View allAll Photos Tagged IndianRestaurant

Chung King Mansion, Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon, Hong Kong

Babu Ji, Indian restaurant, St.Kilda.

The Indian restaurant is at Rowell Road, Little India.

Mural on the side of an Indian restaurant Dosa Mahal in Bloordale. Creation of SPUD from 2016. Notice the tiger eyes.

 

088. TMR Toronto 2018-Jan-26, P1040036. Uploaded 2018-Apr-19. Lmx -FZ07.

  

Bronze elephant outside the Chokhi Dhani Indian restaurant. Riverlight Quay, London Borough of Wandsworth.

Brickfields | Kuala Lumpur

20131130_5843_1D3-45 Indian with Attitude - Arjee Bhajee (Day 334/365) [Explored]

 

Two second handheld exposure (camera resting on car's steering wheel) of the Arjee Bhajee Indian restaurant and take-away in Cranford Street, Christchurch.

 

My wife and Alastair (#2 son) are in there getting Al some dinner. They found out the co-owner comes from the same area in Suva, Fiji as my wife.

 

Selected for Explore. #495 30/11/13

 

#4437

  

The Chef at Rooh made some dessert which was not on the menu as the one we ordered was out!

Chilled and good looking cocktails were served at the Indian restaurant in Blue Waters, Mumbai. Was too busy shooting pictures and never got a chance to taste it!!

 

Please contact me if you would like to use this or any other photographs from my collection. Yes! The images are free for use or for modifications for commercial purpose.

 

Cheers and happy eating

Widford is an Indian Elephant and he lives outside the popular 'Indian Night' Restaurant in Widford which is a parish inside the City of Chelmsford in Essex (UK).

 

Widford greets customers to Indian Night with his colourful water fountain which emanates from his trunk.

A traditional English Indian restaurant.

© All Rights Reserved

 

colorful restaurant in old victorian on fillmore

san francisco, california

Here's the owner of "What Tasty Food" Indian vegetarian restaurant himself serving food to customers.

An oriental belly dancer Nel on performance at an Indian Restaurant, Meera in Osaka, Japan.

 

fiveprime.org/hivemind/Tags/%E3%82%AA%E3%83%AA%E3%83%B3%E...

  

This restaurant/bar was formerly a pub, and originally I believe a post office building (or at least there was one on the same site).

 

Address: 35 Church Road.

Former Name(s): The Red Leopard; The Vintry.

Owner: (website).

Links:

London Eating

London Pubology

While having our food, the combined notes of the percussion and the chord instrument created a wrapping beautiful lament that was floating within the walls of the tiny restaurant and crawling under my skin to find a corner of my heart to conquer...

 

I closed my eyes and I felt lifted, transported... needless to say, I got goosebumps.

Someday I'll travel to India and my soul will change forever, I bet.

 

East Village,

New York.

 

Taken with a 3Gs iPhone

(first image taken using CameraBag app (Lolo), second image taken with VintB&W app).

 

Indian restaurant on Charles Street, just off Yonge Street.

Toronto, Ontario, Canada

 

Become a fan of the cool Froz’n Motion Facebook page at FACEBOOK or visit www.froznmotion.com

AR-Rahman Indian Restaurant at Kampong Bahru Road.

Sitting on the corner of Queen Street and Waterloo Road, Burslem, this early nineteenth century building played a prominent role in the Arnold Bennett books depicting the life of the Clayhanger family.

This was the Clayhanger's Steam Print Works of the novels, and still holds a prominent position in the town centre at the bottom of Swan Square.

The building was occupied by a successful tea merchant, John Eley, who with the proceeds of his business bought many of the surrounding buildings.

The adjacent Kismet is Stoke-on-Trent's oldest Indian restaurant, dating back to 1962.

This building is part of a regeneration scheme, jointly funded by Advantage West Midlands, Heritage Lottery Fund and Stoke-on-Trent City Council. It is grade II listed.

 

An oriental dancer Nel on showing at an Indian Restaurant 'Meera' in Osaka, Japan.

