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I thought I was taking a picture of a phone box but when I looked inside it had a cash machine!
Borough Market, London.
The abandoned trailer across the street seems to be a fun source for photos. This box spring is on the back porch.
Ricardo Brey (born 1955) is a child of the Cuban Revolution. He is one of the pioneer artists of Cuban New Art which began in 1891. Disillusioned by the ideals of the Cuban Revolution as corrupted by the regime of Fidel Castro, Brey participated in this key event along with many notable Cuban artists, writers and art critics.
More than twenty years after leaving Cuba, Brey was given the first retrospective of his work at the Museo Nacional Bellas Artes in Havana (2014). Belgium, Brey’s adopted country, presented the first European retrospective of his work the Museum of Contemporary Art, Antwerp.
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Great Idea to change of use to a Defibrillator ...Seen in the small Village of Sloothby in Lincolnshire ..
Young-adult chapter book. (Cover art, interior illustrations, and book by Melinda B Hipple.)
"Looking for something he believes belongs to his mother, twelve-year-old Josh Milton breaks into Old Man Binkley’s garage. As the old man befriends the young boy, Josh becomes intrigued by the stories Mr. Binkley brings to life with the help of things he has hidden away in boxes—stories of people and places around the world. Curious, Josh returns each weekend until one of the boxes reveals a secret that shakes his trust in his own family. Should he run, or should he stay and face his mother who he now knows has lied to him his entire life?"
66617 gets the road having being held at a signal with the 6H51 10.58 Hardendale Quarry to Tunstead Quarry empties.
The train is near journey's end as it approaches Chinley North Junction on the 6th April 2018.
Railway stations, yards, junctions etc and sections of line between certain locations (called blocks) with complex track work and/or safe working (signalling) systems were usually provided with signal boxes or cabins from which staff worked levers and instruments that controlled all this apparatus. They were busy and fascinating places to watch trains being worked by old fashioned mechanical means.
These days, most of the signal boxes have been centralised and computerised, sometimes replaced by rationalised and simplified installations.
That Chinchilla on the Darling Downs had one indicates a busy and challenging layout. Rationalisation of the whole line and far fewer trains means Chinchilla is but a shadow of its former self. It's fairly large signal box now resides in the local museum.
to use wisely.
box by lauren.rabbit
hematite ring for mental clarity and memory
thank you, rabbit.
I love invitations to groups. love them! but I don't like those big or sparkly icons. so, as much as I love being invited to groups, and love you for inviting me, I will delete them.
sorry.
In Amsterdam Noord there is a crazy place called NDSM-wharf. It's crazy what's inside the NDSM building and the area surrounding it is crazy as well.
As the official web site states, from the 1920s to the 1980s NDSM was one of the biggest shipyards in the world, then it was converted into "Kunststad", an "Art city", and now it's full of weird buildings, arts installation, and whatever creativity could mean.
This picture was taken in the neighborhood, I couldn't resist to those brilliant colors and the box-shaped houses.
66109 leans into the curve as it heads the 4E98 08:24 Mossend to Tees Dock containers through Alnmouth on the 14th December 2019.
Alnmouth signal box is a substantial North Eastern Railway type NER N3+ opened in 1907.
This box was inspired by some Gothic ivory carvings I saw at The Cloisters in NYC this August. The box ended up a lot more Baroque, but even though I'm a Bauhaus kinda guy, this one is my personal favorite of the series.
More views of this box.
Part of an ongoing series on Boxes ... making useful or decorative containers out of LEGO.
Photograph: By www.flickr.com/photos/fotosdelrupert/
Model - Concept: Mine
Estudio:
I'm taking part of the "30 days creativity challenge" and today was about creating in the smallest place you can... I had a similar idea some time ago, today I took a box and start to take pictures...I'm not sure if i'm satisfied with the editing (even if i love the concept), but that's ok, I'll take it as a starting point for making better in future :)
anyway, this picture reminds me of some of my first self portraits :)
A different arrangement of flaps on this one
Result is similar to the Chopin tato-box
The above config is more efficient, box is bigger.
In designing the pattern on the sides of this box I was thinking of Shinto shrine gates. A mix of clear, aqua, and blue trans rounds results in a shimmery glass effect. Leaving the corners without posts I think makes the box look more transparent.
More views of this box.
Part of an ongoing series on Boxes ... making useful or decorative containers out of LEGO. I'm posting one a day for a few days, about three more boxes to go ...