View allAll Photos Tagged Learning.

Damaged desks from the former schoolhouse at Temple, North Dakota are seen in the grass near the ruins of their former home.

Location: 5037 Quebec Street, Vancouver, BC

Date: early 1970's

 

Parked in front of my house in my parent's Datsun.

 

© EF Photography

The sign for the Brown House of Learning on the TRU campus

Down by the canal cottage in Sandiacre was a field with horses and a large tub of carrots for them to eat.

Andy teaches the locals of Hartlepool the art of drone photography as 800111 heads north working a delayed 1S09 08:00 Kings Cross to Edinburgh

At Doe Library, UC Berkeley.

Happy TmT!

Children at the museum

Into the distance a ribbon of black

Stretched to the point of no turning back

A flight of fancy on a windswept field

Standing alone my senses real

A fatal attraction holding me fast how

Can I escape this irresistible grasp?

 

(...)

A soul in tension that's learning to fly

Condition grounded but determined to try

Can't keep my eyes from the circling skies

Tongue-tied and twisted just an earth-bound misfit, I

(...)

 

(Learning to Fly - Pink Floyd)

   

Ericeira - Foz do Lizandro... ontem à tarde...

  

See where this picture was taken. [?]

...a portrait of a girl at home in a small village in rural Rajasthan, India

 

© Handheld Films 2019

www.handheldfilms.co.uk

The Canadian Forces College (CFC) Joint Command and Staff Programme (JCSP) conducts Experiential Learning Visits (ELV) to all elements of the Canadian Armed Forces at Garrison Petawawa, March 30 2022. Students from CFC participate in hands-on demonstrations to view the land domain capabilities and assets held within 2 Canadian Mechanized Brigade Group.

 

Please credit: Cpl Melissa Gloude, Canadian Armed Forces Imagery Technician

~

Dans le cadre du Programme de commandement et d’état major interarmées (PCEMI) du Collège des Forces canadiennes (CFC), des visites d’apprentissage par l’expérience (VAE) sont organisées pour tous les éléments des Forces armées canadiennes à la garnison Petawawa, le 30 mars 2022. Des stagiaires du CFC participent à des démonstrations pratiques pour connaître les capacités et les ressources liées au domaine terrestre dont dispose le 2e Groupe brigade mécanisé du Canada.

 

Photo : Cpl Melissa Gloude, technicienne en imagerie, Forces armées canadiennes

Pictured before the 7 extension came into play, 37608 WX58 JXS on loan to WSM on the 7 route learning for the new Haywood - Locking extension taken 10/8/23

Pity the poor trainee who had to learn his craft on FRU826, a 1946 Bristol K5G with Hants and Dorset, seen here in Bournemouth on June 16th 1969.

This is a full out CASE of my fellow HH sista Kathy....I so LOVE her style and talent :) www.flickr.com/photos/34626929@N04/3918186260/

I learnt from her "Tuesday's Tipster" the technique used on the center heart. 1.bp.blogspot.com/_oCerUETleLI/Sq3C3JtploI/AAAAAAAAAQ4/BC...

 

I also learned from the HA blog how to reposition clear stamps into a curve.

Hero Art stamps: CL342 Everyday sayings and CL301 Hugs & Hearts.

TFL!!!!

One of my photography goals has been to try a levitation photo, and I think I can successfully check that off my to-do list. It was easier than I expected, at least with a levitation photo this basic. But damn, no one tells you how much your back hurts after balancing on a stepladder for a photo! Sacrifices for art.

   

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Bury St Edmunds Suffolk England

The Cathedral of Learning, a Pittsburgh landmark listed in the National Register of Historic Places, is the centerpiece of the University of Pittsburgh's main campus in the Oakland neighborhood of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. Standing at 535 feet (>163 m), the 42-story Late Gothic Revival Cathedral is the tallest educational building in the Western hemisphere and the second tallest university building (fourth tallest educationally-purposed building) in the world. The Cathedral of Learning was commissioned in 1921 and ground was broken in 1926. The first class was held in the building in 1931 and its exterior finished in October 1934, prior to its formal dedication in June, 1937. The Cathedral is a steel frame structure overlaid with Indiana limestone and contains more than 2,000 rooms and windows. The building is often used by the University in photographs, postcards, and other advertisements. (Wikipedia)

 

We returned to the Chicagoland area to snow...and quite a bit of snow for the New Year! I went out to Ryerson with the idea of photographing my favorite avenue of trees with the snow blowing around - trying to get this scene in the different seasons. I don't know how well you can see the snow here - trust me, it was blowing. And then I'd go ski.

 

When I was setting up, this father and young son were making their way very slowly down the path. Slowly, because the little guy, who was learning to cross-country ski, kept falling. Funny thing is, mom and other child were skiing on another path - and that child wasn't using poles, and not falling at all!

