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HALLOW - SET - AVAILABLE NOW
From Collection : Because
2 sets available
SET: 40$ shipping not included
send a private message if interested
*perfect fit for FR2013 FR2, Nu.face, Poppy Parker and other similar dolls*
**accessories and doll are not for sale**
Please go here to see more photographs of the Family Car -
www.flickr.com/photos/69559277@N04/sets/72157628124351754...
Produced from the original negative in my collection.
Some of my wife's collection of shells. These reside in a glass jar on a side table in the dining room.
Camera for the 110 cassette , made in Germany , 1976-1978 . Telescoping body covering lens and finder when closed .Hot shoe flash contact ; exposure setting by weather symbol scale .
It's a strange experience buying someone else's collection - something of a guilty sensation in reaping the benefits of another person's years-long effort. This collection of matchbook covers does have a good home now. There are two boxes of them: a cigar box and an old candy box. There are many wonderful examples: 5-cent Dr. Pepper, Pep Boys, Wrigley's Gum, Havana Cigars, 1939 World's Fair, Tums, Bromo Seltzer and lots of gas stations, restaurants and booze. Hours of quiet entertainment. Who needs cable television? Digital photo. (2008)
Written on paper to which the photo is attached: "My preshious {sic} sister--Cora May Logan--She and Mama & deare [sic] Walter are gone but surely not forgotten. April 30, 1915."
This is going to take me a considerable amount of time to research and it will probably end up in my book, by the looks of what I have seen so far in the public records, but I don't want to delay in putting it up, although it may be awhile before a research summary is here.
What I can tell you is that Cora May Reddick Dancy Logan was born 4 August, 1878. Her first husband was Charles Dancy (1878-1909). Her second was John L. Logan, whom she married in 1906 in Jasper, Missouri. (1878-1929). She died of uterine cancer on 28 April, 1915, at the age of 35 years, eight months, and 24 days. Her burial took place at Hazelwood Cemetery, Springfield, Missouri, and the following summer, on 11 June, 1816, The Woodmen Circle Auxiliary, of which Cora was a member, unveiled her tombstone at a special ceremony, pictured here: www.flickr.com/photos/60861613@N00/16399198257/
Cora May was the daughter of Mary E. Headrick (1855-1917) and the unusually named Bright Columbus Reddick (1853-1899) who was killed in a major train wreck that was reported in midwestern newspapers. Here is his incredibly tantalizing obituary from the Springfield Republican, 3 October, 1899; page 3:
"OBITUARY
_____
Tribute of a Friend to the Memory of B. C. Reddick. Among the three good citizens who were killed in the Frisco railroad wreck, near Kansas City, was Mr. B. C. Reddick of 1609 North Campbell street. Mr. Reddick was a Tennessean by birth; was born in Weakley county, Tennessee, October 10, 1853. He afterwards came with his parents to Dent county, Mo., in 1855, and lived with them until November 22, 1874, when he married Miss Mary E. Headrick, of Celina, Dent county, Mo., and came to Springfield 11 years ago. He has been in the employ of the Frisco ever since, 10 years as a fireman and one year as an engineer. Mr. Reddick was as well qualified a
man as ever run an engine on the road, being highly esteemed among the railroad officials, as well as by everyone who knew him. He always had a kind word and a smile for everyone. Although he was once a very wicked man and a great burden to his family, as well as to himself, the death of his youngest son, when only five months old, caused his father's repentance. This son only lived to be 2 years old. {?} Mr. Reddick became {several illegible words} Smith, the railroad evangelist, and was lead to Christ by this good woman. He afterward joined the Dale Street Methodist church, and was at the time of his death a good and active member of this church. Mr. Reddick was the father of 10 children, four girls and six boys, of whom all but one survived him at this death. His four oldest children are married and live in Springfield. There was never a husband and father that will be missed in a family more than is Mr. Reddick, for his family worshipped him. He was especially devoted to his son David, who is deaf, and attends school at Fulton, Mo. Peace be unto him, and a kind remembrance of him as a good Christian and father.
A Friend."
Here is a link to her FindaGrave page: www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=335505...
So as far as I know, I have every single crystal moonbeam available. PLEASE correct me if I'm wrong, so I can go find the others xD They look rather amazing when I turn the light out and light them up all at once, if anyone is interested in seeing that I can try to take a photo of it lol. Ignore my other things in the background, I am running out of room to put my things so they all kinda get crammed together in places
Camera: Leica IIIf 35mm Rangefinder (1952).
Lens: Waterworth 2 inch Centaur f/3.5.
