Cruse scanner

Author: c | 2025-04-25

★★★★☆ (4.9 / 1560 reviews)

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The new Cruse Scanner has arrived and installed at DRS in Doylestown Pa. It is the most advanced Cruse Scanner in the country and one of the few Cruse Scanners that is commercially available for business use. Most Cruse Scanners are in private hands in museums and universities and other private institutions. In fact, Cruse Scanners are thought by many experts to be one of the best scanners available. In fact, the new Cruse Scanner goes a few steps beyond high resolution because the new lighting system on the Cruse

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Cruse Scanner on Instagram: The CRUSE team finalized and

The Decor and Design industries rely on precise digital reproductions of materials such as wooden floors, furniture designs, ceramic tiles, laminates, wallpaper, and fabrics. With the CRUSE scanner’s advanced scanning technology, these materials can be digitized with incredible detail, producing images that are true to life and accurate in color. Designers, manufacturers, and others in the industry can use these digital replicas to create, visualize, and showcase their products with ease. Capabilities:The CRUSE scanner’s advanced scanning technology allows for the digitization of various materials, including wooden floors, furniture designs, ceramic tiles, laminates, wallpaper, and fabrics. With variable resolution capabilities and a large scan table that can handle up to 300 kg, the CRUSE scanner can produce high-quality, accurate digital reproductions with incredible detail, ensuring that the digital replicas are true to life and accurate in color. CRUSE Scanner Features:Non-contact scanning for objects of up to 10” thicknessVariable resolutionScan table loadable with up to 300 kgOriginal holder: 48″ x 72″ vacuum boardMax resolution: 10,000×15,000 pixels How It WorksThe Decor and Design industries require high-quality, accurate digital reproductions of materials such as wooden floors, furniture designs, ceramic tiles, laminates, wallpaper, and fabrics. With the CRUSE scanner’s advanced scanning technology, these materials can be digitized with incredible detail, producing images that are true to life and accurate in color. This makes the CRUSE scanner an essential tool for designers, manufacturers, and others in the Decor and Design industries who need precise digital replicas of their materials. Experience the Benefits of High-Quality Digital Reproductions with CRUSE ScannerReady to digitize your materials with the most advanced scanner system? Fill out our form and drop off your materials at our facility during our open hours, Monday to Friday from 10am-6pm. Last call for scans on Monday is Fridays at 5pm. Our CRUSE scanner technology will produce true-to-life and color-accurate images of your wooden floors, furniture designs, ceramic tiles, laminates, wallpaper, and fabrics. Don’t settle for less than perfection in the Decor and Design industries.

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Cruse CS295-MS 295cm Portable Cruse Scanner

Over The River 10K Participant List Total Registered Participants: 122 Note: Click on column heading to sort table First Name Last Name Gender Age City State Dave Stacey M 56 Brentwood TN Mary Kay Fisher F 67 Clarksville TN Anna Dempton F 43 Jacks Creek TN Raymond Morrow M 37 Waynesboro TN Barbara Weller F 57 McMinnville TN Caleb Duncan M 15 Maryville TN Samantha Morrow F 40 Waynesboro TN Ruth Thompson F 41 Dickson TN Alice Thompson F 69 Dickson TN Julia Meade F 57 Leoma TN Danielle Cook F 49 Henderson TN Jeremy Cook M 47 Henderson TN Matthew Cook M 16 Henderson TN Hannah Cook F 12 Henderson TN Carolyn Davis F 44 Spring Hill TN Jessica Frazer F 45 Nashville TN Amelia Wallace F 83 Clarksville TN Adam Augustine M 50 Murfreesboro TN L Amanda Pedigo F 58 Madison TN KeevyAnn Hight F 46 LEBANON TN Susan Adams F 63 Murray KY Deetricha Younger F 46 Smyrna TN Jesus Gonzales M 31 Dover TN Zac Davis M 32 Dover TN Lyle Roan M 36 Clarksville TN Marsha Losievski F 43 Dexter KY Paul Vondohlen M 72 Ashland City TN Ronnie Cartwright M 68 Rising Fawn GA Carla Cartwright F 64 Rising Fawn GA Mike Bell M 56 Medina TN Kem Cruse M 60 Pocahontas TN Sharon Cruse F 57 Pocahontas TN Kristen Davis F 36 Dover TN Eddie Webb M 69 Cumberland Furnace TN Tami Winston F 44 Dresden TN Jeff Stracener M 68 Soddy Daisy

