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Standing underneath the Holyhead station roof is 158819 waiting to front the 14:33 Holyhead - Cardiff service, usually diagrammed for a 175.
28th February 2009.
Just another in the long parade of coal trains east to tidewater begins it's journey from Bluefield. Shortly they will traverse the Virginian into Roanoke and then on to tidewater for load out into an ocean going vessel.
...into the inland waterways vessel Marlin at the Euroports Terminal at the 3rd Haven dock. The 1943 built Marlin will take the bulk load to France
A is for Apple seems like such a cliche but apples are a big part of our family history and heritage. I had some photos from October 2009 when quite a few family members were able to come to the farm on the same weekend to help pick the crop. (I loved the Sue Grafton books but there is no mystery involved with my page today!) I started with a template, changed up quite a few things and made the apple embellishment at the bottom of the page from one of my photos.
Prompt: Recycle
I used photos that had been printed out as a test and I could not bring myself to throw them away in March 2008.
The paper scraps have been used from one piece of paper that I started using on the first day of class. I have a smidgen of paper left and it just didn't fit on this layout!
I used the last few rub-ons from a Basic Grey set.
Cardstock: Bazzill
PP: Anna Griffin
Rub-ons: Basic Grey
Stamp: Heidi Swapp
This U-boat bunker located near Bremen, Germany was build from 1943 until 1945 using forced labour, costing the lives of over 6000 men.
The massive concrete factory was meant to construct U-boats for the German Kriegsmarine. In the end, the bunker code-named 'Valentin' did not product a single U-boat due to heavy bombing and eventual conquest by the Allied Forces.
Sometimes the photo really does speak for itself!
I had to take this photo with my phone, so the colors didn't really come out, but the cardstock is a pretty pale yellow, not that muddy grey color!
Day Eleven
The cost of ... everything.
This was a fun one for me.
Journaling reads:
"I quit my full-time, salary position to go back to serving, bartending & uncertainty. I lost an amazing discount on scrap supplies and I no longer see some of my best friends everyday. I no longer spend 6-8 hours a week in the car. I now pay my own health insurance. I don't get calls & texts about issues at work. I create all day and serve the public SEVEN nights a week. I wouldn't have it any other way. I enjoy what I do & I'm really good at it. I kept my sanity. I spend less & save more. What I gained was more than I lost. And my happiness...priceless. 10-11-11"
Supplies Used:
Cardstock: Bazzill [black]
Patterned Paper: Basic Grey [background], Jillibean Soup [journaling card, grey photo mats]
Letter Stickers: October Afternoon
Pen: Signo [white], Staedtler
Adhesive: Scrapbook Adhesives, Scotch
It took both to load this marble and one this size was one per-truck. When we got hear there was 3 trucks waiting to be loaded and one more came up while we were watching. You can walk about the area still.
Loading up the van.
This is a quiet day at the bus station.
On market day it is absolutely packed!
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Marines of the 26th MEU load an Interim Fast Attack vehicle onto a Landing Craft Air Caution on Onslow Beach aboard Camp Lejeune, N.C., Jan. 11.
Photographer: Paul Schorn (Driver)
Location: Grand Junction, CO - Long Beach, CA
Caption: Fish tank to be shipped to Sydney Children's Hospital; 38,0000 lbs.
The light is fading at Chinnor as some bags of unwanted materials are loaded on to a Lowmac wagon that has an Atlas crane mounted on it. John instructs Jim in the use of the remote crontrol, while Steve waits for the manoeuvre to finish. Hard-hatless Nick keeps well clear. Shunter Stephen watches proceeding from the 03.
Chinnor & Princes Risborough Railway.
this is not dead on the prompt. I've done every hobby and craft known to mankind. but this is a story of how on hobby came in handy
Back in the 70’s I remember
my Mom making a Lazy
Daisy afgan. She worked on
it for years. Then itjust
disapeared. No one thought
much about it. It became a
distant memory. Four years
after my Mom passed Dad
had went to Texas to visit
her sisters. Vivian my Mom’s
sister had it. Mom had given
it to her to finish. But she
had forgotten about it. So
when I got it I worked on it
every day till Christmas. I
gave it to my daughter. Now
she a Afgan made by2
gererations. Her Grand-
Mother and her Mother.
There’s alot of LOVE
handcrafted in that Afgan.
stella and rose paper
cricut imagine lori's garden
flowers made by my mother