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I enjoy officiating at weddings. I haven't done very many in the past few years, because of the physical layout of the church I was serving. But, I have tree weddings lined up, occurring before I move again in June. This should be fun!

'Taking Back Sunday' at 'Melkweg, Oude Zaal', Amsterdam on Friday, 21st of February 2014.

 

Find out more about my photography on Facebook.

 

Taken back in the early 2000’s. Loved this look, not so much the orange hair lol

Out for a walk on a common in summer, it's always so beautiful... Barney loves the freedom to run around and all the rabbit burrows to sniff! The only downside is the odd flock of sheep we see, I have to be on watch for them, he's not terrible around livestock but occasionally you see the light bulb goes on and it occurs to Barney sheep would probably be more exciting to herd than a tennis ball. No serious problems, so far...

 

Luckily, Barney's recall is fantastic, even if he's really distracted, whistle or shout his name and he whips round and runs back. If all else fails I say "Bye Barney" and very deliberately walk off in the other direction, a few seconds later, you usually see a blur as he runs past. Here, I had simply called him back to take a photo, I love that happy face :)

 

Hope you had a good weekend, don't know how much I'll be on Flickr this week... I've got a couple more exams to do, which means lots of revision!!

The back of the modified Polaroid 80 camera

クアラルンプール, マレーシア

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Olive-backed Sunbird

Cinnyris jugularis

Singapore Botanic Gardens

26th. December 2008

 

Think I am handsome? You should look at my gorgeous mate www.flickr.com/photos/lipkee/3138937615

 

690V7849

Wawa is Back .. hehe ..

This picture is cropped ill upload the full one later.

Do u think i should upload more photos ??

Finally a new Fickr-account, after having been away for almost 2 years.

Feels good to be back and hope to upload some nice shots soon.

the sesh's have returned.

My big girl is going back to school on Wednesday. Second grade is going to be so much fun!! She is so smart I just can't believe it. And seriously, can you believe this little beauty is only 7?!

I asked her last week if she was excited to go back. She said "yes". I asked what she was most excited about and she said to see her friends again, and math. . . she LOVES math! lol Silly kiddo!

Target "Back to School" 2014 College by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube. #Target #BackToSchool #2014

The deaf institute, Manchester with Chris from Pop Hysteria Victim

Origami designs by Robert Lang.

Medium: Uncut squares of foil-backed tissue paper.

with dog, water bottle, tons of leaves and a huge broken limb that is still laying on the roof of our house.

...new sticker for my eChopper; from jayde micah designs

jaydemicahdesigns.com/

60D with 100mm macro@f4

Back Pain Middletown OH

 

Stretch Physical Therapy & Total Wellness

4851 Wunnenberg Way

West Chester, OH 45069

 

Back Pain Middletown OH

The morning sun illuminated this waterlily from behind when I was searching for frogs in the Mt Coot-tha Botanic Gardens.

I went back to where I used to live until I was 16 for a couple of days and it was lovely to see my friends again and it was wonderful to spend more time outdoors. I miss walking barefoot and strolling around in the woods and fields and meadows. I felt so happy and it was horrible to come back into the middle of the city. I wanna go back to the country so badly.

 

btw, this is not me ;)

many more:

dreamingphotographs.blogspot.de/2012/08/when-i-used-to-wa...

Haynes Apperson Surrey (1902) Engine 500cc 8 HP Two Cylinder

Country of Origin USA (Kokomo, Indiana)

Registration Number BS 8683

Body Type Runabout

2021 London-Brighton Number 151

Entrant Martin Bodenham

Pilote Martin Bodenham

HAYNES (HAYNES APPERSON) ALBUM

www.flickr.com/photos/45676495@N05/albums/72157700577222292/

 

With a badge that carried the slogan - Americas First Car, the Haynes Automobile Company can trace its car making history back to 1898 when the company, formerly known as Haynes-Apperson company was established in Kokomo, Indiana, by brothers Edgar Apperson, Elmer Apperson and Elwood Haynes. Elwood Haynes was a talented metallurgist who invented a very special stainless steel alloy called Stellite which is still used to this day on the space shuttle to this day, he approached the Apperson Brothers to build his first car. The cars were powered by 5 HP engines while the heavy parts were made of aluminium alloy.

