View allAll Photos Tagged AutoMechanic

Flagging a taxi in East Van.

The angels... @ work

@ 2014 Sebring 12 Hours. Co-developed with 2015 Corvette Z06, sharing chassis, engine technologies

and aerodynamics strategy.

All photographs in my photostream are Copyrighted © Dave Kirwin. All Rights Reserved.

 

| Flickr Photos | Flickr Railway Photos | Flickr Graffiti | Instagram | #eastleighsocialphotographer

 

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HAA - Coal hopper/Automechanical discharge, no canopy. Built by BR at Shildon 1966-1971 (Lot 3699).

14/02/09 - C.F.Booths

 

41, 18 Tallebudgera Creek Road

Burleigh Heads, QLD 4220

0432 742 560

 

Nicosia is the capital and largest city on the island of Cyprus, as well as its main business centre.It is located near the centre of the Mesaoria plain, on the banks of the River Pedieos.

There is one thing the photograph must contain, the humanity of the moment.

We are making photographs to understand what our lives mean to us.

The best thing about a picture is that it never changes, even when the people in it do.

The camera is an instrument that teaches people how to see without a camera.

I really believe there are things nobody would see if I didn’t photograph them.

 

All photographs in my photostream are Copyrighted © Dave Kirwin. All Rights Reserved.

 

| Flickr Photos | Flickr Railway Photos | Flickr Graffiti | Instagram | #eastleighsocialphotographer

 

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HAA - Coal hopper/Automechanical discharge, no canopy. Built by BR at Shildon 1966-1971 (Lot 3574).

Carlisle Citadel. Blue painted frame denoted Scottish coal circuit.

Nicosia is the capital and largest city on the island of Cyprus, as well as its main business centre.It is located near the centre of the Mesaoria plain, on the banks of the River Pedieos.

There is one thing the photograph must contain, the humanity of the moment.

We are making photographs to understand what our lives mean to us.

The best thing about a picture is that it never changes, even when the people in it do.

The camera is an instrument that teaches people how to see without a camera.

I really believe there are things nobody would see if I didn’t photograph them

 

Back from a short but jam-packed and very, very fun trip to New York.

Visiting my local mechanic, one of the best around

Women in boilersuit mechanic, automehanic

Triumphal arch, embedded in auto body shop and other retail structures, at Broadway & 216th Street, Inwood.

 

As MyInWood very helpfullly explains (with excellent illustrations, further elaborated here), this is the last survival of the 1855 estate of John T. Seaman; the arch (ostensibly a miniature of the Arc de Triomphe) was the gatehouse. By the turn of the century, the property was in the hands of builder Thomas Dwyer, who used the gatekeeper's quarters in the arch itself as his office, which I suspect many of my friends find a wonderful idea. The encrustations began before World War I, and Dwyer ultimately gave up on the main house; it was torn down in 1938 to make room for a very nice set of mid-rise garden apartments, Park Terrace Gardens (Albert Goldhammer, 1940). The arch itself was burned out in 1970, but Scouting New York gives a great photo-tour of its present-day conditions, including a beautiful moment where the arch base casually drops into the body shop.

These guys liked me. We didn't speak the same language, but we all speak car repair and nice legs. (selected for Explore on Flickr)

 

I have a portfolio of Cuba images for sale at studiogauthier.zenfolio.com.

Tweet me @StudioGauthier

This abandoned business is located along E. Pine St., where US11 travels east from downtown Hattiesburg.

 

Along the top is the name ouf the business, which includes Auto Machine Co. Along the front in green squares are the names of auto part manufacturers the mechanic used.

 

In all of this, I think I also see more than two layers of Royal Crown Cola ads.

"My car isn't making crazy noises anymore." – Jose G.

 

www.yelp.com/biz/reliable-auto-repair-center-chicago

3401 N Ashland Ave, Chicago IL

A two door silver car from the 1970s parked on the street advertises a mechanic's services. Photo taken at dusk on November 26, 2006 somewhere on the road linking Teotihuacan with Cuernavaca in Mexico.

www.yelp.com/biz/rodriguez-auto-shop-chicago

 

"Gilberto is the man ... Great guys, great service. If you go in, in the mid afternoon a food truck drives through with hot sandwiches."– Drew E.

Girls are dangerous especially when there are "weapons" around...

Slacking from job... Nah. Just seeing what you photographer is taking.

Erm... charlie angels... or camel angels?

K10D + Pentax A 24-50/4.0 A friends place of business, specializing in European Cars but still finds time to work on my lowly Saturn Wagon as well as the Mini! Thank you guys...

Have you ever had a beloved tool that broke your heart when you thought you had lost it?

 

The tape measure on the left was mine. I bought it in 1978, as I was learning all the basic DIY skills I had never been taught growing up. (Thanks, DAD. Even though he was a skilled carpenter, plumber, electrician and auto mechanic, his attitude toward my learning those skills was that they were menial tasks and I should, "Be a doctor. Then you can pay someone to do those things." Wrong again, DAD.)

 

But I learned. Plastering, wiring, painting, tiling, plumbing, laying decorative brick pavers in the garden, installing a worm-drive garage door opener, changing the dogbone and rebuilding the headlight motor in a Fiero, fix-it projects in my mom's house in Chicago and my Dad's in Bellwood, putting in a new water heater, turning my bedroom into a home office, complete with built-in Ikea desks, which took quite a bit of ripping down to fit into that relatively tiny space.

 

And that battered little 8 foot tape measure was there, every step of the way. So when I thought I'd lost it earlier this year, (and I'm not ashamed to say it) I cried like a baby.

 

I couldn't cry too long, though -- the projects never end in an old house. So with a heavy heart, I bought the 12-foot tape measure on the right, and kept right on working.

 

Then, getting the Caprice ready for a road trip to Springfield in October, I found the old one in between the front seat cushions! More tears, this time joyous ones.

 

I almost thought of retiring it and putting it up on the shelf, and letting the 12-footer take over. But, no. Stanley built it to work, and work it shall.

Converting 7.62mm PKTM Kalashnikov machine guns taken from Russian armored vehicles to hand carry by adding stock.

 

Still from France 24 video converted to black and white

Nicosia is the capital and largest city on the island of Cyprus, as well as its main business centre.It is located near the centre of the Mesaoria plain, on the banks of the River Pedieos.

There is one thing the photograph must contain, the humanity of the moment.

We are making photographs to understand what our lives mean to us.

The best thing about a picture is that it never changes, even when the people in it do.

The camera is an instrument that teaches people how to see without a camera.

I really believe there are things nobody would see if I didn’t photograph them

 

Taking a deserved water break.

Mt. Pleasant Tire Co. operates this auto repair shop on Fancher St. in downtown. A recent renovation earned the structure a Mt. Pleasant Historic District Commission for preservation.

On the wall of Santander Bank, High Road Tottenham, near Holcombe Market.

 

Many years ago I saw these tear-off strips in the U.S. This is the first time I've seen them in Tottenham.

 

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§ Note: I've blurred the phone number.

§ See where this picture was taken.

Before closing hours, no more customers?

Automechanics Recreate Classical Paintings In Their Garage

The Last Supper by Leonardo da Vinci.

photo : Freddy Fabris

 

#whitedog #agence #agency #marketing #communication #photo #instalike #brandcontent

 

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crowdfundinghub: Amazing post

  

Ok... ok... leave me some to drink ok...

Finally, about to knock off.

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