Film: Ilford FP4 Plus ISO 125 35mm black & white negative.
Development: Ilford ID-11 1 + 3 @ 20C/21m.
Camera supported on Linhof Junior tripod & ball head.
Lens is wide open for this image. Focus point is the "W" badge and lens of the nearest projector, carefully set via the Leica's coupled rangefinder. For a lens with a little front coating damage (cleaning-related I suspect), I thought the contrast and resolution of such an old lens to be respectable.
The Waterworth Centaur is a vanishingly rare 2 inch f/3.5 lens manufactured by Waterworth of Hobart, Tasmania, Australia. Optical manufacture began at the Domain on the edge of the city of Hobart during WWII in order to furnish the Australian defence forces (and to an extent, also, other Allied forces) with lenses, prisms and other components vital for military use in targeting equipment, gunsights and for photo reconnaissance camera applications among others. After the war the workforce turned their skills to the production of goods for civilian use, notably projection equipment for educational institutions. A small number of still camera lenses were nevertheless manufactured in Hobart in the Leica 39mm rangefinder thread mount.
The Centaur was available in two different guises, both with the 39mm Leica thread mount: a non-focusing enlarger version made for darkroom printing; and the type used to make the image shown above. This being a focusing and rangefinder coupled version.
During a visit to the University of Tasmania to inspect the items in their Waterworth Collection (a bequest from the late Peter Smith, long a UTAS chemistry faculty member) I was permitted to fit the focusing example of the Centaur in the collection to my own Leica IIIf Red Dial rangefinder and take a few photos of the collection with it.
In the foreground you will see just a few of the different types of still projectors Waterworth manufactured after World War II.
The Centaur fitted readily to the IIIf like any Leica lens made for it, and coupled perfectly to its (well-calibrated) rangefinder from close range to infinity.
I set the camera and lens onto my own Linhof junior tripod and ball head (which was itself formerly owned by Peter Smith before it came into my possession, so there was a brief reunion of these items once owned by him). A short series of images was made by me at different apertures including wide open at f/3.5 with the camera on the tripod, using a cable release to maximise sharpness.
I have added four very similar images made with this very rare lens. Whilst there are a handful of images of a Waterworth Centaur lens locatable by Google Image search, I have not seen any photos actually taken with the lens: let alone taken with one fitted to a screw mount Leica rangefinder, the type of camera the lens was actually designed to be used with. This series might therefore be the only images on the web with a Centaur on film using a Leica rangefinder and have been uploaded for the benefit of those who may like to see some photos created with one.
The exact number of Waterworth Centaurs produced is not definitively known. At least one serial number into the low 300s exists. But whether all serial numbers from 1 were allocated and used is not known. The actual number made may be considerably less, one source suggests perhaps 200-odd? Many of those would have been for enlarger use and not suitable for photography, thus, the amount of surviving Centaurs with rangefinder coupling may, potentially, be tiny. Who knows? UTAS are researching the activities of the annexe.
You may see a photograph of the Centaur lens attached to my Leica at UTAS here:
www.flickr.com/photos/43224475@N08/51087053587/in/datepos...
More information about the wartime activities at the Hobart annexe and the Waterworth optical products which were made after WWII for civilian use may be found at UTAS's own website for Waterworth, here:
Some images of the actual Waterworth Centaur I had the privilege of photographing with (Centaur serial number 171) may be viewed here:
waterworth.omeka.net/items/show/76
Copyright 2021 Brett Rogers All Rights Reserved
A one-meter (3 foot 3 inch) tall antique Dolorosa, from the Vecin Collection.
See it dressed here: www.flickr.com/photos/28098727@N00/401731676/in/set-72157...
La Diseñadora = Sarita Aristizábal
La Maquilladora = Paulina Valencia
La Fotógrafa = Yo
El Productor = Sebas Aristizábal
Scragg's Coaches: (DX55 HRE) a Mercedes Bernz Vario O.814D in beige and brown livery and captured here on Kingsway at East Didsbury.
© Christopher Lowe.
Date: 10th April 2008.
Ref No: IMG_2528/JL.
