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🎄 Thank You, Second Life Community! 🎄
This year, Brabos is honored to join Lelutka's 12 Days of Christmas event with a special gift for you: the Camden Gift Skin, made to perfectly complement Lelutka's new Camden Gift Head. Designed with care for the best fit this Christmas, the skin includes an array of extras, addons, and even a stubble option.
The tones are fully compatible with Velour and Not Found body skins, ensuring seamless integration into your favorite looks.
This is our way of showing gratitude for your incredible support—not just this year, but in all the years to come. None of this would be possible without you, the amazing Second Life community.
We also want to extend a heartfelt thank you to our fellow designers:
✨ Lelutka, for hosting this wonderful event and pushing creative boundaries.
✨ Not Found and Velour, for your exceptional dev kits that make compatibility and quality a reality.
From all of us at Brabos, thank you for inspiring us and allowing us to share our work with you. Here's to a festive season filled with joy, creativity, and connection!
💚 Happy Holidays, and see you in-world! 💚
– Team Brabos
Complemento natural de nuestra existencia.
Reto de tipo "Chema Madoz" para la clase de Fotografía Publicitaria. Universidad Central de Colombia.
to complement mcdonalds new caramel macchiato flavour mcflurry. See more Japanese candy pix on my blog prettyprettyyumyum.wordpress.com/
Rialto Beach/Black beach, Washington.
Can we learn from nature that color doesn't matter?
Tiny black pebbles make this beach black beach.
SOOC except cropping.
A little while back I acquired a Jupiter 12 lens for my Zorki 4K, to complement the excellent Jupiter 8, but this is the first photo I've posted that was taken with it. I don't have a turret viewfinder yet, and the viewfinder of the Zorki only gives the view for a 50mm lens, so for now composing shots with this lens involves a fair amount of guesswork. View large on black.
Zorki 4K with Jupiter 12 lens, f/16, 1/125 sec. Fuji Neopan 400, FA-1027 1+9 for 7.5 minutes at 20ºC.
The rows of young corn were complemented by the repeated pattern of shooting water from an irrigation sprinkler.
This is from yet another time when I got caught using the MP-E65mm lens to take the sharpest shots of very small bugs - and ended up finding something significantly larger that wouldn't fit in frame.
It's a female brimstone butterfly (Gonepteryx rhamni) refueling on a thistle near the boat pier at Lillsved in the northern part of the peninsula of Värmdö, just east of Stockholm, Sweden.
My mother treated me, the wife and my son to a most excellent lunch at Café Sjöstugan right next to the pier in late July and of course couldn't leave the camera at home.
Here is another shot to complement those I’ve been posting recently of the BNSF’s unique and very interesting Boeing Switch job. Despite the harsh backlight shooting into the morning sun here I though it was worth saving just to show the crew at work switching the Boeing Plant at the top of the hill. The pair of specially assigned geeps are seen with the 5 pack well on track 11 while assorted other cars of various dimensions are in the Boeing Yard that leads to a series of stub ended unloading dock tracks. Out of frame off to the left is even a turntable so the crew can spot a car and spin it if it arrives oriented the wrong direction for unloading. Amazingly all of this is readily viewable from the Boeing Perimeter Road grade crossing at the top of the hill and outside the plant fence.
Opened in 1967 initially to construct the giant new 747s it has been expanded several times over the decades and is presently home to the largest building in the world by volume at 472,370,319 cu ft! To learn more about the history of this plant I recommend this interesting article: airwaysmag.com/uncategorized/boeings-everett-plant-the-wo...
When Boeing chose the site beside Paine Field they needed transportation and the then Great Northern Railway built the spur from essentially sea level snaking up the side of the hill to the western edge of the new plant site at an elevation of 540 feet. At over 5.6% grade this spur is one of the steepest railroad lines in the country and has long been the domain of specially trained crews and specialty equipped locomotives. BNSF GP38-2s 2361 and 2081 are equipped with extended range dynamic brakes and are always positioned on the downhill end of the train. They have an assigned caboose which is used as a shoving platform and operate the equipment at passenger train brake pipe pressures of 110 psi among other things included in a special set of rules just for this job.