The Cruse Scanner in PA - Philadelpia Professional Scanner

Twitter was ablaze Tuesday during The Voice Season 22's controversial top eight results show, as host Carson Daly revealed which five contestants were advancing to next week’s finale. The voting pattern was evident as soon as Carson announced the top four, as chosen by America: three of them were country contestants, three of them were from Team Blake (thus creating a clean sweep for Blake Shelton)… and all four were white singers.Meanwhile, all of the people of color, and arguably Season 22’s strongest power-vocalists — including all three members of John Legend’s talented team — comprised the bottom four. These were the four that would have to compete in an Instant Save sing-off for the finals’ one remaining spot.These results were not totally surprising. I had predicted that Team Blake’s Bryce Leatherwood and Brayden Lape — likable, traditional country crooners — would make the cut, and had argued that Team Camila’s Morgan Myles, who gave the best performance on Monday’s top eight show, and Team Blake’s creative indie singer-songwriter Bodie absolutely deserved to advance.I’d also noted Monday that Team Legend’s 17-year-old Parijita Bastola had peaked too early this season, that John’s power-balladeer Omar José Cardona had sabotaged himself with an ill-advised Celine Dion cover, and that Team Gwen’s Justin Aaron had been in a disadvantageous position by singing first on Monday’s live show.I had hoped, of course, that Team Legend’s third contestant, “Velvet Powerhouse” Kim Cruse, would edge out the undercooked and underwhelming Brayden. But I knew better than to underestimate Brayden’s teen-heartthrob appeal, the power of this show’s core country audience… or the power of Blake Shelton.All that being said, the optics were not good as Parijita, Kim, Justin, and Omar stood onstage learning the results, especially considering all the sheer talent among these four. “I am stunned that several of you are in this position this week,” admitted John, echoing many of the furious comments rolling out in real time on social media. “If this is The Voice, and we vote for people because of their voice…”John kept his comments civil and classy, as he always does, but. The new Cruse Scanner has arrived and installed at DRS in Doylestown Pa. It is the most advanced Cruse Scanner in the country and one of the few Cruse Scanners that is commercially available for business use. Most Cruse Scanners are in private hands in museums and universities and other private institutions. In fact, Cruse Scanners are thought by many experts to be one of the best scanners available. In fact, the new Cruse Scanner goes a few steps beyond high resolution because the new lighting system on the Cruse

Cruse scanner - Still River Editions

Flaka Haliti, Whose Bones?, 2022. (Image credit: courtesy the artist and Cukrarna Gallery, photo: Blaž Gutman/MGML)(Image credit: Courtesy of the artist and Deborah Schamoni)There is something about Art Basel: the world’s most anticipated international art fair, now at age 54, maintains its status as the global market tour-de-force, as well as a testing ground for what galleries, collectors, and institutions will have on their walls for the months to come. Art Basel 2024 will debut for the VIP on Tuesday 11 June, with 285 galleries occupying the soaring convention centre, Messe, in the heart of the Swiss city.For the fair’s recently appointed director Maike Cruse, the excitement, however, starts before the show. ‘I am thrilled to see our exhibitors from all around the world unpacking their crates,’ she tells Wallpaper*. Cruse adds that the fair’s original Basel chapter – besides its also closely watched outposts in Miami, Hong Kong, and Paris – is ‘the flagship, the touch point for the international art market with the broadest overview’.The director has a point: the six-day affair is anchored by the presentation of exhibitors lined across aisles, but spectacle spills outside the convention centre with an ambitious programming tightly customised for the city. Right outside, Messeplatz is home this year to Agnes Denes’ land art installation Honouring Wheatfield - A Confrontation (2024), which pays homage to the American conceptual artist’s seminal 1982-dated Wheatfield installation in downtown Manhattan (she also staged a wheatfield in Milan, in 2015). Come the end of summer and the wheats will be ripe for harvest.Howardena Pindell, Tesseract 16, 2024(Image credit: Courtesy of the artist)Basel, with its medieval charm and effortless bustle, is the main collaborator. ‘We are in a small city with a rich density of high-profile art,’ Cruse says and compares the explosive energy during the fair week to that of the vernissage of the Venice Biennale.Art Basel’s Parcours section – curated by the Swiss Institute’s Stefanie Hessler – invites fairgoers to roam around town to encounter art inside storefronts. Stop by a pharmacy on Clarastrasse for Mendes Wood DM’s presentation of paintings, sculptures, and cut-outs by Pol Taburet. The French artist’s haunting figures don bright attire and detached expressions, fitting for the apothecary backdrop.End your stroll at the Middle Bridge, where the journey crescendoes at the historic Merian Hotel. Here, the building façade is dressed with Kosovar artist Petrit Halilaj’s text-based installation When The Sun Goes Away We Paint The Sky, which shines nightly with the late arrival of the summer dusk. Celebrating the fair’s 30-year collaboration with UBS, the joyful constellation of stars invites visitors inside the hotel for daily panel sessions during the fair, and will continue its nocturnal beam until January 2025. Tracey Emin

