View allAll Photos Tagged Campbell's

A composite of two artworks seen walking by the Avant Gallery in the Hudson Yards Mall, New York City. The flattened can caught my eye, reminded me of my energy drink work. I overlayed the Campbell's can with a work by Tim Tadder, his commercial/fine art photography is stunning to see. It's the head of a beautiful woman model painted white with blue hands wrapping around the head. Not much is identifiable here, the fingers perhaps, but I like the way the two images blended together in PS "Difference" setting.

 

Happy Slider Sunday - HSS!

Campbells were an institution around this part of the state and was one of those stores where you could buy anything you needed , their buildings were also quite stylish , victorian I presume

 

Kilchurn Castle

Campbell’s kingdom

Kilchurn Castle was built in the mid-1400s by Sir Colin Campbell, 1st Lord of Glenorchy.

Large showy pinkish-white flowers of the Campbell’s magnolia (Magnolia campbellii, Alba group) on display in Old arboretum. Old Arboretum; Westonbirt Arboretum near Tetbury, South Gloucestershire, England, UK.

The Pride flag flying over Castle Campbell in May 2019

Damm, two activists threw soup at Mona Lisa last January 28th. The two women stated that they acted for the “right to healthy and sustainable food”, denouncing a “sick agricultural system”.

Gosh! I still don't understand what Leonardo da Vinci has to do with this, and why they threw away soup if they were fighting hunger.

In 1985, Leonel Richie, Michael Jackson, and 38 other great artists, under the direction of Quincy Jones, recorded (without earning anything), in just a few hours, "We are the World", the song that raised tons of resources around the world, to alleviate hunger in Africa. And no one threw soup at Mona Lisa.

On the door of the studio where these great artists recorded, Quincy Jones wrote: "Leave your Ego outside." And it worked so well ! I believe that museums around the world should use this phrase at the entrance. BTW, do you like soup ?

Taken in Landrum, SC. It is the last remaining covered bridge in SC.

Constructed between 1909 and 1911 Campbell’s Covered Bridge is the only remaining covered bridge in the State of South Carolina, a state that once had 20 covered bridges.

Another view of this historic South Carolina covered bridge.

When the company I worked for introduced Quality Assurance principles in 1988, as part of my role I taught the history and application of Quality Management techniques to my staff. I used to hold up Arnott's Biscuits as a leading example. All Aussies will know and love Arnott's wonderful biscuits.....until not all that long ago they used to deliver their products in sparkling red vans that were never dirty, always shining clean and personally I had never found an Arnott's Biscuit that I didn't like nor that was presented and opened without perfection. Now those to me at the time were some important hallmarks of TQM (Total Quality Management) that I thought were great examples for my students....exceeding customer's expectations, consistent quality of product.

 

I know many of you will have studied and applied this stuff in your professional and perhaps personal lives in recent times. This mural of an Arnott's advertising sign brought back those memories and I still love their biscuits (many made within a couple of kilometres from us in Brisbane, at times I can still smell their vanilla creams!) - although they are not so good for me health wise these days. Sadly in some ways, Arnotts was sold to Campbell's (soups) of the USA quite a few years ago, amid some controversy about selling off the farm and is now owned by American investment company KKR - see link below.

 

Today, they have modified their advertising to simply..."There is no substitute".

 

This is one of a number of old signs at Scotty's Garage.

 

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnott%27s_Biscuits

Boabeng-Fiema Monkey Sanctuary

As seen at the Andy Warhol retrospective in Milan, Italy.

In a corner of The Campbell´s Highlands..The church where my love and me pray...

Crotalus campbelli, a rattlesnake species endemic to western Mexico, in the Mexican states of Colima, Jalisco, and Nayarit.

 

Canon EOS 90D + Tamron SP AF 90 mm f/2.8 Di Macro 1:1 (272E). Processed in Darktable.

Diomedea antipodensis antipodensis,

Off Kaikoura, New Zealand

 

Albatrosses are huge and this bird was very close. We went offshore with a group called Albatross Encounter and were not disappointed--it was one of the high points of the trip for me. The lure for the birds was a metal basket of fish parts behind the boat.

   

St Quivox Church in Ayrshire Scotland catches the end towards the end of the day

This natural park got its name from a turn-of-the-century billboard that stood on the hill advertising Tom Campbell's hats.

 

From a sign at the site:

Local residents grazed livestock here until 1939. From the 1950s to 1985, the Zoo used the hill as a paddock for zebras, camels and other hoofed animals.

The Bridgeland-Riverside Community Association campaigned to save the hill as a natural parkland in response to a proposed hotel and townhouse development. In 1992, the city designated Tom Campbell's Hill as parkland, and the Tom Campbell's Hill Committee restored this pocket of prairie so that we can enjoy native grassland in the heart of Calgary.

 

Happy Bench Monday and, to my fellow Canadians, Happy Canada Day!

   

Campbell's Covered Bridge is a wooden covered bridge in northeastern Greenville County, South Carolina, near the small town of Gowensville. Campbell's Covered Bridge was built in 1909 by Charles Willis Irwin and is the last remaining covered bridge in South Carolina. It is owned by Greenville County, which closed it to motorized traffic in the early 1980s. The bridge was added to the National Register of Historic Places on July 1, 2009.

A fresh layer of new fallen snow blankets the historic Campbell's Covered Bridge near the town of Landrum in Upstate South Carolina at the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains.

 

Built by Charles Irwin Willis between 1909 and 1911, it's the last remaining covered bridge in South Carolina and was named after Alexander Lafayette Campbell, who operated a grist mill just downstream of Beaverdam Creek from where the bridge rests.

 

Today the bridge is the staple of a beautiful park with picnic areas, grills and walking trails.

 

As of this posting the bridge is under construction for restoration work, and while still open to the public, be mindful of the men and women working to keep this bridge a remaining part of South Carolina's beautiful history.

 

Thank you for stopping by to view my photos - wishing you all a Merry Christmas and a wonderful New Year!

 

©2022 Johan Hakansson Photography, All Rights Reserved.

Kilchurn Castle, Loch Awe

 

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I really would love to wear this one!

 

all rights reserved. use without permission is illegal.

The sunsets were awesome & included one night of the Aurora Borealis.

tribute to andy warhol

 

sorry mr warhol and mr campbell, but i'm a gourmet: i make my tomato soup by myself

 

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Barbie Andy Warhol Campbell's Soup Alias Edie Sedgwick

One of the many water tanks for the volunteer fire department on Hornby Island, BC.

  

Processed with VSCO with p5 preset

  

song: The Roots - Wan Cook Soup

Double Fairlie 'David Lloyd George' works past Campbell's platform, between Tan-y-Bwch and Ddualt.

Merddin Emrys near Campbells Platform with the FR vintage train. 31st October 2021. No rainbows were photoshopped during the creation of this picture.

South Carolina's only remaining covered bridge.

Lemnos, Victoria, Australia. A landmark near Shepparton, a significant horticultural region in northern Victoria and home to a Campbell's Soup factory which manufactures using local produce.

Female Scarlet Robin (Campbell's), Petroica boodang campbelli, 13 cm. / 5.1 in. Observed feeding young. COMMON in both closed and tall open forests.

 

Dryandra State Forest, Western Australia.

 

©bryanjsmith.

Campbell's Ledge

Campbell's Ledge is a geographical feature north of Harding, PA and also near Pittston, Pennsylvania. It is about 1,280 feet above sea level. It is located about 0.3 miles south of the center of the nearby Campbell's Ledge Reservoir.

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