View allAll Photos Tagged FoodStore
A documentary pic from the first shopping in the bezobalu.org shop. We got fed up with the amount of packaging material we have to throw away every day. This shop allows to buy food and take it home in brought-in containers. Small step, but if everyone did similar, the waste would be greatly reduced.
The Eco Cooler is an innovative new hand made terracotta fruit bowl and root vegetable store with natural cooling properties.
Water Poured in the bottom plate is absorbed by the terracotta. As the water evaporates it cools helping to create the ideal cool, damp, dark environment to store potatoes, onions, garlic, swede and other root vegetables inside. Root vegetables last longer if stored 3-4 degrees below room temperature and in an environment a little warmer than a fridge.
Fruit likes to be slightly chilled, but stored in the open air and light, so Eco Cooler has a bowl on top which cools fruit just a couple of degrees.
At 250mm height and 280mm diameter, Eco Cooler acts as a mini-larder. It is designed by RCA graduate David Weatherhead and hand made in Britain.
Available in White and Pale Blue finish on the interior.
Visit BeMoreEco for more Info
Originally Ashford Society, subsequently Invicta Society; closed December 2004 and replaced by new foodstore opposite.
Midlands Co-op Foodstore, Eccleshall, 2011. This fairly new store replaced a much smaller older shop nearby.
FEAST
881 Queen St. W.
Toronto, ON
(647) 350-1881
thisisafeast.com
Twitter: @thisisafeast
Owners: Neil Lomas and Wendy Zeh
Introducing for Toronto Life: www.torontolife.com/daily-dish/food-shops-daily-dish/2014...
050618-N-6009S-006
Coral Sea (June 18, 2005) - Supply Department personnel use a vertical conveyer to lower stores to a cargo hold during a replenishment at sea aboard the conventionally powered aircraft carrier USS Kitty Hawk (CV 63). Kitty Hawk is currently operating in the Coral Sea in support of Exercise Talisman Sabre 2005. Talisman Sabre is an exercise jointly sponsored by the U.S. Pacific Command and Australian Defense Force Joint Operations Command, and designed to train the U.S. Seventh Fleet commander's staff and Australian Joint Operations staff as a designated Combined Task Force (CTF) headquarters. The exercise focuses on crisis action planning and execution of contingency response operations. U.S. Pacific Command units and Australian forces will conduct land, sea and air training throughout the training area. More than 11,000 U.S. and 6,000 Australian personnel will participate. U.S. Navy photo by Photographer's Mate 1st Class Hana'lei Shimana (RELEASED)
The Ferry Building Marketplace is a people's marketplace serving residents and travelers alike. Located within the historic Ferry Building at the foot of Market Street, shops large and small celebrate food in all its forms, offering everything from artisan cheeses to the freshest of local fish.
AUSTRALIAN ART ORCHESTRA
AZYMUTH & MARCOS VALLE
BAKER BOY
BULLHORN
EISHAN ENSEMBLE
ELECTRIC FIELDS
GABY MORENO
GLASS BEAMS
GOANNA
JOSEPH TAWADROS W/ THE ADELAIDE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
L.A.B
LULUC
MOTEZ (LIVE)
SORONG SAMARAI
SPRINGTIME
SUB-TRIBE
VICTOR MARTINEZ PARADA
AUSTRALIAN ART ORCHESTRA
AZYMUTH & MARCOS VALLE
BAKER BOY
BULLHORN
EISHAN ENSEMBLE
ELECTRIC FIELDS
GABY MORENO
GLASS BEAMS
GOANNA
JOSEPH TAWADROS W/ THE ADELAIDE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
L.A.B
LULUC
MOTEZ (LIVE)
SORONG SAMARAI
SPRINGTIME
SUB-TRIBE
VICTOR MARTINEZ PARADA
formally Windy Nook & District Society, then Windy Nook & Felling and Newcastle Societysubsequently North Eastern Society.
This branch was originally a foodstore.
I first was aware of this store when it became a Wherehouse music store. (Wasn't that how they spelled it?--It was a creative spelling.)
It appears it may have been a Milgram or other food store.
I don't believe I recall this being a store, from earliest memory, meaning, it's not been a store since 1981, I would say.
I could be wrong. If it was an active store in 1981, I don't recall it. I think it's been NOT a store far longer than it was a store.
The Ferry Building Marketplace is a people's marketplace serving residents and travelers alike. Located within the historic Ferry Building at the foot of Market Street, shops large and small celebrate food in all its forms, offering everything from artisan cheeses to the freshest of local fish.
A while ago, I took a shot of the old Safeway and sign and I was asked what the 7-11 looks like. Here it is.
I don't know much about this garage although sadly another one that has long gone and also it went before I had started this photography project and has now become a Coop foodstore.
I'm certain this was a filling station at some point but has been focused on car sales etc for the best part of 15/20 years.
As you can see this is a photo of an image from Google maps from 2017 when it closed.
As this was photographed off google maps I do not include this as my own work or a place i have visited/
COPYRIGHT GOOGLE MAPS.
The most modern image of the area is from 2018
www.google.com/maps/place/Lincolnshire+Co-op+Food+Store+%...
Circles of dough, forced through holes onto round trays that are stacked in a steamer and cooked. Served with curries. A favourite of mine and available at a Sri Lankan foodstore in Sandringham, Auckland
Midlands Co-op Foodstore, Eccleshall, 2011. This fairly new store replaced a much smaller older shop nearby.
Midlands Co-op Foodstore, Eccleshall, 2011. This fairly new store replaced a much smaller older shop nearby.
Store now open as Northfield Supermarket
www.flickr.com/photos/co-operativestores/6002178299/in/se...
Converted to The co-operative food 2011 - this was the last of the Society's foodstores to be rebranded to NBC.
Keep your sunny side up! This, too, shall pass.
I will say this, though. Nobody who willingly paid $50,000 for a Tesla Model 3, an EV the same size as a $20,000 ICE Toyota Corolla, should even be complaining about sky high prices. Ditto people who have paid $200 for a basketball shoe.
And eventually, the price of eggs will come down. EV and sneaker prices? That's another matter.