatre: Rives Theatre.

Mikyta's works make reference to the political iconography of socialist mass movements and to the nationalist and religious symbols of Eastern Europe. Sometimes his interventions, with a pen and often with red paint, are scarcely perceptible, sometimes they are so refined that they give rise to something totally new in terms of both composition and theme. By means of over-drawings and collage-like alienations he 'doubles' their seductive aesthetic and exposes the political manipulation of images, the impact of which is still being felt today. Metodika drakonovi klyuchi art terapiya.

Worksman is America’s oldest bicycle manufacturer. When the company started, William McKinley was president. One hundred nineteen years later, the crew is still building beauties like the old-school beach cruiser we photographed for our. (We recommend it to anyone who will listen.

The Sportsman Flyer is a favorite of ours, too.) It’s the no-bullshit design that moves us, but the man who founded the company, a Russian immigrant named Morris Worksman, originally built them for function, not summer beach. One of Worksman's street vendor carts in NYC.

Students in Josh Sosin's Build A Bike Spring Breakthrough course visit Kish Fabrication in Carrboro.

That’s right, Worksman has always made bikes for workmen. If you've ever seen a street-vending cart in New York City, you've probably seen a Worksman towing it. And what's really special about each and every single bike, trike, hot dog cart, or specialty cycle they've ever made is that it's 100 percent made in America at a factory in South Carolina.

Soset

When we reached the man who owns Worksman these days, Wayne Sosin, he treated us to a brief history of the bicycle. Unsurprisingly, staking claim to the title “oldest bicycle manufacturer in America” is no small feat.

For years, even though their most consistent clientele came from factories and food vendors, Worksman was also in competition with brands like Schwinn and Huffy for the hearts and dollars of the general public. In the ’80s and ’90s, those brands began producing millions of low-priced bikes for big-box stores like Sears and JC Penney. “The pressure to lower prices was so great that virtually every single bike manufacturer with any substance or history left,” said Sosin.

Vyazanie beretov spicami dlya nachinayuschih video. While RUCENTER-REG-RIPN was its first registrar, now it is moved to REGTIME-RU. It was hosted by BSB-Service GmbH, Leaseweb Deutschland GmbH and others.

Now, he says, Schwinn is just a name, and Huffys are made in China. “Even though we’re old and very specialized, we're the only ones left.” Bloomberg Bloomberg These welders are actually “brazing,” a low-temperature weld where rods of brass are melted into the lugs and joints. When the brass hardens, the frame becomes one massive one-piece frame. The Good Humor ice cream company put Worksman on the map in the early 1900s by commissioning tricycles that could tote around iceboxes during the summer.