View allAll Photos Tagged McCracken,
I love to see my pics put to good use but also appreciate photo credits. Instagram - @milbgrammer. Twitter - @jeffhyde. Thanks!
© Lela Bouse-McCracken
Please No Invites or Graphics. Thank You Ever So Much.
"Bighorn males, called rams, are famous for their large, curled horns. These impressive growths are a symbol of status and a weapon used in epic battles across the Rocky Mountains. Fighting for dominance or mating rights, males face each other, rear up on their hind legs, and hurl themselves at each other in charges of some 20 miles (32 kilometers) an hour. The resounding clash of horns can be heard echoing through the mountains as the confrontation is repeated—sometimes for many hours—until one ram submits and walks away. The animal's thick, bony skull usually prevents serious injury. A Rocky Mountain bighorn ram's horns can weigh 30 pounds—more than all the bones in his body combined."
2020 Thomas C2 in service till September 2nd 2025 bus was involved in a accident and totaled. As of October 2nd the bus is at Copart in Sikeston Missouri awaiting auction.
Image Title: Nelson McCracken Farm - Granada
Date: c.1935
Place: 14 miles south of Granda, Colorado
Description/Caption: On verso, "Dust storm approaching Nelson McCracken's farm 14 miles south of Granada, Colorado. At least two chickens in yard that may have blown away. Probably 1935 -36"
Medium: vernacular black and white photograph
Photographer/Maker: Unknown
Cite as: CO-J-0002, WaterArchives.org
Restrictions: There are no known U.S. copyright restrictions on this image. While the digital image is freely available, it is requested that www.waterarchives.org be credited as its source. For higher quality reproductions of the original physical version contact www.waterarchives.org, restrictions may apply.
© Lela Bouse-McCracken
Please No Invites or Graphics. Thank You Ever So Much.
These goats were at the summit of Logan Pass in Glacier National Park. This was shot last fall - since I haven't been out to shoot, I'm marching through the archives. ;) However, be it known...I will return to Glacier National Park at some point in the future. And if you've not been there - just go. :)
2004 Thomas SaF-T-Liner HDX Caterpillar C7
*McCracken’s only HDX* Bus was sold off in 2014 due to it being a piece of junk
© Lela Bouse-McCracken
**Please No Invites or Graphics. Thank You Ever So Much.**
Just north of Broken Bow, OK, sedimentary rock has been thrust upward due to an ancient collision of the North American and South American Plates, forming what is now the Ouachita Mountains.
Evidence of what is called the Ouachita orogeny can be seen all over the park, where some layers of rock can be seen tilted up at angles of about sixty-degrees.
These geologic features can be easily viewed around Broken Bow Lake and Mountain Fork River, where erosion has left much of the rock exposed.
Work table
c. 1857
William McCracken
rosewood and other woods
Label inside reads “Manufactured / by / William McCracken / No’s 45 & 47 Royal St. / New Orleans”.
McCracken, an Irish immigrant, first set up a shop in New Orleans in 1838. Along with Francois Seignouret, Prudent Mallard, and Joseph W. Meeks, he became one of the premier purveyors of furniture in New Orleans in the middle part of the 19th century. McCracken also had shops in various New Orleans locations with his brother James. According to Stephen Harrison, “By the 1850s the McCrackens were a major force in the city’s furniture business with three shop fronts on Royal Street and a small manufactory in the Faubourg Tremé” (Magazine Antiques, May 1997).
Louisiana State Museum purchase (acc. 2010.003)
The Daily English Show NZ Summer Tour 2011
Day 17
www.thedailyenglishshow.com/show/1378-bluff-to-te-anau-fa...
www.thedailyenglishshow.com/nzst2011
This photo is by studio tdes. You’re welcome to use it. We like to share.
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McCracken's Rest, South Island, New Zealand.
Als einer der Vertreter des „West Coast Minimalism“ hat er seine Gemälde und Objekte als eine eher verspielte Variante des Minimalismus angelegt. Auffallend ist die Reduzierung auf monochrome, jedoch leuchtend-spiegelnde Farben und einfache geometrische, dabei oft überlebensgroße bis monumentale Formen. Die Arbeiten stellt er aus so diversen Materialien wie Kunstharz, Fiberglas oder Sperrholz her. Die Konzentration von intensiver, jedoch nicht aufdringlicher Lackfarbe bei Skulpturen wie dem quaderförmigen Song (2004) in Pink ist es auch, die seinen konzentrisch aufgebauten Mandala-Acrylgemälden (Aue-Pavillon) aus den frühen 1970er Jahren ihre spezifische Wirkung verleiht.