View allAll Photos Tagged Bucket
Getting as much of an aerial shot as possible (short of using a helicopter!) for an exterior of Stew Leonard's in Norwalk, CT.
It's not the biggest bucket I've seen, but you could still park a car in there. And that's me leaning against it.
prototype crocheted bucket hat variation. pie crust stitch edging. button is tacked on as a placeholder until I find a good buckle, belt should be shorter too, I think.
Photo dates: October 14 & 22, 2006
(top left) Kids playing with a frog. (top right) Bucket of frogs. (bottom left) Bag of frogs. (bottom right) Frog in a pair of tongs.
I don't know which one I like the best...
Looking down into a bucket of nice agates I picked up at a site called "Rancho Tinaja", located about 15 miles east of San Carlos, Chihuahua, Mexico and to the southwest of the town of San Antonio. Collected on March 15, 2007.
A highly posterized image of one of the members of the 501st Legion - Outer Rim Garrison - from Vancouver, BC.
It was one of the test photos I took, setting my camera up for the Paws for a Cause walk in Stanley Park. The image itself was a bit underexposed, but with the TK armour being so brilliantly white (and in direct sunlight), it just turned out to be a great, albeit accidental, shot.
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Despite the concentration upon my Bucket drawing which has been going on in the studio in the last few days, this is the only Bucket I have installed publicly: at the base of my Kind of Blue Pasteup Totem on the southern end of the Old Kodak Bridge in Coburg North.
In 2014, the Frank Myers Auto Maxx Team participated in the ice bucket challenge at the dealership in Winston-Salem, NC. These photos document that day.
Huge bucket that spilled water periodically. There would be a warning and then all the kids (who weren't afraid) would gather underneath it to be splashed with gallons of water.
As in "kick the bucket"? Looks like it has suffered some abuse.
Well ... whatever. This was an archeological find resulting from my doing a low-crawl under the house, to check for signs of termite activity. Looks like it may have originally had the product name and company info painted on, but virtually nothing of that remains. So, one is left to wonder and speculate. A bucket of lard, perhaps? Then again, maybe not. I think a lot of products used to come in tin buckets, back in those days. Probably too wide a range to warrant even trying to guess. Archeology very quickly gets too challenging for me.