View allAll Photos Tagged MAIL
Gmail isn't the only inbox I'm a slave to. The only things I get in the mail nowadays are bills, cards from my grandmothers, and junk. Today, I got an IKEA catalogue that was addressed to someone else (news flash: USPS sucks in Chicago), the Herald Extra (which is just a reprint of the ads and coupons from the Hyde Park Herald), and a bill for my next two months of health insurance (biggest goddamn scam in the whole world).
A pile of unopened letters at the door of a business closed by the Corona virus lockdown in Belfast.
For a photographic account of life under lockdown in Belfast see:
Inspired by a poem of the same name by Wislawa Szymborska. Made for an assignment from the collage group to send ea person a piece of mail art.
celebrating our postal network around the world...
Created for the Down Under Challenge 1215
Thanks to Cindy Mc for the
plus my collection from Australia.
Work goes on in all weathers on the railway - mail sacks being loaded by Guard Stuart McDonald as the fireman of Standard '2MT' 2-6-0 watches on from the comfort of his warm and dry cab! A 3P20 Parcels Group charter event on a thoroughly wet morning at Ramsbottom station on the East Lancashire Railway on Tuesday 12th March 2019.
© Gordon Edgar - All rights reserved. Please do not use my images without my explicit permission
Tasmania
Camera: Pentax K1000 (Early model C.1977)
Lens: Pentax-M F1.7 50mm
Film: 35mm Ferrania P30 80 ASA
Settings: F11 1/125th
Developer: HC-110 Solution H
(Not for the Squeamish)
Attractively Arranged Street Frogs!
EYE Mail!
Images that catch my attention
as I move through the day
for their beauty
for their joy
for their strangeness
for a painting
for no particular reason at all.
Kathleen Cook
Rock Island train No. 39, the former IMPERIAL (Chicago to Los Angeles), departs Topeka, Kansas, on March 27, 1965, as it skirts the Kansas River west of town. The locomotive is FP7A 408.
In the UK, you know you’re deep in the countryside when you come across a Royal Mail post box nestling in a dry stone wall like this.
This box is from the reign of King George V (1910-36) and I spotted it, with much pleasure, in the hamlet of Treen, not far from St Ives in Cornwall.
Lovely, isn't it? And by the way, for Royal Mail aficionados the post box number is TR26 40.