 

My favorite Indian supermarket and Indian restaurant! www.desibazaarusa.com/ gaganpalace.com/home.php

This mural is on CholaNad Restaurant and Bar on West Franklin Street in Chapel Hill, North Carolina in Orange County.

Another of my Historic Winchester Series

 

1 – 3 Eastgate Street, Winchester

 

These render and brick three story buildings were constructed in 1850 to create a sweeping entrance to Eastgate Street which joins the Broadway to North Walls following the demolition in 1847 of a large house with gardens which had occupied the site since 1665. with six large sash windows with intact glazing bars on the upper floors, separated vertically by pilasters and with stringcourses above and below them, the pitched roof is hidden by a parapet, with modern shop fronts on the ground floor the building has a visually important curved frontage and was given a Grade II listing on the 14th of January 1974.

 

Number 1 Eastgate Street was occupied by a Mr E. Yaldon from 1884 until 1887, and then by a Mr C. J. Gay until 1890, it then appears to have been unoccupied until 1894 when it was registered to J & G Rawlance who remained there until 1904 when it was occupied by W. H. Smithers who was there until 1914, the premises were unoccupied in 1915 but in 1916 it was a butcher’s shop owned by Mr William Henry which was there until 1923.

 

The shop was again unoccupied in 1924 but in 1925 James Henry Young opened a hairdressing business on the premises, staying there until 1929 when Herman Klein took over, as a ladies hairdresser, continuing until 1937 when the hairdressing business was taken over by Stanley Maisin who was there until 1942 after which the records are missing until 1951 when the ground floor of Number 1 was divided into two parts, the left hand side being King Alfred’s Snack Bar, run by Stanley Butler.

 

The name of the snack bar changed to Eatwell in 1953, and following the passing of the Gambling and betting act of 1960, which legalised off-course betting the right hand side became a betting shop run by George Rolls, turf accountants, however this changed to Maurice Jack, another Turf Accountant the flowing year. In 1967 Power, Clark & Hiscocks, a firm of chartered accountants occupied part of the building

 

In 1972 they were joined by H.J.R Developments, a firm of house renovators; By 1979 the shop was back to a single unit and had become Dowlings, a draper’s shop which had moved there from their shop in 127 – 128 High Street. Light ‘n’ Shade, a lighting shop had the premises in 1987 but in July 1988, following a planning application to change the use of the shop to a betting office Number 1 Eastgate Street became Corals bookmakers. In 2003 the shop was the premises of Hobsons Choice suppliers of the German Bulthaup kitchen and living space systems.

 

Number 2 Eastgate Street was a post office and tea dealers in 1885 it was occupied by Arthur Etheridge, a grocer and tea dealer, in 1894 the business was taken over by Mathas Lee who ran it until 1900 when it became Brown Bros., in 1927 Mrs Margaret Brown took over the running of the business, continuing until 1934 when it was taken over by John Walsh. In 1935 they became licensed to sell wines and spirits and in 1937 Mrs Elizabeth Walsh took over the running of the firm continuing until 1960 when the proprietor became David L. Walsh who ran the grocery and off licence until 1973 when the shop was sold to Hampshire Business Supplies which sold office appliances and equipment

 

In the 1976 the shop belonged to a firm Chandlers, an estate agents and this was succeeded by a shop selling Sony hi-fi systems. In 1982 Number 2 was being used by the Eastgate Employment Bureau. In May 1983 planning permission was granted to a film production company called Lacewing to change the use of the ground floor from an employment agency to offices but this must have been short lived as in November 1983 the shop was taken over by the local Hardware store, D&G Hardware until they moved into the vacated Rod Box shop in George Street and in 1988 the shop became Hampshire Business Supplies.

 

By 1996 its occupancy had changed to B. Matthews, funeral directors and by 2013 it had become a showroom for a firm marketing terra cotta products which is still trading there.

 

Number 3 was the first shop in Winchester to have a plate glass window, a result of the process that allowed the manufacture of large flat sheet of glass which had been invented in 1838. Originally having been described in the prospectus as a shop suitable for a chemist, the original usage is unclear but by 1885 was a baker and confectioner’s shop run by a Mr Sidney Prangnall who was joined by Mr L.G. Stickland till 1897 when a Mr Hume joined the firm, remaining there till 1908.

