View allAll Photos Tagged Eyetest
......taken before my appointment with the eye specialist.
For the All New Scavenger Hunt #13 At eye level
Visit to the eye doctor. She squirted the liquid in the eyes and you have to sit there for 15 minutes to give the pupils time to open fully. Kind of a Noctilux view after that. The 35f1.4 had to substitute for the Nocti - full aperture shot.
I have nothing to say about this - I do, I just dont want to - so Il let you make of it what you will.
( if you like my stuff you can follow me on facebook - www.facebook.com/home.php#/pages/The-Ninth-House/13701525...
Title: Eye examination at the School Travelling Ophthalmic Clinic
Dated: 1914
Digital ID: 4880_a004_a004000013r
Series: NRS 4480 Photographs of the School Travelling Ophthalmic Clinic
Rights: No known copyright restrictions www.records.nsw.gov.au/about-us/rights-and-permissions
We'd love to hear from you if you use our photos/documents.
Many other photos in our collection are available to view and browse on our website using Photo Investigator.
You know the scene in Harry Potter when he received an avalanche of invites from Hogworts? Well, that has been me and the cards from Specsavers about an overdue eyetest.
So, along with an emergency dental appointment, I took most of Monday off, with Jools dropping me off midway between St Maggies and Dover, so I could safely walk into town, as no roads or lanes have pavements, so this being the only safe way.
I had time, so once at the cliffs, I sat on a bench and looked at the comings and goings, and a guy base-jumping off the cliff. No idea if he survived, but his partner filmed the leap.
He had a go-pro on his helmet, which made me think he was a cyclist at first, and I was going to tell him off for cycling along the cliffs.
There we no screams of despair after he jumped, so he must have survived. A Google search revealed another base jumper only just survived after his chute failed in 2018, falling to the beach in St Maggies.
I walked on, down into Langdon Hole, with clouds of Chalkhills scattering from each footfall. And there was me saying at the weekend I hadn't seen any.
Down below in the harbour, ferries came and went, and line of cars and motorhomes lined up to check in and board. No queues for freight.
And to the north, a small cruise ships approaches the harbour to dock at the cruise terminal and load up with a fresh set of passengers.
I went for my annual eye test today. This machine takes a photo of the inside of my eye.
The optician said that my eyes are fine and there's been no change since last year.
You know the scene in Harry Potter when he received an avalanche of invites from Hogworts? Well, that has been me and the cards from Specsavers about an overdue eyetest.
So, along with an emergency dental appointment, I took most of Monday off, with Jools dropping me off midway between St Maggies and Dover, so I could safely walk into town, as no roads or lanes have pavements, so this being the only safe way.
I had time, so once at the cliffs, I sat on a bench and looked at the comings and goings, and a guy base-jumping off the cliff. No idea if he survived, but his partner filmed the leap.
He had a go-pro on his helmet, which made me think he was a cyclist at first, and I was going to tell him off for cycling along the cliffs.
There we no screams of despair after he jumped, so he must have survived. A Google search revealed another base jumper only just survived after his chute failed in 2018, falling to the beach in St Maggies.
I walked on, down into Langdon Hole, with clouds of Chalkhills scattering from each footfall. And there was me saying at the weekend I hadn't seen any.
Down below in the harbour, ferries came and went, and line of cars and motorhomes lined up to check in and board. No queues for freight.
And to the north, a small cruise ships approaches the harbour to dock at the cruise terminal and load up with a fresh set of passengers.
