View allAll Photos Tagged Number1

This is a 3 shots vertorama of Lloyds, Willis Group and the Gherkin.

Sweet! I just got this in the mail. I never get tired and still totally dig the thrill of seeing finished projects in print for the first time - especially when it's for something that's puro San Antonio!

 

The Southwest School Of Art & Craft presents: Texas Draws, the inaugural exhibition of a new series instituted to highlight contemporary drawing in Texas.

 

It was a pleasure and a big gracias to Kathy Armstrong, Barbara Hill and all the awesome folks over at the Southwest School Of Art & Craft for including me in this project as the designer of the Texas Draws logo for the inaugural of this biennial exhibition.

 

The awesome cover illustration, Trace, is by Lubbock,Texas artist Alice Leora Briggs.

 

Opening Reception for Texas Draws 1 is Thursday, July 2, 2009 form 5:30-7:30 - stay tuned, more to come!

 

More info: www.swschool.org

walking past the ladies of the night

Number One Train at Greenfield Village

This is my daughter in law Amanda she is in some need of help so she is able to complete her education and get her degree if you could help out it would be so very appreciated so she can graduate and get her degree..thank you so very very much <3📓✏️📚📖. www.gofundme.com/bachelors-degree-last-class

Leopard number1 Chitabe Camp

Several "Unlimited Class" racers maneuver for position at the recent 2010 Reno Air Races. In the foreground is the Yak 3, then two F7F Tigercats, and then two P-51 Mustangs. Check the tags for specific details about the aircraft.

Taken on the 18th March 2012 ,Mothers Day to be precise at 18.55...the reason why I put this shot on flickr is that this capture was taken at exactly the time when Gareth Malone phoned the ladies to confirm that they were number 1 in the UK album charts..this is another great milestone in such a short time for these armed forces wives as the ladies were number 1 at Christmas 2011 in the singles chart ....

Thanks to everyone, and especially the fellow members/nut jobs from Flickr Group Roulette.

 

It wasn't my best work!! Or my most creative in my mind. I don't always take myself seriously, and this was a fun jokey photo for the Roulette challenge of 'Flickr notes'. There are images that I have put considerable more effort into that I am much more proud of. If you made me a contact yesterday on the basis of the Postits, please take time to browse around my stream.

 

Thanks again for all your comments and especially your notes.

 

Sosij

92030 forms 6B45 FO-Q 12:13 Wembley - Dollands Moor empty China Clay tanks service. This service works its way down from Mossend over thursday nights as wagonload 6M76. I have been trying to get a class 92 at this location for some time, which has involved one bowl and two no-shows. The problem with this location and train is that you have to set off to get here before the train leaves Wembley, so there are no trains to be following on realtime trains and it is only once you get here that you can see the train is not running. Nevermind - all those 66 shots instead have been fun.

 

Incidentally, on the subject of 66s - because their bodywork starts so high, even in high midsummer sun the light reaches most of their bogies, which is a pleasing effect. Check the variations out on my other shots at this location in the "London North of the River" set and the 66 shot in particular.

The first of the summer Fortis sponsored athletics event was held last Wednesday. Dale won the 400m in 47.11sec - outside his PB, but not bad for an early season race.

In celebration of Syracuse's #1 ranking in College Basketball - an aerial of the Carrier Dome I took last fall

McTeam 6 get their man (Colonel Sandra). The only thing they need to do now is destroy the original secret recipe!

Follow me on twitter @fastfoodturfwar or check out www.redbubble.com/people/timconstable

Number 1, a Mitsubishi Evo IX entered by Ross Hunter and Chris Dodds, seen in action, cornering, participating in the Border Access Knockhill Rally Stages hosted by Knockhill Racing Circuit, Fife, Scotland, February 2025.

 

Press "L" to view large.

This is the first production Series 11B 110 Forward Control. We purchased it in 2004 and carried out a full restoration to its original specification.

 

It was registered to the Rover Company in September 1966 and despatched to the Sales Department for use as a demonstrator. This vehicle appears in many factory films and photographs.

 

Of particular interest are the canvas hood and sticks, which are very rare.

 

The diesel engine was frankly not the best option for this vehicle, being very sluggish compared with the 2.6 six cylinder petrol – it is flat out at 45mph!

 

The Dunsfold Collection

Alfold - Surrey

England - United Kingdom

June 2015

Tagaytay City-Philippines, 14 November 2009 – A record-breaking more than 700 people from Philippines participated in the Canon PhotoMarathon Asia 2009, putting it in the Philippine Book of Records.