 

In 1905 the Apperson brothers left the company to form Apperson Brothers Automobile Company. Elwood Haynes remained renaming the old company simply the Haynes Automobile Co. from 1914,

Haynes offered a Light Six at $1485. Their ads boasted that it was, - The result of 22 years successful experience in building motor Haynes also proclaimed it Americas greatest light six, and that it will travel 22 to 25 miles on one gallon of gas and has more than 1 horsepower to every 55 pounds of weight.

 

For 1916 Haynes introduced the twelve cylinder Light Twelve, sold alongside a refined Light Six in the guise of Models 36 and 37

1923 saw the introduction of the 57, with a 121 inch wheelbase in five-seat four-door sedan, three-seat coupelet, and two-seat roadster advertised as being complete with front and rear bumpers, six disc (as opposed to wire) wheels, wind wings, sun visors, artistically fashioned individual steps (for the running boards), and individual fenders

 

But the end was in sight, Haynes Automobiles was declared bankrupt in 1924 and went out of business in 1925.

 

Haynes was a relatively expensive make, film star Cleo Madison drove a Haynes Light Six as did composer Louis F. Gottschalk .

 

In 1915 a Haynes 50-60 Model Y Touring Car achieved notoriety when it was featured in what has been called the worlds oldest known pornographic film - A Free Ride

 

Diolch am 89,601,768 o olygfeydd anhygoel, mae pob un yn cael ei werthfawrogi'n fawr.

 

Thanks for 89,601,768 amazing views, every one is greatly appreciated.

 

Shot 06.11.2021 Regents Street In that London in the South (London-Brighton weekend). Ref. 123-060

  

The main reason for visiting Cambridge was to see King's College Chapel.

 

I must first than two friends, Simon K and Aidan for posting shots from Cambridge and so firing up my desire to visit.

 

Things fell into place and I found myself on a train last Sunday, and a place on the first tour of the day Monday morning.

 

I will add more thoughts as I post shots, but this for a start.

 

Quite the strongest emotional response I have ever had to a building, I had to choke back tears!

 

All chairs and seating have been removed, so there is just the building.

 

"Just."

 

Just a handful of us early visitors had the entire chapel to ourselves.

 

I followed up, not on purpose, a Japanese lady who was walking round with an i phone of a selfie stick, recording herself walking round the chapel, rather than the chapel itself. Which I know is her choice.

 

I saw the wonderful glass in the windows of the side chapel, so decided to photograph those too. Took some time.

 

No restrictions on photography, just don't "use flash on the Rubens" in the chancel. I was told.

 

In truth, there's more than enough in the Chapel for a whole day, as I'm sure new details would reveal themselves each time you looked.

 

I walked out into the college grounds, to walk to the bridge over the river. I mean, really, there was no one else out there, and a couple of punts were drifting past, so I wandered round the large square of grass, half of which had been apparently wild flowers, but now cut to look like a rough lawn.

 

The chapel has a 16th sundial, and marvellous lead drain downpipes. I snap them all.

 

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Begun by Henry VI, completed under the direction of Henry VII, the glass scheme installed under the somewhat-disinterested Henry VIII. 'The heart and soul of early 20th Century Anglicanism' according to M R James, the Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols begun here during the First World War helped invent the modern Christmas. The fan vaulting is spectacular, the proportions (300ft long, 40ft wide, 90ft high) almost shocking in their single-minded Perpendicular triumphalism. The Chapel vies with Ely and Peterborough Cathedrals as the best single medieval building in Cambridgeshire, but the vast scheme of early 16th Century glass is undoubtedly the biggest and best of its kind anywhere in the British Isles.

 

www.flickr.com/photos/norfolkodyssey/21007385075/in/album...

 

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King's College Chapel is the chapel of King's College in the University of Cambridge. It is considered one of the finest examples of late Perpendicular Gothic English architecture and features the world's largest fan vault.[3] The Chapel was built in phases by a succession of kings of England from 1446 to 1515, a period which spanned the Wars of the Roses and three subsequent decades. The Chapel's large stained glass windows were completed by 1531, and its early Renaissance rood screen was erected in 1532–36. The Chapel is an active house of worship, and home of the King's College Choir. It is a landmark and a commonly used symbol of the city of Cambridge.