And while I'm sharing interesting facts here is something that is really cool. While some components travel cross country in the familiar brown covered flat cars the specialized containers, the largest of which are ultra wide at 24 ft arrive be sea right here in Mukilteo. So after being offloaded from ship to railcars at the Port of Everett's Mount Baker Terminal all they have to do is be pulled up and across the two main tracks at CP Mulkiteo and on to the Boeing Spur to reverse direction and shove up. The entire trip from dock to the plant is only about two miles which assuredly has to make this the shortest regular class 1 railroad haul anywhere in the country! Prior to the new dock opening these cars were loaded at Pier 1 up in Everett which required a four mile trip down the Scenic sub mainline which required all traffic to cease on both tracks whenever the wide 16 or 24 ft containers were moving. To learn more about the new dock this is a good link:
www.heraldnet.com/business/port-boeing-celebrate-containe...
Everett, Washington
Sunday June 5, 2011
This is a unique lighthouse on the shores of Burnham-on-sea.
After the Pillar Lighthouse building was completed it was found that too low a vantage point had been selected to take into account the massive rise and fall of the tides, so a lighthouse on legs was built in 1832 to complement the tower. The Low Lighthouse lights were inactive between 1969 and 1993 and were re-established on 31 December 1993.
The High Lighthouse lights were permanently discontinued at the same time. The lighthouse has a focal plane of 7m and provides a white flash every 7.5s plus a directional light (white, red, or green depending on direction) at a focal plane of 4m. The light is shown through a window at the front.The lighthouse is painted white with a single vertical red stripe on its front face and is 9m tall with a conical roof and mounted on 9 timber pilings.It remains an active aid to navigation and is visited by many thousands of walkers every year.
Just trying to barely stay in touch at the moment as I am moving back home and have too much to do in my hands at the moment. I am very grateful for everyone of you who faithfully drop by and check on me :) Thanks a lot for that! I will get regular after a few weeks. Till then..keep shooting..photographs that is...
EXIF - 30 sec f/11 ISO 50 20mm
Thanks for viewing and have a nice evening!
I made a great find of old cars yesterday. This 1957 Chev Bel Air is just one of many old classics tucked away on an acreage about half way between Lacombe, Alberta and Stettler, Alberta. This was one of my favorites to shoot because I found the autumn colors really complemented the blue car.
Happy Thanksgiving to all my Canadian friends...Have a safe and wonderful weekend, everyone!
The COVID-19 files | Scene captured during a short holiday break in the Dutch Veluwe region: green tree, purple heather, sand-coloured grass and actual sand complementing the blue sky above the Hoge Veluwe National Park.
FORNOLES-PINTURA-FÓRNOLS-MATARRAÑA-BALSA-MATARRANYA-PAISAJES-PUEBLOS-TERUEL-ARAGON-PAISAJES-CUADROS-ARTISTA-PINTOR-ERNEST DESCALS-
Al llegar al pueblo de FORNOLES ó FORNOLS, me encuentro con la Balsa que es uno de sus principales atractivos visuales, un lugar donde los árboles se reflejan en el agua del estanque con sugerentes sensaciones de frescura, al fondo la montaña con los restos del antiguo castillo, escenas de paz y sosiego que son muestras de la historia de esta población en la Comarca del Matarraña, pueblos y paisajes del Matarranya en Teruel, Aragón, España. El paisaje que contiene agua siempre produce la alegría interior, junto a al cielo de fuerte luminosidad, quiero Pintar este lugar de tanta belleza plástica y poética. Pintura del artista Pintor ERNEST DESCALS en el viajar por estas comarcas limítrofes al sur de Catalunya, cuadros sobre papel de 50 x 65 centímetros que van complementando el amplio catálogo de Pinturas con los símbolos de la personalidad histórica y vital del Matarraña.
The best complement one can be given on a photo is “that looks Photoshopped”, to which the best reply is, “here look at someone else’s shot of the exact same thing.” But this really was an amazing, once-or-twice-in-a-lifetime experience since there was no snow on Glacier Point and the moon was rising to the right side of Half Dome. It was even better sharing it with John Moore and Jeff Sullivan (and his girlfriend). It was cold, and quite and the moon had the ability to draw ooooh ‘s and ahhhh’s from everyone in the crowd. Then we drove back down the road, almost hit a wolf and then ate at a diner. Good times.
Next trip, Vegas!