The Quarry Hospital Museum - The pioneering Dinorwig Quarry Hospital is now a museum housing some of the original equipment from the 1800's. Restored Ward and Operating Theatre, original X-Ray Machine and other bits of gruesome medical equipment, park related exhibitions and a Mortuary! This old hospital in Llanberis was for the men who worked at the Dinorwig Quarry in the 19th and 20th centuries. The idea was to have a hospital close to their place of work so they could get back to work as soon as possible after they received treatment. There were over 3,000 workers in the Dinorwig quarry and there were a lot of accidents - broken bones, lost fingers, crush injuries and worse. The Dinorwig hospital remained until the coming of the NHS in the 1950s. These Jackson Focus Tubes were part of the x-ray machine in Dinorwig Quarry Hospital in 1898. They are of particular interest as it was only in 1895 that x-rays were discovered in Germany and that this is one of the earliest evidence of their use in the United Kingdom.
Published in the January 1961 Meccano Magazine. Being ignorant on naval semaphore codes, I wonder if those are indeed the letters in question?
Eyecare at Home is a London-based company specialising in mobile optical care for patients at home and in nursing and residential care. Our team of optometrists and dispensing opticians are fully trained and accredited, with the necessary experience to ensure each patient receives an exceptional personal service
Yes - that is my bicycle on the left. With the Tokina 10-17, you get **everything** in the picture if you are not careful.....lucky not to have my feet in it!
This Digital Art work Created by Auro Kumar Sahoo with Inkscape and GIMP.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License
You know the scene in Harry Potter when he received an avalanche of invites from Hogworts? Well, that has been me and the cards from Specsavers about an overdue eyetest.
So, along with an emergency dental appointment, I took most of Monday off, with Jools dropping me off midway between St Maggies and Dover, so I could safely walk into town, as no roads or lanes have pavements, so this being the only safe way.
I had time, so once at the cliffs, I sat on a bench and looked at the comings and goings, and a guy base-jumping off the cliff. No idea if he survived, but his partner filmed the leap.
He had a go-pro on his helmet, which made me think he was a cyclist at first, and I was going to tell him off for cycling along the cliffs.
There we no screams of despair after he jumped, so he must have survived. A Google search revealed another base jumper only just survived after his chute failed in 2018, falling to the beach in St Maggies.
I walked on, down into Langdon Hole, with clouds of Chalkhills scattering from each footfall. And there was me saying at the weekend I hadn't seen any.
Down below in the harbour, ferries came and went, and line of cars and motorhomes lined up to check in and board. No queues for freight.
And to the north, a small cruise ships approaches the harbour to dock at the cruise terminal and load up with a fresh set of passengers.
I reach the end of the Cliff Road and climb the path towards the NT building, then turn left along the path before taking the steep path down towards Eastcliff and Athol Terrace.
It is easier going down.
Just.
Under Jubilee Way and out of what little breeze there was, it was hot. I had 45 minutes to get to the opticians.
I walked along Eastcliff, past the multi-coloured houses cowering under the cliffs, along Townwall Street before cutting through the St James Development. I can report that the site of the old leisure centre looks like it is going to be another car park.
As is the site of the old Co-Op, which was the site of an indoor craft market, but that too now has been razed and looked like being a car park too.
The car parks we already have are not full, as the council lets stuff being built in Whitfield.
I walk down Castle Street, then along Biggen Street to the optician, where they get me in early.
And then the blinding machine broke, and it took half an hour to fix, by which time my slot had closed.
Can you come back another time?
Whaaa?
I now had two hours to kill before my dental appointment, so I went for lunch, had a cheese toastie at a place looking out onto the Market Square, where they have repaved it, taken down the large TV stand, the TV went years ago, and the fountain. We will now have large silver hoops.
170_365 I had my eye exam at Kaiser today and Kaiser doesn't seem to think I need glasses. I disagree. I know I could see better than I am. Costco eye doctor, here I come.
You know the scene in Harry Potter when he received an avalanche of invites from Hogworts? Well, that has been me and the cards from Specsavers about an overdue eyetest.
So, along with an emergency dental appointment, I took most of Monday off, with Jools dropping me off midway between St Maggies and Dover, so I could safely walk into town, as no roads or lanes have pavements, so this being the only safe way.
