View allAll Photos Tagged 74:

cologne - 15.03.2013

 

Back in the city of cologne the word capitol of the winter. After one week of cycling and reading in Saint Paul it was a hard way back home because the airport security is still on strike. It took the whole day to come from door to door, but at the end I had a great dinner with Antony talking about films and the highlights of the week. I wish you a nice weekend folks.

cambridge, massachusetts

fall 1975

 

dance rehearsal

 

part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf

 

© the Nick DeWolf Foundation

Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com

70-class 74 "River Lagan" approaches Waterside station, Londonderry with what is probably the 08.05 from York Road, Belfast.

 

74 was built by the UTA in September 1966 and survived until May 1983, being dumped in Crosshill in January 1985.

 

All photographs are my copyright and must not be used without permission. Unauthorised use will result in my invoicing you £1,500 per photograph and, if necessary, taking legal action for recovery.

Ashdown Forest....

This is the first photo of a loco I took, on my Dad's Agfa 120 roll film camera.

Also our first train spotting trip, spent at Eastleigh on the 21st June 1975.

Red Lion Street,Burnley.

cambridge, massachusetts

fall 1975

 

dance rehearsal

 

part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf

 

© the Nick DeWolf Foundation

Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com

Pg73-74

5 x 9 in / 15 x 23 cms.

double-page book spread. collage on paper.

Altered Book.

Life.

Current Journal.

©fdL2009

 

Blogged at:

 

lacomunidad.elpais.com/nava2392/2010/5/28/cascabel

 

Llegaste a la hora serena, cuando los quehaceres y los oficios están tomando un respiro.

No sé si te trajo el viento o tú lo trajiste a él.

La luna está alta, menguando, y con media sonrisa mirando al sur.

Aún no has puesto un pie en casa, pero este cascabel tintinea plateado y nítido, anunciando tu llegada.

Espero tu primer beso, promesa simple de un campo de girasol.

 

©MN2010

©fdL2009

anaheim, california

fall 1975

 

plaza inn, main street usa

disneyland

 

part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf

 

© the Nick DeWolf Foundation

Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com

74. Raindrops on............... in 121 pictures in 2021

 

cambridge, massachusetts

fall 1975

 

dance rehearsal

 

part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf

 

© the Nick DeWolf Foundation

Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com

SSSflickrchallenge#74 For this card I used the following supplies: SSS Circular Lace Stencil from the SSS Cherished release, texture paste, glitter embossing powder, SSS banner die, vellum, SSS Love word die, and Neenah Desert Storm 80 lb. cardstock for the base.

março 2012.

San Quirico d'Orcia (Siena)

1. |||| ////, 2. Pet Cemetery, Adak, AK, 3. Where have all the graveyards gone?, 4. Street Mosaic Taipei (Urban Grime TTV), 5. DC-3 @ Albury Airport, 6. Riding into the Sunset (in the jet age) I, 7. Coffee Continent, 8. You gotta have faith !,

 

9. The Ugly Face of War, 10. Clouds of War, 11. Tripod..Camera...Action, 12. BSL Road Train eXtreme, 13. eXtreme Lee, 14. Gitzo In Space, 15. Fox Eradication nº 2 eXtreme, 16. Gitzo GK1380VQR Vintage,

 

17. Wildlife... as Canon never sees it., 18. My life's a red bubble, 19. International Eagle in Acid, 20. Port Kembla Steelworks at night, 21. Wide Open Sky, 22. Australian Gothic II, 23. Australian Gothic, 24. The Flying Men and their Machines,

 

25. Is the US Dollar on the edge of turning into a Lemon ?, 26. Woman with Pigeon, 27. Sphinx, 28. TTV-090228-470-H, 29. And what, I say, is that ladder doing there?, 30. "Grub and Glamour", 31. 364 eyes of the world!!!, 32. Albury Railway Station @ night,

 

33. Hell's Gate, 34. Olbia_2_Dust_Texture_1b, 35. Transformer: Gitzo Man, 36. Stripes {experimental}, 37. Gitzo Shutters, GITZ∆ Art Deco, 38. Red Poppies (Remembrance Day nº 3), 39. Lest We Forget (Remembrance Day nº 2), 40. Blue-tongue Lizard nº 2,

 

41. The Red Road to Mungo HDR, 42. Impressions of Seattle '08 - Gehry Building nº 21, 43. Lake Mungo Formations, 44. Yellow Bus in the Strzelecki Desert nº 1, 45. Dawn at Mt Wood, 46. Willandra Stars @ night nº 1, 47. Driving by on the Hume..., 48. Willandra Drought,

 