Pentax K3
Pentax K5
Pentax K01
Pentax Q
Pentax K10D
Pentax LX
Pentax SuperA
PENTAX DA 18-135mm F3.5-5.6 WR
PENTAX DA 35mm F2.8 Macro Limited
PENTAX DA 40mm F2.8 XS (Pancake lens)
PENTAX DA* 16-50mm F2.8
PENTAX DA* 50-135mm F2.8
PENTAX DA* 300mm F4
PENTAX F 50mm F1.4
PENTAX FA* 28-70mm F2.8
Sigma 8-16mm F4.5-5.6
Sigma 50-500mm F4-6.3
Sigma 70-200mm F2.8
Sigma mirror 600mm F8
Tamron Macro 90mm F2.8
my wonderful round rocks that my friend michelle gave to me, my eifle tower a gift from sherry olsen, little cup made by me, a wooden vase that i got at anthropolgie last year, and my cherished ceramic sculpture of a babushka'd lady that i bought in prague in 1993.
CDs:
01. Binaural
02. Lost Dogs
03. No Code
04. Pearl Jam
06. Rearviewmirror
07. Riot Act
08. Ten
09. Ten [European Import]
10. Vitalogy
11. VS
12. VS [eco-pack version]
13. Yield
EPs:
14. Live at Easy Street
Singles:
15. Alive
16. Animal
17. Daughter
18. Even Flow
19. Given to Fly
20. Go
21. I Am Mine
22. I Am Mine [import]
23. Immortality
24. Jeremy
25. Last Kiss
26. Light Years
27. Man of the Hour
28. Merkinball
29. Not for You
30. Nothing as it Seems
31. Nothing as it Seems [limited edition]
32. Oceans
33. Off He Goes
34. Save You
35. Spin the Black Circle
36. Who You Are
37. Wishlist
Promos:
38. Light Years
Live:
39. Barcelona, Spain - May 25, 2000
40. Benaroya Hall
41. Detroit, Michigan - June 26, 2003
42. Dissident/Live in Atlanta
43. Dublin, Ireland - June 1, 2000
44. Hamburg, Germany - June 26, 2000
45. Indianapolis, Indiana - August 18, 2000
46. Katowice, Poland - June 15, 2000
47. Katowice Poland - June 16, 2000
48. Landgraaf, Holland - June 12, 2000
49. Live in NYC 12/31/92
50. Live on Two Legs
51. London, England May 29, 2000
52. London, England May 30, 2000
53. Manchester, England - April 6, 2000
54. Mansfield, Massachusetts - July 3, 2003
55. Mansfield, Massachusetts - July 11, 2003
56. Montreal, Quebec - June 29, 2003
57. Montreal, Quebec - October 4, 2000
58. New York, New York - July 8, 2003
59. New York, New York - July 9, 2003
60. Paris, France June 8, 2000
61. Perth, Australia - February 23, 2003
62. Salzburg, Austria - June 18, 2000
63. Seattle, Washington - November 6, 2000
64. State College Pennsylvania - May 3, 2003
65. Tampa, Florida - August 12, 2000
66. Tokyo, Japan - March 3, 2003
67. Toronto, Canada - October 5, 2000
68. Verona, Italy - June 20, 2000
69. Zurich, Switzerland - June 23, 2000
Bootlegs:
70. Alive and Kicking '95
71. All Night Thing
72. Eddie's Secrets
73. Live at the Ulu
74. New Songs
75. No Fuckin' Messiah
76. No Fuckin' Messiah 2
77. Yield Radio Special 56:37
Vinyls:
78. Alive [UK]
79. Life Wasted
80. Lost Dogs
81. Pearl Jam
Box Sets:
82. Live at the Gorge 05/06
--not pictured: Ten Super Deluxe Edition--
The insect collection of 19th century Texas naturalist Ludolph Heiligbrodt is housed at the University of Texas at Austin.
These three photos show most of my BrickArms weapons cache. I'm interested in selling, possibly trading, the rainbow transparent Weapons as well as the Chrome weapons and crate. The other photo covers most of what will be left in my Arsenal after 2 years of offloading at bricks Cascade. I am currently arranging a photo of all of the extra special weapons, including prototypes, over molds, short shot items, and one flamethrower :-) please send a direct message if you see anything you are interested in. Would only really be open to trades across for science fiction custom minifig items such as aliens, like Xenomorphs facehuggers Etc, or Colonial Space Marines items
Why Do I need them all?
Why do I feel so compelled?
I did this with Blythe stock boots too, Had to have them all at one point, But for some reason I cant bring myself to part with the Converse.
Its rediculous.
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Description :
These are collection from :
beta.news.yahoo.com/photos/volcano-ash-turns-asian-eclips...
Plz do no give Any credit to me for this Image, I am sharing these here as a Documentation ,And these Imges are Neither clicked in BANGLADESH nor Clicked by me, and I do not know the author therefore I share the collection Link for my viewers,
These are not for sale