 

(Special thank to Sir Jay-R Romero and Wendy Garrido)

 

Singapore, Singapore - December 7, 2021: Vehicles parked on a street before Grab's headquarters at the One-North precinct. NASDAQ-listed Grab is the developer of a 'superapp' that provides transportation, food delivery and digital payment services in various Southeast Asian markets.

North Eastern Railway Bo-Bo 3rd rail and overhead wire steeplecab electric shunter locomotive number 1 (BR Class ES1 26500) inside Locomotion: The National Railway Museum at Shildon in County Durham (UK).

 

North Eastern Railway number 1 was designed by NER Chief Mechanical Engineer Wilson Worsdell entered service in 1905 and like most shunters had a very long service life. Number 1 was finally withdrawn from British Railways in 1964.

Daja lives in Boston and I met her on Boston Common. I explained about the project and she was happy for me to take her photo. She had been having some fun with a video camera and asked if she could film me - of course I agreed. Daja was delighted to be my first stranger. She liked the idea of being Number 1!

 

This picture is #001 in my 100 strangers project. Find out more about the project and see pictures taken by other photographers at the 100 Strangers Flickr Group page

everything almost back to normal

At night

 

The manager of the Barber Shop was telling me that they're thinking of getting rid of the Graff as it's sending out the wrong signal. "Too gangsta," he said.

The Misses Kettlewell’s School

At the auction in 1876 Enmoor Lodge was bought by Mrs Jane Kettlewell, for £1,600. She and her daughters, the Misses Kettlewell, ran a private boarding school for young ladies. Their ‘ladies seminary’ was previously at St.James’s Villa, just around the corner in Louis Street. They were probably needing a larger building for their school; it is possible that the extension, at the rear of Enmoor Lodge, was built on around this time.

Also Mrs Kettlewell's husband, John Kettlewell had just died the previous year, 1875, possibly leaving her with the wealth and freedom to buy larger premises for the school.

John Kettlewell was a watchmaker and had his own business in the city cetre. He is listed in the directories at 157 Briggate as a gold and silversmith,jewelry and clock manufacturer, optician ,etc..

The Kettlewell family comprised: Mrs Jane, a widow; Misses Fanny Alicia, Anne Elizabeth, and Emma, her daughters, and her son Charles B.The 1881 Census lists the Kettlewell plus a Governess, Cook, Housemaid, and 10 female students, making 18 residents altogether, quite a houseful!

The Misses Kettlewell were spinsters. In 1910 Charles Buck Kettlewell is still listed as a resident of 96 Chapeltown Road. 'Buck'was the maiden name of Jane Kettlewell, his mother. He was an insurance broker and a bachelor. He died in 1915, aged 67, . Two small upstairs windows still the bear the initials ‘CBK’ in Victorian frosted glass, these may stand for Charles Buck Kettlewell.

The school advertised regularly in the local press for prospective pupils. An advert on the front page of the Leeds Mercury on Saturday, August 3rd, 1878 reads:

ENMOOR LODGE Ladies School, Chapeltown Road, New Leeds – Mrs and the Misses Kettlewell receive Young Ladies to Board and Educate. The School Course embraces preparation for the University, Local and other Examinations. The terms include thorough English – its language and Literature, Latin, Mathematics, Natural Sciences. Resident French and English Governesses, and a staff of high class visiting Professors. Yearly examinations of the whole School. Prospectus on application. Duties resumed (D.V.) August 8th.

This shows that the young ladies at Enmoor Lodge received a highly academic education, aimed at university entrance. In the mid-late Victorian period women's education began to change, the Two Spheres division was breaking down. Women like Bella Rokesmith in Dickens's Our Mutual Friend were demanding a bigger role: "I want to be something so much worthier than the doll in the doll's house."(Book IV, Chap.5). Of course, when women passed their university examinations they still would not have been awarded degrees at this time.

In 1890 Mrs. Kettlewell decided to pass on the ownership of the house to her three daughters.

Mrs.Kettlewell died in 1895 at the age of 83.

After thirty-three years the school at Enmoor Lodge closed in 1911. By this time only the Misses Kettlewell remained. They continued to live in the house until the early 1920s when, in the space of three years they all passed away. Fanny Alicia died on October 12th, 1920, aged 69; Anne Elizabeth died at Enmoor Lodge on 26th March, 1921, aged 72; and Emma expired on 20th October, 1923, at the ripe old age of79. Interestingly, Emma had also owned 4 houses on Roseville Road which she must have let out to tenants.

The whole Kettlewell family from enmoor Lodge icluding John (the father)were buried in Leeds General Cemetery which is now known as St George's Fields and lies within the University of Leeds campus. Unfortunately nearly all the gravestones have been cleared away.