 

Henry VI planned a university counterpart to Eton College (whose Chapel is very similar, but not on the scale intended by Henry). The King decided the dimensions of the Chapel. Reginald Ely was most likely the architect and worked on the site since 1446.[6] Two years earlier Reginald was charged with sourcing craftsmen for the Chapel's construction.[6] He continued to work on the site until building was interrupted in 1461, having probably designed the elevations.[6] The original plans called for lierne vaulting, and the piers of the choir were built to conform with them.[6] Ultimately, a complex fan vault was constructed instead.[6] Reginald probably designed the window tracery at the extreme east of the church's north side: the east window of the easternmost side chapel, which unlike the Perpendicular style of the others is in curvilinear Gothic style.[6] The priest and later bishop Nicholas Close (or Cloos) was recorded as the "surveyor", having been the curate of St John Zachary, a church demolished to make way for the Chapel.[7][8][9]

 

The first stone of the Chapel was laid, by Henry himself, on the Feast of St James the Apostle, 25 July 1446, the College having been begun in 1441. By the end of the reign of Richard III (1485), despite the Wars of the Roses, five bays had been completed and a timber roof erected. Henry VII visited in 1506, paying for the work to resume and even leaving money so that the work could continue after his death. In 1515, under Henry VIII, the building was complete but the great windows had yet to be made.

 

The Chapel features the world's largest fan vault, constructed between 1512 and 1515 by master mason John Wastell. It also features fine medieval stained glass and, above the altar, The Adoration of the Magi by Rubens, painted in 1634 for the Convent of the White Nuns at Louvain in Belgium. The painting was installed in the Chapel in 1968; this involved the lowering of the Sanctuary floor leading up to the High Altar. It had been believed that gradations were created in 1774 by James Essex, when Essex had in fact lowered the floor by 5 1/2 inches,[10] but at the demolition of these steps, it was found that the floor instead rested on Tudor brick arches.

 

During the removal of these Tudor steps, built at the Founder's specific request that the high altar should be 3 ft above the choir floor, human remains in intact lead coffins with brass plaques were discovered, dating from the 15th to 18th centuries, and were disinterred.[12]

 

The eventual installation of the Rubens was also not without problems: once seen beneath the east window, a conflict was felt between the picture's swirling colours and those of the stained glass.[13][title missing] The Rubens was also a similar shape to the window, which "dwarfed it and made it look rather like a dependent postage stamp".[14] Plain shutters were proposed, one on each side, to give it a triptych shape (although the picture was never part of a triptych) and lend it independence of form, which is how one sees the Rubens today. The installation was designed by architect Sir Martyn Beckett, who was "philosophical about the furore this inevitably occasioned - which quickly became acceptance of a solution to a difficult problem."[15]

 

During the Civil War the Chapel was used as a training ground by Oliver Cromwell's troops, but escaped major damage, possibly because Cromwell, having been a Cambridge student, gave orders for it to be spared. Graffiti left by these soldiers is still visible on the north and south walls near the altar.[16] During World War II most of the stained glass was removed and the Chapel again escaped damage.[17]

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King%27s_College_Chapel,_Cambridge

 

I have a pile of projects called my "back burner projects" they are a collection of creative thoughts, ideas and things I'm passionate about, inspire me, feel authentic and soar me to the moon in so many words however always . . . you got it. . .get put on the back burner. Its time to clear the stove.

 

Back cover of: H.G. Wells: Kipps.

The story of a simple soul.

With an introduction by Eward Shanks.

Fontana Books 1961.

Movie tie-in starring Michael Redgrave, Diana Wynyard, Phyllis Calvert and Michael Wilding.

A back-balance in a lyra, or aerial hoop.

Shot with Elinchrom BXRi's against white paper, edited with Photoshop.

 

Back cover of: James McGovern: Fräulein.

London: Ace Books 1959.

"You can come in if you stop trying to look up my skirt..."

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Taken from the Family Album.

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