 

Mrs Prangnall took over the running of the bakers in 1925 and in 1931 her son, John C. Prangnall succeeded her, and his brother, Charles R Prangall became part of the firm. they was joined by Herbert John Walter in 1939. Records are incomplete for the years 1942 to 1950 but in 1951 the bakers would appear to have been run by a Mr Henry Robinson until about 1961 but by 1965 the shop was again Prangnall’s, remaining so until at least 1974

 

On the 7th of July 1975 planning permission was granted to a Mr N. E. Marshall for a change of use from a shop to a café and the shop was altered to become Charles House, a Chinese restaurant. In 1978 Number 3 became Ninos Ristoraunte Napoli, an Italian Restaurant, the first of a chain of 10 in the south of England, a photo taken in 1980 shows it as still having plate glass windows but at some stage since then this has been replaced with folding doors to enable the front to be opened right up on warm days, this probably happened in 1981 when the ownership changed to Avocados Restaurant, which sold British food.

 

Avocados closed in 1989, and Richoux Tea Rooms opened on the site, by 1996 the building had become part of the Café Rouge chain of French Bistro Restaurants, by 2011 this had changed to Terracotta, a Cantonese restaurant specialising in modern Chinese cuisine. In 2015 the restaurant became the Fish Tale Grille and bar but this closed in January 2017 and it is now DiYA the Indian restaurant.

 

UPDATE 03/10/19, The restaunt at number 3 is now Taste of Gurkahs, a Nepalese restaurant.

 

california 2022

The owner of the Singh's Indian restaurant once again has placed his funny car on the wrong side of the street, right at the restaurant's door, despite several fines from the police in

recent past.

High Street, Chesham, Buckinghamshire

 

Sony A7III + FE 24-105mm F4 G

At Dalhousie Lane, Little India. View from Clive Street.

Outside of the Maharaja Indian Cuisine

4900 Lomas Boulevard Northeast

Albuquerque, NM 87110

 

maharajaabq.com/

 

Maharaja means king in English.

 

The Indian restaurant at Upper Dickson Road, Little India.

A wide range of authentic Indian dishes from Indian cuisine were served at the Indian restaurant in Blue Waters, Mumbai. Was too busy shooting pictures and never got a chance to taste it!!

 

Please contact me if you would like to use this or any other photographs from my collection. Yes! The images are free for use or for modifications for commercial purpose.

 

Cheers and happy eating

 

Kirti

UPDATE: Explored! #245 - April 4th 2011.

 

Singapore's nightlife hub - The Riverside. The flashy neon lighting in the restaurants creates very interesting colors in the Singapore River.

 

NO GRAPHICS in your comments please, thank you!

At Dalhousie Lane, Little India.

Damrak 20/02/2019 14h59

I see you...

 

More AmsterdamPeople (album with candid and non-candid shot of people in Amsterdam)

313/365

East Village, New York, NY

November 9, 2011

Walking home after taking some night shots, passed the Indian Cavalry Club restaurant in the West End, still had the tripod out, for a change at this busy intersection there was a sudden gap in traffic, so quickly set up and took a night shot before the traffic rolled back in and blocked the view.

Brick Lane at Night

As I'm glacially packing and glacially moving my possessions over to Watertown, I'm revisiting the favorite places in my old neighborhood I won't get to as often. This fabulous and inexpensive casual Indian bistro always has a line out the door for take-out and loud Bollywood-style videos on the TV over the counter where you give your order. You always run into someone you know while you're in line. Despite "the look" I'd asked permission to shoot. :-)

Canon 550D + Sigma 50mm 1.4

Taken at Agashiye, the rooftop restaurant at the House of Mangaldas Girdhardas. The House of MG is a heritage hotel in the heart of old Ahmedabad...and the restaurant was a great place to escape the horrific air and noise pollution down at street level.

 

This was a bottomless vegetarian thali. Waiters just kept coming by with refill after refill. So, even if the individual elements look small, this was a HUGE meal.

 

Nice to have a couple of photos with more than 10,000 views and no nudity =)

1 3 5 6 7 ••• 79 80