 

In 1924 a group of Jewish gentlemen clubbed together and bought number 1 Leopold Street. These 'gentlemen' were mostly actually workingmen from Chapeltown, Harehills, and Sheepscar: they included nine tailors, a machinist, a drayman, a furnisher, and a jeweller. One, Harris Goldfine, was from Islington in London. Another was Hyman Morris, a wallpaper manufacturer, who was to become an alderman and in 1941 he became the first Jewish Lord Mayor of Leeds.

Hyman Morris, the first Jewish Lord Mayor of Leeds, 1941.

The Jewish partners paid £1,500 for number1 Leopold Street and then proceeded to have the house converted into flats. The Electoral Register of 1928 lists residents of Flats 1,2,4 and 5, at number 1 Leopold Street. At flat 5 there lived Joseph and Lily Cohen, and in 1929 they were joined by Jack and Gershon Cohen; in Flat 7 a Rhoda Ginsberg resided. The fact that there were now Jewish tenants at number 1 Leopold Street was a reflection of the movement of the Jewish community into Chapeltown at this time.

By 1934 seven of the original Jewish partners had died and the house was sold for £1,500 to a Jewish friendly society, called the King David Independent Friendly Society. In 1959 the council bought number 1 Leopold Street for £2,250, and it became council flats.

 

After the Second World War more immigrants came to Chapeltown. These included Poles, Latvians, Serbs, Asians, and, of course, Afro-Caribbeans. In 1966 Stanislav and Helen Szostak lived in flat D, number 1 Leopold Street. They were probably Polish. In flat C, Calvin and Viris Jobson lived, a couple from the Caribbean.

In February, 1998, number 1 Leopold Street was bought by Leeds Action to Create Homes, a local charity which provides housing and support to the homeless. Over th enext few years LATCH carried out extensive alterations to the house and converted it into 6 modern flats for young people in housing need. The work was carried out by the new tenants or "self-builders", volunteers, and workers on training schemes. An official opening ceremony was held in January 2001 and the tenants were able to move in, thus completing another chapter in the history of this seemingly unremarkable Leeds house...

The Men's Open Race at Rd 7 of the Scottish Cyclocross Series produced an epic event. Providing 55 mins of incredibly competitive racing, with the win by Lewis Martin [race number1] only be secured in the last fifty metres.

Just found this photo from the last summers art deco.. well thats what i wore for it.It was a cool experience. :)

Hair accessory ; theblueshop.

Dress;Farmers

Shoes;Number1 show warehouse.

Gloves-Mumzy, and so is the bag :D

The Scottish Motor Racing Championships (SMRC) Meeting saw Scottish Formula Ford Championship races at Knockhill Racing Circuit, Fife, July 2021.

 

This image shows Jordan Gronkowski in his Van Diemen JL012K.

 

Press "L" to view large.

© All Rights Reserved - Black Diamond Images

 

BDI Australian Beaches

 

Number One Beach is 1.3 km long and curves around on its southern end to face the northeast. Being protected by Seal Rocks Point. the beach offers a good 1-2m surf break in a southerly swell with offshore winds combining to effect the best conditions for surfing. The beach is unpatrolled and the Seal Rocks Camping Reserve is ideally located directly across the road from the beach with littoral rainforest backing the southern end.

To the north of the northern end of Number One Beach are five small pocket beaches ranging in size from 125 m to 275 m long. The beaches known as Number 2,3,4,5 and 6 beaches are only accessible by water or on foot through Myall Lakes National Park and are backed by forested hills rising steeply to over 100 m. Beyond these 5 small beaches lies the usually closed entrance to Smiths Lake at Sandbar and Celito Beach.

 

Seal Rocks formerly a quiet fishing village,is now more well known for it being one of the last bastions of the endangered Grey Nurse Shark. Numerous Dive Operators conduct commercial dives to see these docile sharks.

 

Good dive sites at Seal Rocks include the 125 m long cargo steamer SS Satara which foundered on the Edith Breaker off Seal Rocks on the 10th April 1910 while on a voyage to Brisbane. No lives were lost and the SS Satara is now resting on its port side in 42 m of water with the large prop and stern section sitting in an upright position along with the portholes, boilers, engine, propeller shaft, and piles of chains. The wreck is now home to a variety of reef and pelagic fish, Port Jackson, Grey Nurse, Wobbegong and Bronze Whaler sharks as well as sponges, ascidians, anemones and black coral trees. The wreck of the SS Satara was not discovered until 1984.

A number of other recommended dive locations can be found off Seal Rocks, including Skeleton Rocks, Little Seal Rock, Edith Breakers and the wreck of the 93 m long Catterthun, in 60 m of water.