Cruse Scanner - Cultural Heritage Digitisation

Plateau Gobbler Gallop 11K Participant List Total Registered Participants: 98 Note: Click on column heading to sort table First Name Last Name Gender Age City State Raymond Morrow M 34 Waynesboro TN Charles Blair M 74 Fayetteville TN Leia Amos F 38 Crossville TN Kenneth Sheffield M 61 Smyrna TN Reina Sheffield F 63 Smyrna TN Whitney McDuffee F 33 Crossville TN Steve Amos M 55 Crossville TN Catherine Dudley F 69 Clarksville TN Doris Brown F 73 Cookeville TN Dolores Betz F 48 Lebanon TN Paul Vondohlen M 69 Ashland City TN Laura Goodwin F 51 Hermitage TN Amber Hellstrom F 26 Murfreesboro TN John Evans M 51 Cookeville TN Karrie Stevens F 54 Monterey TN Jared Lockridge M 14 Monterey TN Bob Hardin M 75 Elizabethton TN Marci Perry F 65 Crossville TN John McGee M 40 Lebanon TN Connie Haxby F 45 Lebanon TN Janet Lowe F 78 Cookeville TN Gerald Goodwin M 71 C ookeville TN Zachary Duncan M 36 Maryville TN Caleb Duncan M 12 Maryville TN Vickie Spickard F 64 NASHVILLE TN Samantha Palko F 27 Louisville KY Steven Looby M 28 Louisville KY Bobby Lockhart M 54 New Tazewell TN Nikki Lockhart F 52 New Tazewell TN Brandon Wray M 45 Farragut TN Peter Bampton-Clare M 39 Crossville TN Erin McGuire F 71 Pulaski TN Guy Giles M 70 Knoxville TN Jeanie Fanning F 50 Lebanon TN Scott Fanning M 51 Lebanon TN Keith Tucker M 67 Greenfield TN Ginny Archie F 15 Greenfield TN Tomas de Paulis M 78 Hermitage TN Lynda de Paulis F 75 Hermitage TN Joe Fussell M 74 Fayetteville TN Helen Fussell F 72 FAYETTEVILLE TN Will Runion M 52 LIMESTONE TN Tyler Davis M 35 Sparta TN Wendy Sadler F 61 Rockvale TN Jan Woods F 73 SAVANNAH TN Sharon Cruse F 54 Pocahontas TN Kem Cruse M 57 Pocahontas TN Amelia Wallace F 80 Clarksville TN JoAnn Adames F 63 Clarksville TN Terry Quillen M 59 Tullahoma TN Mary Kay Fisher F 63 Clarksville TN Carla Snodgrass F 68 White House TN Andrew Tolley M 75

