View allAll Photos Tagged KnifeSharpener

En pleine activité dans la rue lors de la foire aux harengs de Dieppe

SkyLine, Made in England, broken knife sharpener

Happy MM for 2018.

My Favorite Theme of the Year...

1. Pareidolia

2. Found in the Kitchen

3. Broken

4. Rusty

5. Made of Metal

6. Eyes

This high magnification macro is just a few mm across:

26x focus stacked shots to show detail of the tiny (invisible to the naked eye) steel shavings in foreground.

Phone aspect ratio

 

I enjoyed strolling though our Saturday Farmer's Market today. Bought some delicious food, had 2 knives sharpened and bought a basil plant.

 

"The market is located in the heart of our beautiful Humber Bay Park West and is the perfect spot to enjoy the outdoors while supporting local farmers and artisans. We are open every Saturday from late May to Thanksgiving and offer some of the freshest and highest quality products from around the city and nearby farms."

 

Thanks for visiting, enjoy your weekend!

Seville, 2012. That little instrument he's holding was loud. It doesn't sound like a harmonica. Shaky old iPhone vdeo here.

I got this gadget recently, the advertisements spoke highly of it. I'm not so sure.

 

The 2022 : one photo each day group has chosen The Letter G for the Week 20 weekly challenge.

The blades on these two kitchen knives have just been sharpened and are now very sharp ... so we will make sure that we do not touch those blades!!

 

Our Daily Challenge ~ Don't Touch ...

 

Stay Safe and Healthy Everyone!

 

Thanks to everyone who views this photo, adds a note, leaves a comment and of course BIG thanks to anyone who chooses to favourite my photo .... Thanks to you all!

Excerpt from www.citywindsor.ca/residents/historyofwindsor/Documents/M...:

 

The Lazurek Series: Just after WW I, Theodore “Fred” Lazurek emigrated from Romania with his parents who, along with many others from the region, sought the employment opportunities Ford City could offer. Fred followed in his father’s footsteps and became a photographer. Enthralled and inspired by its cultural diversity, Fred saw Ford City as a true community where everyone knew and cared about each other. Working from his home studio on Drouillard Road, he captured the essence of post-WW II life in East Windsor. A free spirit, unconcerned with fame or fortune, Fred was obsessed with recording images taking delight in commonplace scenes like a group of boys hanging out at the temple Theatre, or the neighbourhood knife sharpener on his daily rounds. His photos inspired revitalization project artists to create these vignettes of life on Drouillard Road, as seen through Fred Lazurek’s lens.

 

Fred Lazurek by JoAnne Weston 2001

The Recycler by Ryan Pearson 2001

Night Scene by Mike Mascarin 1999

News Stand by James Levergood 2001

Boys at the Theatre by Carl T. Haskell & James Levergood 2001

Knife Sharpener by Glen Donaldson 2000

Oooff, I blinked and lost five days there.

 

Need to watch the distortion on that 15-35, amazing sharpener though, if you're in the market.

Nostell Priory (National Trust). West Yorkshire, UK

Knife sharpening dude. Somewhere in Bombay.

 

I like his glasses.

  

This rusty old knife sharpener still does a fantastic job.

 

Photo taken for the Macro Mondays theme "Tools and Utensils."

 

Thank you for viewing. Feel free to provide feedback via comments as I increase my macro photography skills. HMM everyone.

A bangali man uses his ingeniously machine to sharpen knives from restaurant to restaurant

Picture of the "Knife sharpener" in Netrokona,Boro Bazar,Bangladesh

The crowd queues up for breakfast at Mama's in North Beach, while the knife grinder sharpens the chef's knives. I always admire people who live by their wits with a little hustle thrown in, and don't you just love that truck? The rear window is further testament that duct tape is great for just about anything. It sort of reminds me of a truck one of my uncles used to own. It was a real junker but it ran great. "Good brakes and good tires is all you need," my uncle would say. And of course, a little duct tape here and there.

 

San Francisco, CA

Sharpen while you wait service spotted on a street in Oaxaca Centro.

Hard manual labor with a grindstone "powered" by one of the two knife sharpeners.

Useful service roaming the streets.

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved

  

Italy, Venice - model chairmaker & knife sharpener

I have tried several patent knife sharpeners … none are particularly good.

 

The hereios of the We're Here! group have paid a visit to the Sharpness group today at the suggestion of ruthlesscrab.

 

Stuck for an idea for your daily 365 shot? Join the hereios of the We're Here! group for inspiration.

A friend gave me this Victorinox knife sharpener which is just what I need :)

The pack needs opening so what else would I use to do the job?

Around the streets of Leon, Nicaragua

Still life photos at home over Spring Break (Canon 10D with Canon EF 50/1.4)

Unfortunately, another job that is being lost.

Found these workmen sharpening a scissor using a grinding wheel.The tool they are using is an antique one.

This is belt driven and requires two people to operate.One using the belt to spin the grinding wheel and the other one sharpening the scissor .

There is a variation of this which uses a pedal to drive/spin the grinding stone and this requires only one person to operate the equipment.

 

This post is in response to a recent post by Daniel ( www.flickr.com/photos/dancrissco/7951846032/in/photostream )

Wallington Hall, Northumberland

Crawford Market

Bombay, India

 

Get a ltitle exercise, sharpen some cutlery....

 

View On Black

 

© Mark V. Krajnak 2009 | All Rights Reserved

jerseystylephotography.wordpress.com

 

Not visible to the eye on this picture, but this is actually running water that comes from the spring on top of the hill. The villagers use this water for drinking and cooking, and water from pipe is used for cleaning and washing. Such richness, such nature and peace, yet people flee out in search for wealth. Those villages are for that reason on fortunately dying, old houses are falling apart and soon there will be only stone and wooden remainings.

The most simple broom ever possible. Quite still in use.

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