Complementing a already uploaded shot of it on St. Mirren St, McGill's ex-Bus Éireann Cadet J5518 prepares to pull away from Gauze/High St with a Gallowhill-bound 20 in early December 2016.
The last of it's type in service with the company and like Trident I9954 a few images back, would be withdrawn by the end of the month.
Photo Date: 6th December 2016
Complements of the site owner, Darth and Yoda have not taken to flight this 2014 Annual Balloon Fiesta as yet 2nd day mass ascension cancelled due to unfavorable winds aloft, safety reasons, Nikon and innovation from the photographer have provided a conceptual presentation Just For You !
Those tire stacks are either totally new, or they never were painted like that before. I don't remember seeing them last time I was there. This is the entry to what would be turn 2
#84 JDC-Miller Motorsports Cadillac DPi, DPi: Simon Trummer, Stephen Simpson, Chris Miller
IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship
Motul Petit Le Mans
Road Atlanta, Braselton, GA, USA
Thursday October 10, 2019
World Copyright: Peter Burke
LAT Images
And here's the westbound complement to the previous picture. Amtrak train 63, the Toronto-bound Maple Leaf, accelerates from the Syracuse station and rounds the curve at Onondaga Lake being P42 No. 101. Never thought the day would come when it was said "get those Genesis units while you can"... strange days indeed.
This series complements my award-winning guidebook, Chicago in Stone and Clay: A Guide to the Windy City's Architectural Geology. Henceforth I'll just call it CSC.
The CSC section and page reference for the building featured here: 15.8; pp. 246-249.
Looking northwestward at the eastern and southern elevations.
Of the many fine late-nineteenth-century residences still on view in the Windy City, the Richardsonian Romanesque Rickcords House in the Gold Coast neighborhood holds the distinction of being a rare surviving example of the use of that hardest of architectural stones, the Montello Granite.
The Montello, quarried in the central-Wisconsin town of that name, formed from a body of magma associated with a violent eruptive event in the Paleoproterozoic era, about 1.76 Ga ago. This cataclysmic episode in the complex geologic history of the Badger State blanketed its region with rhyolite and welded tuff (fused volcanic ash). Apparently it was triggered not by the usual process of plate convergence, but by crustal thinning—possibly caused by a process known as slab rollback.
While the particular mass of molten rock that became the granite did not reach the surface before it cooled, its geochemistry is essentally the same as that of the extrusive material that did. What makes the Montello Granite both so hard to work and so durable is its abnormally high quartz content. It was also favored—and much more frequently used—for monuments and cemetery headstones.
For considerably more on this site, get and read Chicago in Stone and Clay, described at its Cornell University Press webpage.
The other photos and discussions in this series can be found in my "Chicago in Stone and Clay" Companion album. In addition, you'll find other relevant images and descriptions in my Architectural Geology: Chicago album.
Model: Egle Andreikaite
MakeUp & Hair: María Luisa Peña Makeup / Maquillaje Profesional
Diseñadora De Alta Costura: Susana Hidalgo
Complementos: Martina Dorta
Photo & Retouch: Javier Jayma
With a full complement of sixty two aircraft aboard her, newly commissioned US Navy Nuclear powered Aircraft Carrier, the USS Nimitz 'CVAN-68' moored in Stokes Bay in The Solent back in October 1975
Named in honour of Chester W. Nimitz, embarked for a North Atlantic cruise was Air Wing CVW-8 with the tail code 'AJ' and consisting of:
HS-15 'Red Lions' with 7 x Sikorsky SH-3H Sea King helicopters
VMFA-333 'Fighting Shamrocks' with 10 x USMC McDonnell-Douglas F-4J Phantoms
Also aboard were 3 x F-4J 'AC' coded Phantoms of VF-31 'Tomcatters'
VA-82 'Marauders' with 10 x LTV A-7E Corsair II plus 10 more of VA-86 'Sidewinders'
VA-35 'Black Panthers' with 8 x Grumman A-6E Intruders plus 3 x KA-6D tanker versions
RVAH-9 'Hoot Owls' with 2 x North American RA-5C Vigilantes
VAQ-130 'Zappers' with 4 x Grumman EA-6B Prowlers
VAW-116 'Sun Kings' with 4 x Grumman E-2B Hawkeyes
and finally the carrier's own 'COD' - a Grumman C-1A Trader
Scanned Kodak 35mm Transparency
Nevilles Pond, Paradise, Newfoundland
If you remember the other day I posted about my experience with the lone Eurasian Wigeon at Nevilles Pond. As he became more and more comfortable with my presence I soon found myself only a few feet away from him as we both sat at the waters edge. Peaking my lens around the tall grass between us I framed him in my camera. Keeping in mind the colors in its head feathers I decided to use a patch of dieing grass in the far distance that had a yellowish orange hue to it as my background.