CRUSE Scanner Vancouver - ABC Fine ART

Lunar calendar is based on the moon's cycles—holidays with specific dates only apply to one calendar or the other. What is Hanukkah?Hanukkah (also spelled Chanukah) is the winter "festival of lights," celebrated by nightly candle lighting, special blessings, and eating tasty foods. Holiday traditions and observance vary by different origins and sects of Judaism. In the second century BCE, Judea was invaded by a Seleucid king who tried to force the Jews to adopt Greek culture and beliefs. The Jewish priest Judah the Maccabee led his outnumbered and poorly armed people to defeat the far more powerful Seleucid army and reclaim the Holy temple in Jerusalem. According to the Encyclopedia Britannica, Hanukkah is a festival that "reaffirms the ideals of Judaism and commemorates the rededication of the Second Temple of Jerusalem." What are some traditional Hanukkah foods?Now, onto the fun part: food! There are so many traditional foods to enjoy during Hanukkah, many of which are fried in oil to honor the original miracle of oil that kept the menorah lit for eight days. These include sufganiyot (deep-fried jelly doughnuts) and latkes (fried potato pancakes). Classic Jewish comfort foods like matzo ball soup, brisket, applesauce, and challah are also served during the holiday! How many days is Hanukkah?Hanukkah is always eight days and nights. The significance of this time is described in the Jewish Talmud. According to Chabad.org, after the Jewish people reclaimed the Holy Temple in Jerusalem, "they sought to light the Temple's Menorah (the seven-branched candelabrum), [but] found only a single cruse of olive oil had escaped contamination by the Greeks. Miraculously, they lit the menorah and the one-day supply of oil lasted for eight days, until new oil could be prepared under conditions of ritual purity." The ancient rabbis created the festival of Hanukkah to celebrate this. The new Cruse Scanner has arrived and installed at DRS in Doylestown Pa. It is the most advanced Cruse Scanner in the country and one of the few Cruse Scanners that is commercially available for business use. Most Cruse Scanners are in private hands in museums and universities and other private institutions.

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User7008

The Decor and Design industries rely on precise digital reproductions of materials such as wooden floors, furniture designs, ceramic tiles, laminates, wallpaper, and fabrics. With the CRUSE scanner’s advanced scanning technology, these materials can be digitized with incredible detail, producing images that are true to life and accurate in color. Designers, manufacturers, and others in the industry can use these digital replicas to create, visualize, and showcase their products with ease. Capabilities:The CRUSE scanner’s advanced scanning technology allows for the digitization of various materials, including wooden floors, furniture designs, ceramic tiles, laminates, wallpaper, and fabrics. With variable resolution capabilities and a large scan table that can handle up to 300 kg, the CRUSE scanner can produce high-quality, accurate digital reproductions with incredible detail, ensuring that the digital replicas are true to life and accurate in color. CRUSE Scanner Features:Non-contact scanning for objects of up to 10” thicknessVariable resolutionScan table loadable with up to 300 kgOriginal holder: 48″ x 72″ vacuum boardMax resolution: 10,000×15,000 pixels How It WorksThe Decor and Design industries require high-quality, accurate digital reproductions of materials such as wooden floors, furniture designs, ceramic tiles, laminates, wallpaper, and fabrics. With the CRUSE scanner’s advanced scanning technology, these materials can be digitized with incredible detail, producing images that are true to life and accurate in color. This makes the CRUSE scanner an essential tool for designers, manufacturers, and others in the Decor and Design industries who need precise digital replicas of their materials. Experience the Benefits of High-Quality Digital Reproductions with CRUSE ScannerReady to digitize your materials with the most advanced scanner system? Fill out our form and drop off your materials at our facility during our open hours, Monday to Friday from 10am-6pm. Last call for scans on Monday is Fridays at 5pm. Our CRUSE scanner technology will produce true-to-life and color-accurate images of your wooden floors, furniture designs, ceramic tiles, laminates, wallpaper, and fabrics. Don’t settle for less than perfection in the Decor and Design industries.

