It's Wonderland, of course! Everything, as Alice had made up, was meant to be nonsense and everything that made sense would be twisted to be nonsense. Am I making any sense? (heheheXD)
If you mean during printing and are referring to the projected image, it is upside down if you put the negative in the carrier the wrong way. The image should go upside down in the carrier so that it is projected right side up.
Croquet`That's right!' shouted the Queen. `Can you play croquet?'The soldiers were silent, and looked at Alice, as the question was evidently meant for her.`Yes!' shouted Alice.`Come on, then!' roared the Queen, and Alice joined the procession, wondering very much what would happen next.
Some types of ambigrams read the same from different perspectives.
That would be the Leonardo who hailed from Vinci, Italy. He could also write upside-down, right-to left, or left-to right, and did so on occasion.
As light travels through a convex lens (used in most slide projectors), the light and slide image are turned upside-down. Therefore, in order to appear correctly on screen, the image must enter the lens upside-down, which would then be inverted by the lens to appear right-side up. **** Furthermore, they are reversed left to right. What applies to the vertical holds true for the horizontal. The above holds true for any type of slide projector that performs similar to a Kodak carousel. However, the cube projector (Bell & Howell?) was different because the image bounced off of a mirror before going through the lens. I believe those slides were inserted into the cube right side up, but backwards (left to right), but I'm not sure.
Yes, Alice in Wonderland costumes are all the rage right now. There is everything from Alice, to the Cheshire cat, to the Queen to the Madhatter to choose from.
He is called the Cheshire Cat.
In the middle of like this little green forest I guess because it is right there by the railroad
1st take the middle one, Take the right one, take thw left one!
In Lewis Carroll's book, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, the Caterpillar tells Alice to repeat the poem You Are Old, Father William, which she does. It begins, "'You are old, Father William,' the young man said." So, the young man, Alice and the Caterpillar all say 'You are old father' in Alice in Wonderland. `Repeat, "YOU ARE OLD, FATHER WILLIAM,"' said the Caterpillar. Alice folded her hands, and began:-- `You are old, Father William,' the young man said, `And your hair has become very white; And yet you incessantly stand on your head-- Do you think, at your age, it is right?' In the 1951 Disney version, Tweedledum and Tweedledee begin to repeat the poem, but Alice has heard enough poetry from them, so she leaves.
The 'Alice in Wonderland' ride is one where you SLOWLY ride in a car on a rail, meeting a variety of characters from the 1951 film. In the link below, click on the [>] Button ro the right of the [Slideshow] Button for a series of photos of what the ride is like.
In "Alice in Wonderland," when Alice refers to "antipathies," she is talking about strong feelings of dislike or aversion towards something or someone. This term signifies a feeling of opposition or hostility.
Right click on your screen, then click graphics properties, then rerotate your graphics setup. Hope that helps! :)
NoSteamboat Willie starring Mickey Mouse was the first short film by Disney(1928)Snow White and the 7 Dwarfs was the first full length Disney Movie(1937)
If it is Alice's adventures in wonderland pastel edition that you are referring to, mint condition could be in the $5,000 - $6,000 US dollars. The only problem is these were published before 1904. I don't recall any being from 1904. The rarest one has a photograph of a girl in the top right Corner of the cover. This is a very RARE item you have! Hope this helps!
Just go on the computer, RIGHT click on your mouse, go to GRAPHIC OPTIONS, then go to ROTATION, then click on the degree you would like and there you will fix it.
No, TV pictures are broadcast the 'right' way up - however, your eyes' lenses form an image on your retinas of everything in the world upside-down, and your brain adjusts the image to look correct.