View allAll Photos Tagged LIBRARY
Tierny Sager brought back her snakes and bugs for another great Snakes Alive program! The kids learned about snakes and bugs and the brave ones got to touch one!
Preschool Storytime (for ages 3-6): at 10:45 a.m. on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. Pat's theme this week was penguins and each child who came to storytime got a chance to pretend to be a penguin and stand with an egg balanced on their feet.
A shot of the Cleveland Public Library in downtown Cleveland, on East 6th and Superior.
Due to a discussion at the Olympus E-System Community, I decided to try a new challenge where I would pick a prime lens, and shoot only JPEG, and do no post processing adjustments to the photo. Similar to the days of film, where you could not change a dozen setting at any given moment. I am shooting in black and white, ISO 400, contrast +2, and all other settings left alone. The only settings I will be changing are aperture, shutter speed, and a B&W color filter if I decide to do so. I of course picked my OM Zuiko 50mm f/1.8 lens.
This was taken at f/8, with a red filter.
I am really liking this project so far, I am definitely paying more attention to light and shadow, and composition.
an old medieval library, the oldest public library in the UK. It's part of the Chetham's Music school in Manchester near Victoria Station
Pictured from left, Charlotte Trosclair, Director; Charles Precht, Cameron Parish Police Juror; Wanita Harrison, Library Board of Control; Cyndi Sellers, Library Board President.
Regularly changed advertising in the lift has proved to be effective, with a captive audience at least for the duration of the ride to the next floor.
This sign advertises coming EndNote workshops that students can book themselves in online.
The Summer Reading Club was a big hit this year with hundreds of kids participating and reading all Summer long. Any kid who read at least 30 books got their picture taken and was added to the train on the wall in the Juvenile section of the library.
This is what was going on behind the sealed off half on the ground floor in June and July 2011.
The public could still use the library on the other side of the partition wall - there was a temporary enquiry desk and the stock was re-arranged.
Now that Bob and Dave found the missing book, they headed over the the Beneficial-Hodson Library to look at some microfilm for their top secret project. After several hours of research, they had all that they could take and needed to burn off some steam and went outside.
Thanks to Andy's Ikea construction skills, my library is back.
ARCTIC MONKEYS - "Library Pictures"
Library pictures of the quickening canoe
The first of it's kind to get to the moon
Trust some ellipses to chase you round the room
Through curly straws and metaphors and goo
Been watching all the neon blossom flickering
You look as if you've all forgotten where you've been
Going riding through the thunder suckle fuzz canyon
10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4...
3, 2, 1
Library pictures of the quickening canoe
The first of it's kind to get to the moon
Give me an eenie meenie miney mo
Or an ip dip dog shit rock n roll
The Summer Reading Club was a big hit this year with hundreds of kids participating and reading all Summer long. Any kid who read at least 30 books got their picture taken and was added to the train on the wall in the Juvenile section of the library.
John W. Graham Library, Munk Centre, Trinity College, University of Toronto (UofT)
3 Devonshire Place
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
South Library. Tuesday 28 July 2015.
Photo by Donna Robertson
File reference: 2015-07-28-IMG_8389
From the collection of Christchurch City Libraries.
Built in 1910 by Henry Huntington, heir to the Huntington Fortune, the Huntington Library and Gardens hold some of the largest collections of plants and rare books and manuscripts in the nation. Apparently, Huntington's collectors found a prime buyer's market in post-WWI Europe.
San Marino, California
October 11, 2014, was the last day for the Reading Public Library at their 64 Middlesex Ave location. They will be moving into a temporary location while the building gets a renovation and expansion, and reopens in 2016.
The building was formerly the Highland School, was built in 1896 and designed by Horace G. Wadlin, 1851 – 1925, a Massachusetts statistician, economist, librarian, and architect. The building served as a public school until 1981, and opened as the home of the Reading Public Library in 1984. The building is added to the National Register of Historic Place in 1984, NRHP Reference #84002643.