Being aware of the elements in a scene and what will make up your background can complete change the feel of an image.
**Feel free to comment, like and share with all your nature loving friends**http://art.newfoundlandcanvas.com/gallery/bradjames/
Complemento a la foto anterior pero esta vez centrada exclusivamente en los dos trenes que se acercaban circulando en paralelo.
Como complemento a la foto que ha subido Jorge, os pongo la toma trasera de las "Ferroviales" de hoy.
La 335.032 remolcando a la 313.021 (ex. 1321). desde Valencia FSL a Vicálvaro.
Ciempozuelos 10.10.2012
Last May 2025, as a complement to the festivities of the city's patron saint, San Isidro, the 43rd edition of the "Cacharrería Fair" was held, where we could find stalls selling ceramics from all over Spain.
On the left side, you can see part of the façade of the convent of the nuns "Commendadoras de la Orden de Santiago," patron saint of Spain, after whom the square where this fair is held is named.
This convent was founded in 1584, but it wasn't occupied by the first nuns, from Valladolid, until 1650.
These first nuns arrived thanks to the decision of Blessed María Ana de Jesús, who saw some traveling stars in the sky, which she interpreted as "messengers of God's will."
During the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939), the building suffered significant damage, its artwork was looted, and it was used as a "people's prison" or "Cheka."
Later, in the postwar period, it was used as a jail for Republican prisoners until 1941.
This convent and its church, in honor of the Apostle Saint James, were declared a Historic-Artistic Monument in 1970.
You can see part of the facade of that church in a reddish tone in the center of the image.
Between 2009 and 2020, several restoration and consolidation works were carried out. (Source: Wikipedia)
PLAZA DE LAS COMENDADORAS, MADRID, 2025 (2)
El pasado mes de mayo de 2025, como complemento a las fiestas del patrono de la ciudad, San Isidro, se ha celebrado la 43º edición de la "Feria de la Cacharrería", donde pudimos encontrar puestos de venta de artistas de cerámica de toda España.
En el lado izquierdo se puede ver parte de la fachada del convento de las monjas "Comendadoras de la Orden de Santiago", patrono de España, que da nombre a la plaza en la que se celebra esta feria.
Este convento fue fundado en 1584, pero no fue ocupado por las primeras monjas, procedentes de Valladolid hasta 1650.
Estas primeras monjas llegaron gracias a la decisión de la beata María Ana de Jesús vio unas estrellas viajeras en el cielo, que interpretó como "mensajeras de la voluntad de Dios".
Durante la Guerra Civil española (1936-1939), el edificio sufrió importantes desperfectos, sus obras de arte fueron saqueadas y fue usado como "cárcel del pueblo" o "Cheka".
Posteriormente, en la postguerra, fue usado como cárcel de prisioneros republicanos hasta 1941.
Este convento y su iglesia, en honor del apóstol Santiago, fue declarado Monumento histórico artístico en 1970.
Se puede ver parte de la fachada de esa iglesia en tono rojizo en el centro de la imagen.
Entre 2009 y 2020 se han hecho varias obras de restauración y consolidación. (Fuente: Wikipedia)
The 2014 Doddington Hall Sculpture Exhibition at Doddington Hall, a Grade I listed Elizabethan mansion complete with walled courtyards and a gabled gatehouse. In Doddington, North Kesteven, Lincolnshire.
The Sculpture Exhibitions are held every two years and feature carefully selected national and international sculptors to complement each area and to provide an eclectic exhibition to suit all tastes, styles, and budgets.
Curator David Waghorne arranged the outdoor pieces taking full advantage of the Doddington Hall back drop and the large and varied gardens. Almost every piece on exhibition is for sale.
Information Source:
"Na ciência das cores, duas cores são chamadas complementares se, quando misturadas, produzem o preto, o branco ou alguma graduação de cinza. Nos sistemas de cores mais perceptíveis, o branco está no centro do espectro e as cores complementares se situam uma ao lado oposto da outra.