2025-04-10
User2240

Over The River 10K Participant List Total Registered Participants: 122 Note: Click on column heading to sort table First Name Last Name Gender Age City State Dave Stacey M 56 Brentwood TN Mary Kay Fisher F 67 Clarksville TN Anna Dempton F 43 Jacks Creek TN Raymond Morrow M 37 Waynesboro TN Barbara Weller F 57 McMinnville TN Caleb Duncan M 15 Maryville TN Samantha Morrow F 40 Waynesboro TN Ruth Thompson F 41 Dickson TN Alice Thompson F 69 Dickson TN Julia Meade F 57 Leoma TN Danielle Cook F 49 Henderson TN Jeremy Cook M 47 Henderson TN Matthew Cook M 16 Henderson TN Hannah Cook F 12 Henderson TN Carolyn Davis F 44 Spring Hill TN Jessica Frazer F 45 Nashville TN Amelia Wallace F 83 Clarksville TN Adam Augustine M 50 Murfreesboro TN L Amanda Pedigo F 58 Madison TN KeevyAnn Hight F 46 LEBANON TN Susan Adams F 63 Murray KY Deetricha Younger F 46 Smyrna TN Jesus Gonzales M 31 Dover TN Zac Davis M 32 Dover TN Lyle Roan M 36 Clarksville TN Marsha Losievski F 43 Dexter KY Paul Vondohlen M 72 Ashland City TN Ronnie Cartwright M 68 Rising Fawn GA Carla Cartwright F 64 Rising Fawn GA Mike Bell M 56 Medina TN Kem Cruse M 60 Pocahontas TN Sharon Cruse F 57 Pocahontas TN Kristen Davis F 36 Dover TN Eddie Webb M 69 Cumberland Furnace TN Tami Winston F 44 Dresden TN Jeff Stracener M 68 Soddy Daisy

2025-03-29
User8229

Flaka Haliti, Whose Bones?, 2022. (Image credit: courtesy the artist and Cukrarna Gallery, photo: Blaž Gutman/MGML)(Image credit: Courtesy of the artist and Deborah Schamoni)There is something about Art Basel: the world’s most anticipated international art fair, now at age 54, maintains its status as the global market tour-de-force, as well as a testing ground for what galleries, collectors, and institutions will have on their walls for the months to come. Art Basel 2024 will debut for the VIP on Tuesday 11 June, with 285 galleries occupying the soaring convention centre, Messe, in the heart of the Swiss city.For the fair’s recently appointed director Maike Cruse, the excitement, however, starts before the show. ‘I am thrilled to see our exhibitors from all around the world unpacking their crates,’ she tells Wallpaper*. Cruse adds that the fair’s original Basel chapter – besides its also closely watched outposts in Miami, Hong Kong, and Paris – is ‘the flagship, the touch point for the international art market with the broadest overview’.The director has a point: the six-day affair is anchored by the presentation of exhibitors lined across aisles, but spectacle spills outside the convention centre with an ambitious programming tightly customised for the city. Right outside, Messeplatz is home this year to Agnes Denes’ land art installation Honouring Wheatfield - A Confrontation (2024), which pays homage to the American conceptual artist’s seminal 1982-dated Wheatfield installation in downtown Manhattan (she also staged a wheatfield in Milan, in 2015). Come the end of summer and the wheats will be ripe for harvest.Howardena Pindell, Tesseract 16, 2024(Image credit: Courtesy of the artist)Basel, with its medieval charm and effortless bustle, is the main collaborator. ‘We are in a small city with a rich density of high-profile art,’ Cruse says and compares the explosive energy during the fair week to that of the vernissage of the Venice Biennale.Art Basel’s Parcours section – curated by the Swiss Institute’s Stefanie Hessler – invites fairgoers to roam around town to encounter art inside storefronts. Stop by a pharmacy on Clarastrasse for Mendes Wood DM’s presentation of paintings, sculptures, and cut-outs by Pol Taburet. The French artist’s haunting figures don bright attire and detached expressions, fitting for the apothecary backdrop.End your stroll at the Middle Bridge, where the journey crescendoes at the historic Merian Hotel. Here, the building façade is dressed with Kosovar artist Petrit Halilaj’s text-based installation When The Sun Goes Away We Paint The Sky, which shines nightly with the late arrival of the summer dusk. Celebrating the fair’s 30-year collaboration with UBS, the joyful constellation of stars invites visitors inside the hotel for daily panel sessions during the fair, and will continue its nocturnal beam until January 2025. Tracey Emin

2025-04-09

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