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Neodymium Rare Earth Disc Magnets suspending my glasses from iron pole.
Tough subject Flickrfriday : /
FlickrFriday No. 227: #SummerVacations
If you´re looking for a quiet and modern hotel with a spectacular infinity-pool in a beautiful city with good weather guarantee - well, look somewhere else!
Seriously, as school holidays are still 4 weeks ahead, I spent a short weekend in Kassel and "dokumenta 14" (google if you like...).
The diving board on top of the old hotel is a statement and piece of art titled "ARSCHBOMBE" (translates: cannonball (?)) by Ralph Raabe from 2002.
Sound: Like Suicide by Soundgarden
This week's FlickrFriday theme is: #Jump
Le thème de ce FlickrFriday est: #Saut
O tema desta FlickrFriday é: #Pular
本次 FlickrFriday 主題: #跳
FlickrFriday-Thema der Woche: #Springen
El tema de FlickrFriday es: #Salto
Cadeau d'#Anniversaire
#FlickrFriday
#624
This week's FlickrFriday theme is: #Birthday
Le thème de ce FlickrFriday est: #Anniversaire
O tema desta FlickrFriday é: #Aniversário
本次 FlickrFriday 主題: #生日
FlickrFriday-Thema der Woche: #Geburtstag
El tema de FlickrFriday es: #Cumpleaños
Ten years after the death of Mary Maclennon ( 1823 - 1873 ) a second headstone was added, that of her ever loving husband John ( 1824 - 1883 )
Subframed by the Waterlily leaves.
“Water Lilies' is an extension of my life. Without the water the lilies cannot live, as I am without art.”
― Claude Monet
IMG_4751.jpgt.jpgp.jpgy
New office of the Picton Gazette in Picton, Ontario.
"Canada oldest weekly newspaper; serving Prince Edward County since 1830; locally owned - proudly independent."
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When you want to go to the bird feeder but the big boys are there and it feels a bit threatening, best to stick together and watch. It is a good idea for one of the group to keep an eye on the human as well.
The #FlickrFriday #chain challenge
The bugle is the simplest member of the brass instrument family, only being able to play notes from the first harmonic, equivalent to a trumpet being played without its valves being used. They were widely used in military camps and aboard ships before the advent of modern communications to signal instructions, sometimes amidst the noise and confusion of battle.
The mouthpieces of all except bespoke brass instruments are detachable, allowing musicians to select a mouthpiece to their precise requirements. This could create a problem for a military bugler. If the colonel were to instruct the advance to be sounded, that august officer would be unlikely to appreciate being informed that the bugler had lost his mouthpiece, without which the instrument is useless, hence the essential mouthpiece is chained to the instrument. The dents on this First World War bugle (wonder what stories it could tell?) suggest an active service spent being hung from webbing, dangled from nails hammered in walls, being dropped, clattered against fixtures within trenches, and being thrown hurriedly into bags. Losing the mouthpiece would have been a real danger but for the chain.
The photo of this instrument was window lit on a dull day with a plain black background shielded from the lighting to make the instrument stand out even more. General tweaks to the RAW file were made c/o Photoshop for enhancement.