49. Tarcutta Truck Light Streams nº 2, 50. Tailfin, 51. Moon Shadows at Lake Mungo, 52. Hi, its me, 53. Now ... let me remember..., 54. The meek shall inherit the Earth, 55. A Door to Many Pasts Unknown, 56. Red Poppies nº 1 (Commemorating ANZAC Day 2008),

 

57. Red Poppies nº 2 (Commemorating ANZAC Day 2008), 58. Trucks passing through Tarcutta @ Night nº 1, 59. Bridges of Gundagai nº 1, 60. Sunset at Mungo Lunette nº 13, 61. Mungo Creature, 62. Giant Emu in the sky above Lake Mungo, 63. Mungo Sunrise, 64. Sunset with moon over Australia nº 2,

 

65. Clouds over water tank, 66. 29 days of February, 29 eyes-->ONE blended image (read explanation!), 67. Reflecting (on) January 2008, 68. Ghosts of Lake Hume Nº 3, 69. The Magic of a Banana, 70. Happy New Year 2008 (UFO), 71. Anchorage Impressions '07 - Snow nº 8, 72. 'Transparency in Green' (Albury Botanic Gardens nº 9),

 

73. "Message Sticks" (Albury Botanic Gardens Bamboo nº 1), 74. Flowers of Majuro 6

 

Created with fd's Flickr Toys

Manufactured by Dr.Nagel-Werke, Stuttgart, Germany

Model: c.1930, (All Librette produced between from 1930-33 )

Folder bed film camera, film 120 roll, picture size 6x9cm

Engravings on top of the camera, camera leg, back cover and

under the lens standard: Nagel logo

Engraving on the hand grip: Nagel 74 (hard to read !)

Engravings on the lens and front of the lens-shutter barrel: Dr.Aug.Nagel Stuttgart

Lens: Nagel-Anastigmat 105mm f/4.5, the front element of the lens has screw mount, filter slip-on, serial no.251370

Aperture: f/4.5-f/25, setting: lever and scale on the lens-shutter barrel

Focusing: bellows focusing, distance scale and lever on the right inside of the front cover

Focus range: 1.2-10m +inf.

Shutter: Ibsor leaf shutter, speeds: 1-1/125 + B&T, (DRP marking on front of the lens-shutter barrel), setting: dial on top of the lens-shutter barrel

Cocking and Shutter release: by the same lever on the lens-shutter barrel, for speeds press once then release the lever, the shutter cocks, opens and closes

Cable release socket: on the lens-shutter barrel

Viewfinder: 1) Waist level brilliant finder, turning 90 degrees to left on its own axis for landscape pictures, w/ a red spirit level

2) Sports finder: A big wire sports finder, hinged on the lens standard and used with a frame on a pull-out tab, on the left side of the camera, (wire finder is lost)

Winding lever: on the right side of the camera

Bellows: single-extension

Front cover and bellows opening: first pull the front cover by using front cover leg of the camera, then pull the bellows forward by engaging its rails to the front cover mounted rails, then press the two milled chrome handles on front of the lens rails to inwards, then pull out the bellows as far as locks near the focus scale,

Closing: simply pull in the bellows as far as it goes, than push the struts to inwards

Cold-shoe: none

Self-timer: none

Back cover: remowable with whole box except right plate of the camera, w/ red window, opens by a knob with A and Z marks on the left plate of the camera, when the knob on A, pull-out by holding the right plate of the camera

Film loading: by special spool parts

Tripod sockets: old type 3/8'', two, on the front cover and right plate of the camera

Lugs for leather hand grip

Body: metal, Weight: 568g

serial no. 14913 (inside of the camera)

 

Librette 74 produced with many different lens and shutter combinations, like Nagel Anastigmat, Laudar or Xenar f/4,5 & 6,3 105mm lenses and Nagel, Pronto or Compur shutters. Also there are black or brown coverings.

Dr.Nagel-Werke founded by Dr.August Nagel in 1928.

Dr. A.Nagel founded or merged with several camera factories. In 1908 Drexler & Nagel was founded by him, a camera maker based in Stuttgart, Germany. In 1909 it was renamed to Contessa Camerawerke or Contessa Camerawerke Drexler & Nagel. In 1919 the company bought the Nettel Camerawerk and it operated under the Contessa-Nettel name from 1919 until 1926. Then Dr.Nagel was one of the co-founders of Zeiss Ikon in 1926. He left Zeiss Ikon in 1928 and founded his own company. In 1932, Eastman Kodak bought this business and established it in Stuttgart as Kodak AG, with Dr. Nagel as its managing director and design head.

more info: Kodak Cameras and Uk Camera

  

Leuchars Airshow September 1989.