Nos sistemas RGB e CMY, as primárias de um sistema são secundárias do outro e vice-versa. Desta maneira, afirma-se que são complementares os seguintes pares de cores:
Vermelho e Ciano
Verde e Magenta
Azul e Amarelo
Como no decorrer da história havia poucos pigmentos disponíveis - cores como o magenta e o ciano são muito raras na natureza - os artistas ainda hoje costumam usar outros pares de cores complementares, a saber:
Azul e Laranja
Vermelho e Verde
Amarelo e Violeta (ou Roxo)
O uso de cores complementares é um aspecto importante para a beleza na arte e no design gráfico. Quando são colocadas uma ao lado da outra, os complementos aparecem contrastantes.
Imagens negativas
Quando alguém fixa os olhos em uma cor única por um período de tempo (30 segundos até um minuto são suficientes) e depois olha para uma superfície branca, uma imagem com a cor complementar vai aparecer. Isto ocorre porque os fotorreceptores de uma cor na retina são fatigados, perdendo a habilidade de enviar informação ao cérebro. Quando a luz branca é vista, as porções daquela cor incidentes no olho não são transmitidas eficientemente como as outras cores, e o resultado é a ilusão de ver a cor complementar. Quando os receptores permanecem em repouso por algum tempo, a ilusão desaparece."
(Wikipédia)
(Updated on May 14, 2024)
This series complements my recently published guidebook, Milwaukee in Stone and Clay: A Guide to the Cream City's Architectural Geology. Henceforth I'll just call it MSC.
The MSC section and page references for the building featured here: 8.21; pp. 211-212.
In the Northpoint neighborhood.
One of my favorite dissonances in American residential architecture is what I call the Tudorranean style. In Milwaukee, the Wiswell House is its exemplar.
Wonderfully gloomy Lake Superior Brownstone and half-timbered Tudor gables have been set against jarringly cheerful Mediterranean terra-cotta roof tiles. It may seem the design equivalent of adding tabasco sauce to chocolate mousse, but it works. And architects Ferry & Clas knew it.
Geologically speaking, the maroon ashlar is Chequamegon Sandstone quarried on the Lake Superior littoral at the Prentice Quarry in North Washburn, Wisconsin. It belongs to the great sequence of clastic sedimentary strata that overlie the lava flows of the Midcontinent Rift.
For decades, the Chequamegon's age was "poorly constrained," which means it was difficult to pin down. Because it lacks index fossils and other traditionally sought-after clues, estimates of its antiquity ranged from the latest Mesoproterozoic to the Cambrian—a span of over half a billion years.
Fortunately, one newer technique, detrital-zircon analysis, has now established the Chequamegon's maximum depositional age as 1.039 Ga. This means that it is either very late Mesoproterozoic or early Neoproterozoic.
The roof tiles are unsourced, but probably were manufactured by either Ludowici or Celadon. At the time the Wiswell House was constructed, these were the two leading Midwestern producers.
This site and many others in Milwaukee County are discussed at greater length in Milwaukee in Stone and Clay (NIU Imprint of Cornell University Press).
The other photos and discussions in this series can be found in my "Milwaukee in Stone and Clay" Companion album. Also, while you're at it, check out my Architectural Geology of Milwaukee album, too. It contains quite a few photos and descriptions of Cream City sites highlighted in other series of mine.
Gardens by the Bay consists of three distinctive waterfront gardens – Bay South, Bay East and Bay Central, spanning a total of 101 hectares. They are set in the heart of Singapore’s new downtown Marina Bay, encircling the Marina Reservoir like a green necklace. The Gardens will complement the array of attractions around Marina Bay.
Gardens by the Bay is an integral part of a strategy by the Singapore government that further transforms Singapore from a ‘Garden City’ to a ‘City in a Garden’, in which the city is woven into a green and floral tapestry. This aims to raise the quality of life in Singapore with a more holistic and all-encompassing programme that enhances greenery and flora in the city. First announced to the public by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong during the National Day Rally in August 2005, Gardens by the Bay will become Singapore’s premier urban outdoor recreation space, and a national icon.