 

It was a fantastic day to be out skiing. Perfect snow. Such easy gliding. Great way to begin the New Year.

Every year in China, millions of rural residents migrate to cities for work. Most of them lack the skills needed to make a decent living. Chongqing, China. Photo: Li Wenyong / World Bank

 

Find out more about this project

A paraglider soars over the distant mountains as the sun touches the peaks of the Harqualhala Mountains

DSC_7247

 

Camera - Nikon D7000

Lens - tamron 18-270 mm

Taken in the Nature Reserve Taubergießen

Learning the ropes of being an engineer is a 24/7 job just like everything else on the railroad. Here a newer engineer trainee works the control stand over while switching cars.

The impressive Victorian Gothic edifice of the Victorian College for the Deaf stands proudly on their original grounds on the corner of High Street and Melbourne's grand boulevard of St Kilda Road where it has stood for nearly one hundred and sixty years.

 

Victorian College for the Deaf is Victoria's oldest deaf school, opening in 1860. The grand building is socially and historically significant at state level because the Victorian School for Deaf Children (originally known as the Deaf and Dumb Institution), has played a pioneering role in the history of the welfare of the deaf in Victoria.

 

Designed by architects Crouch and Wilson, the Gothic Revival school was erected between 1866 and 1871 to educate the many children who suffered deafness through the high incidence of disease and accident in the infant colony of Victoria. The development of the school is associated with the growth of many important Melbourne educational and social welfare institutions established in the two decades following the population explosion of the gold rush.

 

The school has architectural significance as an imposing design in the institutional Early English Gothic Style and is a major work of the notable architects Crouch and Wilson, who were among the most prolific Melbourne Nineteenth Century architectural practicioners and designed other important Victorian buildings.

 

The Victorian School for the Deaf, the neighbouring Wesley College, and the Royal Victorian Institute for the Blind all have extensive grounds facing St Kilda Road.

 

Crouch and Wilson was an architectural practice based in Melbourne, Australia in the late nineteenth century. The partnership, between Tasmanian-born Thomas Crouch and recently arrived Londoner Ralph Wilson, commenced in 1857 in Elizabeth Street. The firm designed numerous prominent Melbourne buildings including many Presbyterian and Wesleyan churches. After the deaths of the partners in the late 1880s, their sons continued on with the business until its closure in 1916. Buildings of note include the Prahran Town Hall, Chapel Street, Prahran in 1861, the Durham Street Methodist Church in Christchurch in 1864, the Victorian School for the Deaf on St Kilda Road between1866 and 1871, the Royal Victorian Institute for the Blind on St Kilda Road in 1868, the Weslyan Methodist Church in Davey Street Hobart in 1870, the Chinese Mission Church in Little Bourke Street in1872, Hawksburn Primary School in Malvern Road in Hawksburn in 1874, the Church Of The Immaculate Conception in Hawthorn in 1867, the Colombo Street Methodist Church in Christchurch in 1877 (now demolished), the East Melbourne Synagogue in 1877,

Methodist Ladies' College in Hawthorn in 1882 and the Homeopathic Hospital (later Prince Henry's Hospital), St Kilda Road between 1882 and 1884 (now demolished).

I want you to understand that I am not the same as yesterday. You were the turning point and although maybe not. I just wake up without talking to the pillow, learning to rest from you and my thoughts.

Playing with my new camera.

Sunderland is a port city and metropolitan borough in Tyne and Wear, England. It is a port at the mouth of the River Wear on the North Sea, approximately 10 miles (16 km) south-east of Newcastle upon Tyne. It is the most populous settlement in the Wearside conurbation and the second most populous settlement in North East England after Newcastle.

 

The centre of the modern city is an amalgamation of three settlements founded in the Anglo-Saxon era: Monkwearmouth, on the north bank of the Wear, and Sunderland and Bishopwearmouth on the south bank. Monkwearmouth contains St Peter's Church, which was founded in 674 and formed part of Monkwearmouth–Jarrow Abbey, a significant centre of learning in the seventh and eighth centuries. Sunderland was a fishing settlement and later a port, being granted a town charter in 1179. The city traded in coal and salt, also developing shipbuilding industry in the fourteenth century and glassmaking industry in the seventeenth century.

 

Sunderland was once known as 'the largest shipbuilding town in the world' and once made a quarter of all of the world's ships from its yards.[citation needed] Following the decline of its traditional industries in the late 20th century, the area became an automotive building centre. In 1992, the borough of Sunderland was granted city status. Sunderland is historically part of County Durham, being incorporated to the ceremonial county of Tyne and Wear in 1974.

 

Locals are sometimes known as Mackems, a term which came into common use in the 1970s. Its use and acceptance by residents, particularly among the older generations, is not universal. The term is also applied to the Sunderland dialect, which shares similarities with the other North East England dialects.

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