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Goodies in my Brick Fair baggie.
LEGO 2x4 Brick keychain
Brickee Soda Can
Brick Forge coupon and 2 parts (wish I saw this when I shopped there earlier today!)
Admission tix for public days
Brick Fair Program
Brick Fair Pin (almost bought this earlier today but the booth was closed thank God! It was pouring today so we put the goodie bags in the car during a trip to unload my MOCs and bring them into the convention center)
Candy
Engraved Name Badge that looks beautiful (I added the lettered tiles and silver parts to further customize my badge)
from the archives 09/2102...the carrie furnaces produced iron from 1884 to 1982. rivers of steel national heritage tour. rankin.PA
Recipro is a website that allows the construction industry to promote all and any of their surplus construction materials on the website to help create a sustainable construction industry thus creating a builders surplus store for environmentally friendly building materials.
Forfarshire, Scotland is where Liff is but it appears this brick is probably from Leeds, it's pale colour tying in with fireclay bricks from there
These two rows of bricks in front of the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium are nod to the past when trolleys/streetcars ran in the same place.
L'épave a été dégagée seulement à la fin des années 80, le corps d'Arthur Beane a été retrouvé dans le poste de pilotage.
Pilote de la Royal Navy, il avait été détaché dans la RAF qui manquait de pilotes au moment de la bataille d'Angleterre.
brick lane joyride
London’s Brick Lane Market is a traditional flea-market affair, with a rich diversity of products and wares with everything from food, second-hand clothes (always worth a look for the retro-lovers), furniture, bric-a-brac, magazines, toiletries, sweets, electrical equipment and ABSOLUTELY EVERYTHING in between. The market spills across a relatively large area and several streets. The Brick Lane Market is now becoming known as a great place to pick up home accessories: from kitchen equipment, CDs, DVDs and furniture.
The Brick Lane area is home to London's most famous enclave of Indian and other asian fooderies and as such there is no shortage of snacks, delicacies and proper sit-down meals that you can try inbetween browsing through the wares on offer. There are so many to choose from with such a variety of quality, that the best advice is probably just to head to the ones with the biggest queues as the locals and regulars have long since managed to separate the wheat from the chaff!
If you're really into your bargain hunting and haggling then why not make a proper day of it? Take in all the local markets one Sunday including the Columbia Road flower market, Spitalfields market and Petticoat Lane market which are all within easy reach of Brick Lane market itself.
Open: Sun 8am-2pm
source >All in London.co.uk>
'Holmer Works Hereford' brick in the wall of the dining room at the Victoria Hotel, Canterbury, Kent.
Abandoned warehouse I built on a 48x48 plate for the collaborative ApocaLEGO Snowpocalypse build at BrickFair 2010.
Special thanks to [http://www.flickr.com/photos/52186110@N04] for help with the photography.
Old red bricks, Castlemaine, Victoria