An international competition for the design of the master plan was held in January 2006 to elicit the best designs for the Gardens. This attracted more than 70 entries submitted by 170 firms from 24 countries, from which two firms – Grant Associates and Gustafson Porter – were eventually awarded the master plan design for the Bay South and Bay East Gardens respectively.
The Gardens are being developed in phases. Bay South is currently being constructed and is slated to be completed by June 2012. Bay East has been developed as an interim park in support of the Youth Olympic Games 2010, and is scheduled to open to the public in late 2011 or early 2012. The full master plan implementation of Bay East and the development of Bay Central are part of the next phase of development.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia......
Some information about singapore
Singapore, officially the Republic of Singapore, is a Southeast Asian city-state off the southern tip of the Malay Peninsula, 137 kilometres (85 mi) north of the equator. An island country made up of 63 islands, it is separated from Malaysia by the Straits of Johor to its north and from Indonesia's Riau Islands by the Singapore Strait to its south. Singapore is highly urbanised but almost half of the country is covered by greenery. More land is being created for development through land reclamation.
Singapore had been a part of various local empires since it was first inhabited in the second century AD. Modern Singapore was founded as a trading post of the East India Company by Sir Stamford Raffles in 1819 with permission from the Sultanate of Johor. The British obtained full sovereignty over the island in 1824 and Singapore became one of the British Straits Settlements in 1826. Singapore was occupied by the Japanese in World War II and reverted to British rule after the war. It became internally self-governing in 1959. Singapore united with other former British territories to form Malaysia in 1963 and became a fully independent state two years later after separation from Malaysia. Since then it has had a massive increase in wealth, and is one of the Four Asian Tigers. The economy depends heavily on the industry and service sectors. Singapore is a world leader in several areas: It is the world's fourth-leading financial centre, the world's second-biggest casino gambling market, and the world's third-largest oil refining centre. The port of Singapore is one of the five busiest ports in the world, most notable for being the busiest transshipment port in the world. The country is home to more US dollar millionaire households per capita than any other country. The World Bank notes Singapore as the easiest place in the world to do business. The country has the world's third highest GDP PPP per capita of US$59,936, making Singapore one of the world's wealthiest countries.
As cores complementares são aquelas que são opostas, mas combinam perfeitamente entre si... então fikadika pra quem gosta de seguir o estilo Raema, ou pra qualquer outra nail art, ou combinação, que use 2 ou mais cores...
Ex: vermelho combina com o verde médio, laranja com azil acinzentado, violeta com amarelo, e por aí vai...
Se quiser usar mais de 2 cores vc pode usar as complementares, mais a cor ao lado de uma delas, ex: violeta, amarelo e magenta... combinam... ;)
“Ordinary riches can be stolen, real riches cannot. In your soul are infinitely precious things that cannot be taken from you.”
Oscar Wilde (Irish Poet, Novelist, Dramatist and Critic, 1854-1900)
The Morning Sun beamed down behind me and reflected its intensity on this bush rendering it as on fire while the clouds in the background complement as the rising smoke, deeper the orange glow is indeed the belly of the Fire
Anima Series 6
Lismore NSW Australia 2024
For many people art is decoration.
It’s the print that complements their decor or the mass-produced objet d'art that can always be replaced if it breaks.
Yet the power of art extends from everyday examples like these to life-changing encounters that alter our perception or even the way we think.
How many times have we listened to a song that moved us to tears, or read a book, watched a movie, viewed a painting that we remember for life?
Some examples of art have the capacity to enrich our experience and expand our understanding, yet not necessarily in ways that are comfortable.
Some art is powerful enough to shock.
It can challenge our senses in ways that disturb or confuse.
It can expose us to mental dissonance or a failure to even recognise what we’re seeing.
On occasions it can upset or offend, pushing past our ability to take something in.
Not all art is pleasurable, and we may complain, criticise, lobby for censorship ………. but it will be something we remember regardless.
Sometimes it takes a bit of shock, a bit of hardship to reach a higher understanding.
Complementing the previous upload, here is another Scotstoun-based B7RLE, this time 69104, on one of the evening westbound 6Bs that terminated at Baljaffray (two usually did so as far as memory serves, with a 3rd on schooldays only).
Caught at the famous Watt Bros. stop on Hope St before departure. The 6B would be withdrawn 9 days later (October 16th).
Photo Date: 7th October 2015