View allAll Photos Tagged KEYHOLE
Door lock.
Composite image with varying lighting schemes.
Illumination: mixed LED spotlight, daylight.
... for the sewing box of my mother.
For #MacroMondays and this week's theme #Keyhole
Happy Macro Monday!
Thanks for all your faves and comments everyone!
I really appreciate them!
SDIM9318
The wind was blowing so hard it was blowing wet sand! But we persisted and got a few long exposures of the Keyhole at Bandon beach in Oregon as the sun went down.
Happy Slider Sunday!
The keyhole on a 1950s ladies vanity case. Well used and a bit battered now but taken everywhere in its day. Who knows what this one has seen... Full of sewing bits and bobs when I opened it for the first time though.
A lock of a treasure box holding some jewellery. I'm glad the key was not allowed in the photo - I lost it a long time ago. For Macro Monday group. HMM
Peter has been working for days to make a gift for his very best friend Scout who lives in Australia. He has locked himself in Jan's (Mummy Marian's husband) man cave.
Oleg misses Peter and his friend Paddy, who also lives in Australia, has been advising him to ask Peter if he needs help or if he can bring him food and drink.
Oleg looks, in the keyhole of Jan's man cave
OLEG:
OMG...what is he doing?
That hammer is way too huge.
(Oleg knocks on the door)
Can I help you Peter...it's me...Oleg.
PETER:
No....thank you
OLEG:
Would you like something to eat or drink?
PETER:
No..that's not necessary...I have chips and lemonade for four days
OLEG:
Um...don't you have to pee?
PETER:
Yes...there is a sink here
I don't want to be disturbed anymore Oleg
Oleg sighs....
MACRO MONDAY'S "keyhole" theme
Was a bit relieved that my new car came with a traditional key start, many thefts now due to key fob codes being hacked.
Temptation is the devil looking through the keyhole. Yielding is opening the door and inviting him in.
~Billy Sunday
“What the Butler Saw” popularised from a mutoscope reel from the early 1900s. The title of this feature became widely used in Britain as a generic term for devices and movies of this kind. The phrase had entered British popular culture after the 1886 divorce case of Lord Colin Campbell and Gertrude Elizabeth Blood. The trial hinged on whether their butler could have seen Lady Campbell with Captain Shaw through the keyhole of their dining room at 79 Cadogan Place, London.