The Catterthun was on a voyage from Sydney to Hong Kong when it ran into a storm off Seal Rocks. The ship foundered in the early hours of the 8th August 1895 with the loss of 31 lives. One lifeboat with 26 survivors made it safely to shore with assistance from a local sailing boat. Rescue efforts were hampered by the bad weather, and two more crewmen were found two days later in a lifeboat.

In Memory of Stefán Karl Stefánsson. He was Number One!

Inspired by londoncake.com

Support me and become a fan on Facebook: Cakes by Andreea

Jackson Pollock

American, 1912-1956

 

Number 1A, 1948, 1948

Oil and enamel on unprimed canvas, 68" x 8' 8"

 

Publication excerpt from The Museum of Modern Art, MoMA Highlights, New York: The Museum of Modern Art, revised 2004, originally published 1999, p. 194:

 

One is a masterpiece of the "drip," or pouring, technique, the radical method that Pollock contributed to Abstract Expressionism. Moving around an expanse of canvas laid on the floor, Pollock would fling and pour ropes of paint across the surface. One is among the largest of his works that bear evidence of these dynamic gestures. The canvas pulses with energy: strings and skeins of enamel, some matte, some glossy, weave and run, an intricate web of tans, blues, and grays lashed through with black and white. The way the paint lies on the canvas can suggest speed and force, and the image as a whole is dense and lushyet its details have a lacelike filigree, a delicacy, a lyricism.

 

The Surrealists' embrace of accident as a way to bypass the conscious mind sparked Pollock's experiments with the chance effects of gravity and momentum on falling paint. Yet although works like One have neither a single point of focus nor any obvious repetition or pattern, they sustain a sense of underlying order. This and the physicality of Pollock's method have led to comparisons of his process with choreography, as if the works were the traces of a dance. Some see in paintings like One the nervous intensity of the modern city, others the primal rhythms of nature.

Former World Number 1 Martina Hingis in action at the 2007 Australian Open, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

Seattle Police Patrol Boat No. 1

Number 1, 1949

1949

Jackson Pollock

 

Enamel and Alumininum Paint on Canvas

 

MOCA, The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles

The Rita and Taft Schreiber Collection

© All Rights Reserved - Black Diamond Images

 

BDI Australian Beaches

 

Number One Beach is 1.3 km long and curves around on its southern end to face the northeast. Being protected by Seal Rocks Point. the beach offers a good 1-2m surf break in a southerly swell with offshore winds combining to effect the best conditions for surfing. The beach is unpatrolled and the Seal Rocks Camping Reserve is ideally located directly across the road from the beach with littoral rainforest backing the southern end.

To the north of the northern end of Number One Beach are five small pocket beaches ranging in size from 125 m to 275 m long. The beaches known as Number 2,3,4,5 and 6 beaches are only accessible by water or on foot through Myall Lakes National Park and are backed by forested hills rising steeply to over 100 m. Beyond these 5 small beaches lies the usually closed entrance to Smiths Lake at Sandbar and Celito Beach.

 

Seal Rocks formerly a quiet fishing village,is now more well known for it being one of the last bastions of the endangered Grey Nurse Shark.Numerous Dive Operators conduct commercial Dives to see these docile sharks.

 

Good dive sites at Seal Rocks include the 125 m long cargo steamer SS Satara which foundered on the Edith Breaker off Seal Rocks on the 10th April 1910 while on a voyage to Brisbane. No lives were lost and the SS Satara is now resting at on its port side in 42 m of water with the large prop and stern section sitting in an upright position along with the portholes, boilers, engine, propeller shaft, and piles of chains. The wreck is now home to a variety of reef and pelagic fish, Port Jackson, Grey Nurse, Wobbegong and Bronze Whaler sharks as well as sponges, ascidians, anemones and black coral trees. The wreck of the SS Satara was not discovered until 1984.

A number of other recommended dive locations can be found off Seal Rocks, including Skeleton Rocks, Little Seal Rock, Edith Breakers and the wreck of the 93 m long Catterthun, in 60 m of water.

The Catterthun was on a voyage from Sydney to Hong Kong when it ran into a storm off Seal Rocks. The ship foundered in the early hours of the 8th August 1895 with the loss of 31 lives. One lifeboat with 26 survivors made it safely to shore with assistance from a local sailing boat. Rescue efforts were hampered by the bad weather, and two more crewmen were found two days later in a lifeboat.

 

Note - Much more than the usual amount of driftwood and seaweed on the beach in these images due to the recent flooding events up and down the NSW Coast.

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