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I can't wait to end this 4 years of "Human Carnage." Please vote Biden-Harris if you live in the US and you can vote.
Fujifilm x100v with Pulled Superia recipe from FujiXWeekly. I love the way the sunset cast a streak of light along the freshly painted beach huts.
Second life Credits:
www.fire-and-ice-blog.com/single-post/2016/09/19/Cast-awayx
Deviant Art Credits:
A dark clothed stranger passes by the Historic Ladd and Bush Bank Building located in Downtown Salem, Oregon.
An old Fishing Shot, where I decided to have one more cast before heading home. Alas it did not work out and I ended up packing all the tackle away. C'est la vie
Explore #7 on Wednesday April 15 2009.
Taken on my recent Easter camping trip up at Noosa, we took a couple of day trips to Rainbow Beach - gods country! I saw an opportunity with this guy casting for bait fish in the shallows, and started snapping away. We had some awful weather up there, not one decent sunset/sunrise in four days!!
I bought a new 10” cast iron skillet at the Lodge Factory here in Tennessee. I also got a cast iron butter warmer for grilling. Nice to live so close to such a great factory!
Continuing my Toy-ronto Life series...
After one rainy day I witnessed a charming blue hour scene in my Toy-ronto. So, of course, I did cast some miniature long exposure magic upon this Jarvis Mansion District as you know that tilt-shift digi-magic plus blue hour equals toy-some magic! :-)
Stay tuned for the next episode of Miniature Sunday filled with tilt-shift digi-magic cast upon Toy-ronto! Bientot a l'ecran ;-)
Although KITT is perfectly capable of operating autonomously, Knight Rider had a cast that viewers loved as much as they loved the car (well, almost as much).
So I updated my LEGO Ideas project to include Michael, Bonnie, and Devon.
You can check the project out here: ideas.lego.com/projects/104066
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I made a wee bookmark for Urban Outfitters - they'll be free in stores quite soon I believe.
Characters for a probably ludicrous novel I'd definitely read (left to right, top to bottom): Librarian, Explorer, Explorer's Ghost, Nurse, Robot, Geisha, Fisherman, Femme Fatale, Captain, Sailor (Sailorette?), Bandit and Invalid Banker.
Old mailbox in Delfshaven , Oude brievenbus in Delfshaven , Rotterdam
Old mailbox , oude brievenbus in Delfshaven , Rotterdam
The dutch mailbox.
The frst mailbos was introduced in the Netherlands around 1850. In the beginning there were about 70 mailboxes and only in the big cities. In the rest of the Netherlands everyone in that time had to go to the postoffice to post a letter. The first mailbox was made of cast iron ans was nicely decorated.I think the mailbox in this picture dates from 1914.
Oude brievenbus in Delfshaven
De Nederlandse brievenbus
De eerste brievenbus werd geintroduceerd zo rond 1850. In het begin stonden er alleen maar brievenbussen in de grote steden.In de rest van Nederland moest men naar het postkantoor om een brief op de bus te doen.
De eerste brievenbussen werden gemaakt van gietijzer en werden zwaar gedecoreerd.Ik denk dat de brievenbus op deze foto in 1914 is gemaakt.
If you're interested, here's the link to our 500px website: 500px.com/StehouwerandRecio
Hundreds of worm casts on Second Sands, Port William, Scotland. Six second exposure.
Thanks very much for favourites and comments. They are very much appreciated. Explore #21
This Scheveningen lighthouse was designed by Quirinus Harder and was completed in 1875.
432 cast iron plates and 4,600 nuts and bolts hold it together.
It now has the status of a national monument.
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The Clock Tower was built between 1403 and 1412, probably finished in 1405. It was built in the market place, then much larger and triangular in shape, its outline still clear in the street plan. The tower was built close to the Eleanor Cross. Twelve Eleanor crosses were constructed throughout eastern England under the orders of King Edward I between 1291 and 1294 in memory of his wife Eleanor of Castile. The site of each cross marks the nightly resting place of Eleanor's funeral procession.
The people of St Albans built the tower as a symbol of their resistance against the power of the abbot of St Albans. By deciding their own times in which to trade and ring curfew they could achieve independence from the dictates of the Abbey.
The Clock Tower contains two bells, one familiarly known as Gabriel and the Market bell. Gabriel is the larger and much older of the two and is so named as result of the inscription on the bell "Missi De Celis Habeo Nomen Gabrielis" ("I am Heaven sent, in Gabriel's name"). Although the date of its construction is unknown, John Harris of the British Archaeological Association believed that it was cast c.1335. Gabriels diameter is approximately 3 ft 10 in and it weighs roughly one ton. Gabriel would have been rung at approximately 4 am in the morning to mark the Angelus, and again at 8–9 pm at night for the curfew. In addition, the bells could also be run in the event of emergencies, this could be something as simple as a fire, or as historic as the First Battle of St Albans, seen as the first battle of the War of the Roses on 22 May, 1455.
Inspired by the cast iron buildings of New York, this modular building was one of the eight 16-wide buildings in The Promenade. It was displayed at BrickWorld Chicago in 2015.
Instructions available through Rebrickable.
Messing around with hand torches for selective lighting. Amazing how differently the camera sensor "sees" than how our eyes and brain see. The room was just barely dark enough for this to work.
Bigger, with more detail on decluttr.