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Deux personnages manutentionnent un frigogidaire (oui, j'utilise des néologismes absolument barbares si je veux !) le long d'un trottoir sévèrement bordé par une armée de potelets...
Souhaitons-leur bonne chance !
Holz Handgriff am alten Bügeleisen.
Für:“Smile on Saturday“ 16.11.2024.
Thema:“Handles - Griff….Handgriff.
😃Thanks for views, faves and comments 😃
The bridge with its reflection looks to me like a big eye. Okay, well, this is the Parliament Bridge in Cork, Ireland and was taken on a rare sunny day this past January. And that is the River Lee doing a splendid job handling the reflection. Happy Friday everyone!!
Thanks as always to everyone who stops by to view, fave, and comment on my photos - it is much appreciated.
#Griffe#….Henkel.
Auswahlfoto:
Für:“ Crazy Tuesday“ am 04.04.2023.
Thema:“ HANDLES“……(Griff)
Thanks for views,faves and comments:-))
otherwise it is broken easily...
"Leading lines" - The Flickr Lounge
"Feeling Sad and/or Fed Up" - Geometry Sunday - 7 Days of Shooting - Week #12
"Handle with care" - Macro Mondays
Handles on the old canon in Calton Park, Edinburgh have been worn to a polished bronze by the many hands holding them.
This is my clear acrylic box w/clear round handle that holds my cotton balls. It lives in the bathroom cabinet, but came out for a visit to the dining room table photo studio. lol.. It’s refracting/reflecting the Minion behind it a few times. HSoS
Photographed the reflection of the McIntyre Gold Mine No. 11 Shaft Headframe on Pearl Lake located in the Town of Schumacher in the Township of Tisdale located in the City of Timmins in Northeastern Ontario Canada
Standing at 53.34 metres (175 feet) in height, the No. 11 shaft headframe is the sole remaining building of the McIntyre mine, which finally ceased operations in the 1990s after 90 years of continuous extraction. A headframe serves as the top of an elevator shaft, supporting the machinery that allows miners to travel deep into the mine and carry ore and waste rock to the surface. Sitting below No. 11 is a mineshaft 2.5 km deep that gives access to the ore below.
The No. 11 McIntyre Headframe consists of a sturdy steel frame, sheathed in B.C. fir tongue-in-groove planks, and clad with galvanized corrugated iron. Inside, the headframe once housed two ore skips and three-man cages. In its heyday, it handled about 80 per cent of the material extracted from this landmark mine.
Though no longer in operation, the No. 11 headframe continues to be a much-loved city icon, with images occasionally projected onto its large flat surface to mark special occasions.
Source: Ontario Association of Architects
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