View allAll Photos Tagged Locking
On the lower level of the Cooperage at Beckman Mill.
This was featured on Portal Wisconsin page on 4/01/11.
Two males locking horns as part of female courtship. My favourite springbok activity was pronking though, which I didn’t get to photograph. Think about this animal jumping using all fours like a kangaroo! It was a sight to see.
Apparently Martin Nyrop, who designed the Copenhagen Town Hall, was into detail. Like the look of an ordinary cupboard lock in the library.
Inside Rådhusbiblioteket (Town Hall Library).
It's been hot as hell this past week. I'm hiding indoors to keep away from most of the heat, so now I feel cramped and locked up in my own house!
SAO PAULO, BRAZIL - FEBRUARY 11: Alexandre "xms" Forte of Karmine Corp is seen at the VALORANT Champions Tour 2023: LOCK//IN tech check on February 11, 2023 in Sao Paulo, Brazil. (Photo by Colin Young-Wolff/Riot Games)
One of a series of 3 "drawings" about OTT strategies:
Reach, Engage and then Lock.
This one is about Lock. It is depicted as padlock,
Dogwood week 12: Orange
A new shed was built in our back yard, equipped with slide latches where padlocks could be deployed. However the normal padlocks which we had on our old shed don't really work well with this type of latch. More likely these are just the cheapest and worst latches that the builder was able to find. Resulting doors that look locked at first sight, but with a bit of adjustment of the padlock can be opened easily without a key.
Longer story of why it took me over a month to shoot an image for week 12: renku.smugmug.com/2017Dogwood52/Week-12
The lock in our front door has been sort of crappy and prone to sticking since the day we moved in; we've pretty much always used the back door only for the last couple years because we wanted to make sure not to get locked out of our own house.
Until today! Some drilling and some chiseling and some screwdrivering and some futzing and, blammo: a front door we can actually use to leave the house through.
The final lock on the Forth and Clyde canal, which connects the east and west of Scotland, from the river Forth to the river Clyde. There are 39 locks on the canal - so why is this Lock 40?
Camden lock gates are being replaced by the Canal and River Trust as part of a national restoration project they are at the first stage on the first pair of gates the other pair are still on the barge. Both sides of the lock will be renewed so that is a total of four pairs of gates. I had a close up look at the gates on the barge and they are new and not recycled so these gates are still being manufactured, that's good news for employment.
A little more work with some extra wall and some greenery around the bottom and the scene becomes more realistic. A tree has been added behind the wall, and the whole has been photographed in front of a photographic backscene for the full effect.
A smear of cooking oil gives the impression of an oil stain on the tarmac.
Bakewell Love Lock Bridge.
River Wye - Bakewell - footbridge
Heading into Bakewell over the River Wye.
Footbridge seen from the other smaller footbridge. Behind it is a weir. Various geese here!
There are Love Locks on this bridge!
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Bakewell is the only market town within the Peak District National Park boundary.
Its attractive courtyards, independent shops, cafés and its scenic location on the River Wye (about thirteen miles southwest of Sheffield) make it a hugely popular destination for Peak District tourists.
Bakewell is best known for a confection made by mistake. In the 19th century a cook at the Rutland Arms was baking a jam tart but misunderstood the recipe and so Bakewell Pudding was created. Now almost every visitor to the town samples this culinary delight.
LOVE LOCKS
An idea thought to have originate in Paris,
Couples inscribe their names on locks then attach the locks to bridges and throw the keys in the river.
Both sides of this footbridge are covered in locks.
NEW UPDATE ON THE LOVELOCKS
Boulter's Lock is a lock and weir on the River Thames in England on the eastern side of Maidenhead, Berkshire.
During Victorian times, Boulter's Lock won fame - and notoriety - across the country as thousands of people flocked to the river here to mess about and watch the wealthier classes indulge themselves.
This is an original photograph from a family (Unknown) album.
the basement locking room at the humboldt-university's central library is a place that continues to attract me for its atmosphere. the idea to introduce locks to lock the lockers (yes, sounds a little tautological: what else would you use to lock lockers?) is quite recent, after the majority of keys (see, there you go ...) were stolen or lockers more or less continually reserved by nerds who wouldn't bother to drag their stuff home since they haunt the library on a daily basis. so now, it's locks, lots of golden locks. unless, of course, someone has the need to make a case against the one-dimensionality of mass university ...
[my hundredth upload, by the way. any interpretations? :-)]
mitte, berlin, 07/2010.
The lock at Heybridge basin under going refurbishment and interesting to see just how deep these locks are.
www.flickriver.com/photos/carlosporto/popular-interesting/
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