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"There is a silence where hath been no sound,
There is a silence where no sound may be,
In the cold grave—under the deep deep sea,
Or in the wide desert where no life is found,
Which hath been mute, and still must sleep profound;
No voice is hush’d—no life treads silently,
But clouds and cloudy shadows wander free,
That never spoke, over the idle ground …"
-Thomas Hood "Silence"
great weather today! ;)
we`ve had a wonderful outdoor-shooting...
have a wonderful weekend ,my dear flickr-friends!
the texture is not my work,it`s made by "Joes Sistah",you`ll find her fantastic work here:
www.flickr.com/photos/27805557@N08/5174517536/in/contacts/
thank you very much for sharing!
Nikon D90 - HDR
Monument for the glory of cycling, located on one rest area of freeway between Lourdes and Tarbes ( South of France..near the Pyrenées mountains..)
Grensmaas Roosteren, Wandelingids Zuidlimburg no.1326, 8 km.
Een gemakkelijke wandeling om eens lekker uit te waaien langs de Maas. Via een rustige weg loopt u naar de Maas en dan wandelt u over een prachtige dijk naar de buurtschap Kokkelert. Via prachtig pad loopt u naar de brug bij Maaseik en dan struint u zeer geruime tijd door de weilanden en over grasspaadjes verder langs de Maas. Bij het keerpunt loopt u door de weilanden en via mooie veldweg loopt u weer Roosteren binnen. Het stuk langs de Maas biedt mooie uitzichten omdat u meestal hoger loopt.
Mit dem V-Club unterwegs in Hannover
... on tour with V-Club in Hanover
Huge thanks for all your faves and comments
This officially kicks off a new feature, my RIP album. It will be comprised of my photographic subjects that no longer exist. I never like seeing former subjects disappear but am always glad that I have a record of them.
This neon is one of my earliest posts to the Mick L FLICKR photostream and one of the few times that I knew in advance that the building would be demolished. This version of the P-Club ended forever although a much lesser club resurrected the name later at another location.
I took many outside shots over a few days, and the owner of the club kindly allowed me to photograph interior signs on closing night. I was also a long-time patron of the P-Club, which had some good entertainment at times and always offered excellent free popcorn. It was a major entertainment venue in its halcyon days and many hockey and football stars sometimes visited.
I put 10 photos of other some of the other P-Club pics plus other RIP subjects in the album (see below) and will add more with new posts through time.
I really wasn't sure what train had the Club Car since the train that used to have it didn't. A quick check with Steve Bauer set things straight. Here #349 with C&NW 553 accelerates out of Highwood bound for Kenosha.
Coronation St, Salford
I’ve been meaning to visit here for a very long time, mainly to take a picture of the iconic front doors for my Etsy shop. Pop art, abstract art and logos seem to sell better than any landscape I’ve ever tried to sell.
Kathy’s parents both lived in Salford and her dad was a member of the club in his youth so it was a double reason to finally go and visit. It’s open to the public every Wednesday and Saturday between 11am and 2pm. It’s run by volunteers and we were met at the door by Ross – who originated from Devon, came to study in Manchester and has never left. Ross is a mind of information and as we were the only one’s there at opening time gave us a personal guided tour of the building and its history. It’s very impressive and I had the free rein of the building to take photos (with tripod I might add) with the Archive Room being the most impressive but I’ll write about that in another posting.
Salford Lads Club is the third most visited music related venue in the UK next to the Abbey Road crossing and The Cavern (you don’t get free coffee/tea and biscuits at those venues unlike SLC) – proper northern hospitality! Its fame was probably boosted by the iconic image of The Smith outside its doors for their album sleeve – The Queen Is Dead, but in reality, it was more to do with Morrissey’s love of Coronation Street and the street sign high on the wall.
Taken at the Fastiques Rod & Custom Car Club's Pumpkin Run Nationals car show and swap meet held at the Clermont County Fair Grounds in Owensville, Ohio.
The license plate causes me to call this a 1934, but I don't know the make. The owner seems to be enthralled with things like machine guns and bombs as well as leaving messages all over his car. Creative, but not really my cup of tea although I wouldn't mind having the car without all the military stuff. It looks pretty well constructed and should scoot with that V8 powerpack, Another thing I like about it is the fact that it is unchopped 4 door which should provide ample room.