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South Western Ambulance Service Mobile Treatment Centre Emergency Service Show NEC Birmingham

 

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Berchtesgaden, Bavaria

Now we know what happens with the old technology…

This is how the Dutch do it.

Processed with VSCOcam with b5 preset

Sunny, Saturday afternoon... curbside.

  

© Luther Roseman Dease, II

Bayfront Park, Daphne AL

Made from pattern by Craft Shmaft.

 

I used my current favorite fabric collection- Prince Charming by the fabulous Tula Pink.

Galette des rois | A cake for Epiphany, on 6 January, but available well afterward. There's a small porcelain charm inside called the fève. This one was a tiny raspberry tart. | January 10, 2016 | Huawei Nexus 6P | ¹⁄₆₀ sec at f/2.0 81

Illuminated mobile home in Cedar City Missouri by Notley Hawkins. Taken with a Sony ILCE-7RM3 camera with a Sony FE 16-35mm F2.8 GM lens at ƒ/2.8 with a 1/8 second exposure at ISO 400. Processed with Adobe Lightroom CC.

 

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©Notley Hawkins

Abandoned mobile home in Cedar City Missouri by Notley Hawkins. Taken with a Sony ILCE-7RM2 camera with a Sony FE 16-35mm F2.8 GM lens at ƒ/4.0 with a 13 second exposure at ISO 200. Processed with Adobe Lightroom CC.

 

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©Notley Hawkins

In the beginning, we were defenseless against the raids, and the city burned. Then the City Defense Force brought in tanks and put AA guns on every rooftop. The tanks were mostly target practice, and now we don't have that many rooftops left. We've brought in mobile AA guns and they seem to have evened the field. Now the raiders come at their own peril.

The Cathedral Basilica of the Immaculate Conception (French: Cathédrale de l'Immaculée-Conception de Mobile) is a cathedral serving Roman Catholics in the U.S. city of Mobile, Alabama. It is the seat of the Archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Mobile. The cathedral is named for Mary, mother of Jesus, under her title, Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places as a contributing property to the Church Street East Historic District and Lower Dauphin Street Historic District and is listed on the Historic Roman Catholic Properties in Mobile Multiple Property Submission.

 

Mobile’s Cathedral Parish was established on July 20, 1703, by Jean-Baptiste de la Croix de Chevrières de Saint-Vallier, Bishop of Quebec. Bishop de Saint-Vallier named Father Roulleaux de La Vente, first pastor of the parish church, which was located at the French settlement of Mobile at the citadel of Fort Louis de la Louisiane. The parish is the first established on the Gulf Coast.

 

When the Mobile settlement was relocated to its present site in 1711, a new parish church was built and was known as Notre Dame de la Mobile (Our Lady of Mobile). In 1781, during the Spanish occupation of Mobile, the parish took its current name, Immaculate Conception.

 

Mobile was elevated to a diocese in 1829, and Frenchman, Michael Portier, was named its first bishop. Bishop Portier’s first “cathedral” was a small wooden structure located in the Old Spanish Burying Ground, site of the present cathedral. Portier soon set out to construct a "real" cathedral.

 

The cathedral, designed in 1833, by Claude Beroujon, a former seminarian turned architect, is laid out in a Roman basilica design. Construction began in 1835, but the Panic of 1837, caused a shortage of funds and delayed progress. The cathedral was consecrated for public worship in 1850, by Bishop Portier, though Beroujon’s design was not yet fully realized. The portico and towers were to come later.

 

The classical portico, with eight massive columns of the Roman Doric order, was added in the 1870s, under the direction of Bishop John Quinlan. The two towers were completed in 1884, during the watch of Bishop Jeremiah O'Sullivan.

 

Located on South Claiborne Street in downtown, it is bounded by Dauphin Street on the north, Franklin Street on the west, and Conti Street on the south. The front of the church faces east, toward the Mobile River, and overlooks Cathedral Square.

 

The building, laid out in an east-west axis, is 164 ft (50 m) long and 90 ft (27 m) wide. The ceiling is 60 ft (18 m) at its highest point, and its twin towers rise to 103 ft (31 m).

 

One of the cathedral’s finest attributes is its stained glass windows. The windows were made in Munich, Germany by Franz Mayer & Co., and installed beginning in 1890. The last window was installed in 1910, during the time of Bishop Edward Patrick Allen.

 

The twelve main windows, six on the south wall and six on the north wall, are approximately 8 feet (2.4 m) wide and 23 feet (7.0 m) tall. Each window depicts an event involving Mary in the life of her son, Jesus. The subjects of the south wall windows are Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception, the Presentation of Mary at the Temple, the Annunciation, the Visitation, the Nativity of Jesus, and the Holy Family. The themes of the north wall are the Finding of the Child Jesus at the Temple, the Marriage Feast of Cana, the Crucifixion of Jesus, Pentecost, the Assumption of Mary into Heaven, and the Coronation of Mary, Queen of Heaven.

 

Two large windows flank the portico, one under each of the two towers. The Baptism of Jesus in the River Jordan, by John the Baptist is the subject of the window in the Reconciliation Room, under the north tower. The window under the south tower, in the stairway to the choir loft, appropriately depicts St. Cecilia, patron saint of musicians.

 

Smaller windows are found in each of the eight doors in the foyer, behind the cathedral’s main doors, at the church’s front entrance. These depict, from left to right, St. Augustine of Hippo, Our Lady of Mount Carmel, the Presentation of Mary at the Temple, St. Louis IX, King of France, St. Patrick, Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception, St. Agnes of Rome, Virgin & Martyr , and the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus. Above the four middle doors is the Holy Spirit window.

 

Credit for the data above is given to the following websites:

www.mobilecathedral.org/cms/

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cathedral_Basilica_of_the_Immaculat...(Mobile,_Alabama)

   

Mobile pavement at Oslo S railway station. Tweaked with Photoshop Express.

Picture taken with Blackberry 10

 

Thank you for your favs and comments, your feedback is much appreciated ;)

I love this one. Taken with my mobile and postprocessed :)

 

# Exposure: 0.002 sec (1/500)

# Aperture: f/2.8

# Focal Length: 5.6 mm

# ISO Speed: 100

Mobile Lego arctic base for research in the most extreme conditions. The base contains a snow scooter hangar, drill tower, crane, sensor array and laboratory.

 

youtu.be/X8j0DqY9-jc

crossing the tappan zee bridge into insanely horrible traffic. fun.

One of the most important items for Japanese people are their phones.

I think everyone has a phone. Phone decoration is also popular, like the left girl. Some watch TV, other write emails or surf in the internet. Nobody is actually talking (in the train). Noone writes short messages in Japan. I think that feature is quite historical. They all write emails to each other, with pictures or a ridicously high amount of little smileys and graphics.

 

View On Black (and large)

 

(I'll be in Nagoya the next days, so no flickr :-) )

Nowadays, drug addiction doesn’t kill, mobile addiction does

Meu primeiro móbile de Natal acabou de sair do forno...rsrsrs

Preciso fazer mais, afinal o Natal ta quase chegando hein ( adoooro) rsrs

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