City of Exeter 74, 974AFJ, 1960 Massey-bodied Guy Arab IV, at the Kingsbridge Running Day, 20 September 2025

Looking down to the stage, and the sea beyond, at the Minack Theatre, Cornwall.

aspen, colorado

fall 1975

 

"amateur night" at the aspen inn club

 

part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf

 

© the Nick DeWolf Foundation

Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com

SSANGYONG Kyron

Datum eerste toelating : 3 maart 2006

Datum eerste tenaamstelling : 3 maart 2006

Datum laatste tenaamstelling : 18 september 2013

APK vervaldatum : 26 maart 2018

cambridge, massachusetts

fall 1975

 

dance rehearsal

 

part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf

 

© the Nick DeWolf Foundation

Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com

Tuesday, 15th March 2011.

 

These are my beloved moleskine notebooks! One of which is for my Uni notes and the other is my new sketchbook. I love them! I did loads of writing today in my two, two hour lectures. Fortunately they were quite interesting, we had a guest lecturer in for our Theory of Architecture lecture and all the philosophy made my head hurt a little. I had a nice gap in between lectures today when I went home for lunch and chatted to Kirsty for a bit before going back into Uni. In the evening I had a nice chill and then went to the pub after watching Waking the Dead online :D

cambridge, massachusetts

fall 1975

 

dance rehearsal

 

part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf

 

© the Nick DeWolf Foundation

Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com

Image source: Queensland State Archives Item ID ITM1102550 Expo 88 Lunchtime Parade Child's Play float, Brisbane.

 

Australia was approaching its bicentennial celebrations, and after Brisbane’s success hosting the 1982 Commonwealth Games, Brisbane City Council and the Queensland State Government were confident they could win the bid to hold the next World Exhibition.

Brisbane won the right to hold the event and Expo 88 was officially opened by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II on 30 April 1988. By the time it closed, it had changed the way the world saw Brisbane and helped shaped the city as we know it today.

 

Starting with an estimated budget of $645 million, the Queensland State Government developed a World Expo that would recoup and support its own costs and promote international investment in Queensland, both during and after the event. South Bank, badly damaged in the 1973–74 floods, was chosen and the site acquired for $150 million. Developers completed construction on time and within budget. The targets set for ticket sales were reached 11 weeks before Expo 88 had even opened. It was off to a smashing start.

 

Celebrating ‘Leisure in the age of technology’, there was an incredible range of pavilions, performances, parades, comedy and artwork on show. Guests could experience over 50 restaurants filled with flavours from around the globe. Hosted over six months, it drew more than 18 million people to the renewed South Bank parklands district. An average of 100,000 people a day entered the gates.

 

An influx of royalty, celebrities and international visitors came to Brisbane for the exhibition, but it was Queensland residents who attended the most often, purchasing 500,000 season tickets. Expo 88 provided something the city needed: an easy-to-access recreational facility with exciting things to do, see and experience. Brisbanites returned again and again to socialise and enjoy the festival atmosphere.

The monorail was one of the most popular attractions. Giving travellers a view of the entertainments from above, it operated along a 2.3-kilometre track during Expo 88, taking up to 44,000 visitors a day from one side of Expo to the other, along the Brisbane River. Built by Swedish manufacturer Von Roll, the monorail cost $12 million and comprised four MkII trains with nine carriages each. The idea of keeping the monorail operating after Expo and extending it into the Brisbane CBD was discussed. Ultimately, the existing monorail wasn’t a feasible long-term people-moving solution and it was disbursed. Three trains were sold back to Von Roll and were used in Germany’s Europa-Park. The remaining train and some tracks were incorporated into the Sea World theme park on the Gold Coast.

 

Some of the most significant installations, exhibitions and artworks from Expo 88 were relocated and continue to be enjoyed today. Ken Done AM, a prominent Australian artist and designer, was commissioned to produce the entry and exit statement art pieces for the Australia Pavilion. Using the word ‘Australia’, Done produced a sign nearly six metres tall that could not be missed by anyone who attended Expo 88. The letters have since been restored and are on display at the Caboolture Heritage Village. The Nepal Peace Pagoda was the only international pavilion that remained on-site, after a petition asking that it remain attracted about 70,000 signatures. The Japan Garden and Pond were gifted to the city of Brisbane and moved to the Botanic Gardens at Mt Coot-Tha.

 

The buzz of activity, the investment in South Bank’s infrastructure and the spotlight on Brisbane transformed the city. The physical legacy left by Expo 88 turned South Bank into a thriving social space and prominent cultural hotspot: 42 hectares was dedicated to the construction of the South Bank Parklands.

 

Story source: Queensland State Archives Blog: When the world comes to town: Expo 88

15-3-2011 a photo a day for a year

 

danbo's camera has packed up but he just cant seem to fix it...

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