I had time, so once at the cliffs, I sat on a bench and looked at the comings and goings, and a guy base-jumping off the cliff. No idea if he survived, but his partner filmed the leap.
He had a go-pro on his helmet, which made me think he was a cyclist at first, and I was going to tell him off for cycling along the cliffs.
There we no screams of despair after he jumped, so he must have survived. A Google search revealed another base jumper only just survived after his chute failed in 2018, falling to the beach in St Maggies.
I walked on, down into Langdon Hole, with clouds of Chalkhills scattering from each footfall. And there was me saying at the weekend I hadn't seen any.
Down below in the harbour, ferries came and went, and line of cars and motorhomes lined up to check in and board. No queues for freight.
And to the north, a small cruise ships approaches the harbour to dock at the cruise terminal and load up with a fresh set of passengers.
A) I never use flickr anymore. for more of my work go to www.behance.net/stephaphotography or my website www.lifefromoneeye.com
B) The last 6 weeks I have been on board the MV Pacific Link. To many this vessel might look like a dingy japanese fishing ship, looking rather out of place in the salt water rivers of PNG, but to thousands of people in the Gulf Province in Papua New Guinea, It looked like a beacon of hope and Gods love in action.
The YWAM ( Youth With A Mission ) Medical ship has spent the last number of weeks operating around remote villages in the Gulf, providing not only primary healthcare, cataract surgeries and dental services, but we also have been able to go into villages to test peoples eyes and give them used prescription glasses that we collected over the past year, all for free!
To many, restoring their vision meant restoring their lives. People here rely heavily on sharp eye sight as a way of life. Clear vision means being able to fish and provide for their families, clear vision means a child can get an education and be able to enroll back in school.
This was just one of the smiling faces I was privileged to capture, It was so amazing to be able to give back to this nation that so richly blessed me when I visited last year.
Micky Maus / Heft-Reihe
Copyright: Walt Disney 1960
EHAPA Verlag
(Stuttgart / Deutschland)
ex libris MTP
Mid-adult African-American doctor with clipboard and Caucasion mid-adult female patient in doctor's office looking at viewer and smiling.
You know the scene in Harry Potter when he received an avalanche of invites from Hogworts? Well, that has been me and the cards from Specsavers about an overdue eyetest.
So, along with an emergency dental appointment, I took most of Monday off, with Jools dropping me off midway between St Maggies and Dover, so I could safely walk into town, as no roads or lanes have pavements, so this being the only safe way.
I had time, so once at the cliffs, I sat on a bench and looked at the comings and goings, and a guy base-jumping off the cliff. No idea if he survived, but his partner filmed the leap.
He had a go-pro on his helmet, which made me think he was a cyclist at first, and I was going to tell him off for cycling along the cliffs.
There we no screams of despair after he jumped, so he must have survived. A Google search revealed another base jumper only just survived after his chute failed in 2018, falling to the beach in St Maggies.
I walked on, down into Langdon Hole, with clouds of Chalkhills scattering from each footfall. And there was me saying at the weekend I hadn't seen any.
Down below in the harbour, ferries came and went, and line of cars and motorhomes lined up to check in and board. No queues for freight.
And to the north, a small cruise ships approaches the harbour to dock at the cruise terminal and load up with a fresh set of passengers.
I reach the end of the Cliff Road and climb the path towards the NT building, then turn left along the path before taking the steep path down towards Eastcliff and Athol Terrace.
It is easier going down.
Just.
Under Jubilee Way and out of what little breeze there was, it was hot. I had 45 minutes to get to the opticians.
I walked along Eastcliff, past the multi-coloured houses cowering under the cliffs, along Townwall Street before cutting through the St James Development. I can report that the site of the old leisure centre looks like it is going to be another car park.
As is the site of the old Co-Op, which was the site of an indoor craft market, but that too now has been razed and looked like being a car park too.
The car parks we already have are not full, as the council lets stuff being built in Whitfield.
I walk down Castle Street, then along Biggen Street to the optician, where they get me in early.
And then the blinding machine broke, and it took half an hour to fix, by which time my slot had closed.
Can you come back another time?
Whaaa?
I now had two hours to kill before my dental appointment, so I went for lunch, had a cheese toastie at a place looking out onto the Market Square, where they have repaved it, taken down the large TV stand, the TV went years ago, and the fountain. We will now have large silver hoops.
You know the scene in Harry Potter when he received an avalanche of invites from Hogworts? Well, that has been me and the cards from Specsavers about an overdue eyetest.
So, along with an emergency dental appointment, I took most of Monday off, with Jools dropping me off midway between St Maggies and Dover, so I could safely walk into town, as no roads or lanes have pavements, so this being the only safe way.
I had time, so once at the cliffs, I sat on a bench and looked at the comings and goings, and a guy base-jumping off the cliff. No idea if he survived, but his partner filmed the leap.
He had a go-pro on his helmet, which made me think he was a cyclist at first, and I was going to tell him off for cycling along the cliffs.
There we no screams of despair after he jumped, so he must have survived. A Google search revealed another base jumper only just survived after his chute failed in 2018, falling to the beach in St Maggies.
I walked on, down into Langdon Hole, with clouds of Chalkhills scattering from each footfall. And there was me saying at the weekend I hadn't seen any.
Down below in the harbour, ferries came and went, and line of cars and motorhomes lined up to check in and board. No queues for freight.
And to the north, a small cruise ships approaches the harbour to dock at the cruise terminal and load up with a fresh set of passengers.
I reach the end of the Cliff Road and climb the path towards the NT building, then turn left along the path before taking the steep path down towards Eastcliff and Athol Terrace.
It is easier going down.
Just.
Under Jubilee Way and out of what little breeze there was, it was hot. I had 45 minutes to get to the opticians.
I walked along Eastcliff, past the multi-coloured houses cowering under the cliffs, along Townwall Street before cutting through the St James Development. I can report that the site of the old leisure centre looks like it is going to be another car park.
As is the site of the old Co-Op, which was the site of an indoor craft market, but that too now has been razed and looked like being a car park too.
The car parks we already have are not full, as the council lets stuff being built in Whitfield.
Some colour is visible but this pic shows mostly how incredibly easily the msc is damaged on a tan doll >.<
I got my eyes tested yesterday morning, and picked out a new pair of glasses at the local optometrist's. After the eyetest, I had to wait while the man measured up the lenses of my old multifocals and did the paperwork (on a computer), so I spent the time with camera in hand.
Passed my 2-yearly eye test to allow me to continue to drive minibuses. Unlike cars where you only have to read a number plate at a certain distance, this one was thorough and took about 45 mins. I thought it was an insurance requirement, but seems to be a DVLA requirement for certain classes of vehicles. This instrument is a phoropter, an instrument commonly used by eye care professionals during an eye examination, containing different lenses used for refraction of the eye during sight testing, to measure an individual's refractive error and determine his or her eyeglass prescription.
featured as 'video of the day' on Steven Van Zandt's Underground Garage
Please take a moment to watch this video, and 'like' it if the spirit moves you. This is the first single from my forthcoming album 'Right On, Alright'.
All doll photography, set design & editing, music/lyrics & performance: Dina Regine. additional stock photos Ali & Frazier courtesy Wikipedia, stock footage: Shutterstock. feat Tim Luntzel (bass), Dan Rieser (drums), Jon Cowherd (B3), Erik Lawrence (sax), Briggan Krauss (baritone sax), Frank London (trumpet), and Dina Regine (vocals, guitars), GUMBY (good vibes) and of course, starring Barbie and badboy Ken. Video can also be seen on YouTube
Dina's main homepage www.dinaregine.com
listen to Dina Regine music here: www.soundcloud.com/dina-regine
see more of Dina's photographs here: www.dinareginephotography.com