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I love this dog :) (and my other one too!)

layered two of my own ttvs

FashionLicious Delisious Tube Top for LIKE Sales Room, J&A Rock Culture Zipper Mini Skirt Black UK for LIKE Sales Room, WRD Diana Black, for LIKE Sales Room, M-NUS, Simple Heels in Black (SLink Mid Feet Needed) for LIKE Sales Room, Saturday Night Fever Pose Set for Oneword, Clawtooth: Hang it up from Silent Movie Star Pack for Collarbor88, Morphine Rowena in Native Skin Tone, The Cotton Candy Hunt Gift, BODY DOUBLES Elle Shape, *GA* Mesh Eyelashes Utopia, IKON Ardent Eyes in Pewter, [Kaharma] Birdy Tattoo worn 65% for LIKE Sales Room, Baubles by Phe Revved (Earrings & Necklace) for The Designer Circle and {ZOZ} Angel Polish Pack for SLink Nails for The Designer Circle!

 

Original Blog Post:

auroratown.wordpress.com/2014/05/07/like-sales-room-desig...

Tucker Torpedo brochure, c. 1947. This concept drawing includes a centrally positioned steering wheel, doors that wrap up into the roof, and front fenders that turn when the car is cornering. These features did not reach production.

The Tucker 48 (named after its model year) is an automobile conceived by Preston Tucker and briefly produced in Chicago in 1948. Only 51 cars were made before the company ceased operations on March 3, 1949, due to negative publicity initiated by the news media, a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation and a heavily publicized stock fraud trial (in which the allegations were proven baseless and led to a full acquittal). Speculation exists that the Big Three automakers and Michigan Senator Homer S. Ferguson also had a role in the Tucker Corporation's demise.[citation needed] The 1988 movie Tucker: The Man and His Dream is based on the saga surrounding the car's production. The film's director, Francis Ford Coppola, is a Tucker owner and displays his vehicle on the grounds of his winery.[2] The 48's original proposed price was said to be $1,000, but the actual selling price was closer to $4,000.[3] A 1948 Tucker sedan was featured in the July 26, 2011, installment of NBC's It's Worth What? television show. The car's estimated value at that time was US$1,200,000. The car is commonly referred to as the "Tucker Torpedo". This name was never used in conjunction with the actual production car, and its name was officially "Tucker 48".

 

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

Available @Oneword November

Sign inside a lighthouse. Plymouth, Devon, England

Available at Oneword Sept 17th

Plymouth, Devon, England

Lines up more appropriately this way...

Una palabra que esta ayudando a salvar vidas en estos momentos dificiles por los que pasa la Ciudad de México.

Por favor guarden silencio cuando se pida.

Plymouth, Devon, England

I love how cowboy boots look like they're being worn, even when they're off your feet.

 

These need a good polish, really. They cost me $8 ten years ago and I should probably treat them better than I do.

 

Shutter Sisters project for February.

Plymouth, Devon, England

Lynchburg, Tennessee, USA

The wild ponies in the New Forest roam freely, even on the roads.

 

What an appropriate vehicle to come by at just that moment!

  

...

For you there’s rosemary and rue; these keep

Seeming and savour all the winter long:

Grace and remembrance be to you both,

...

 

A Winter's Tale. Act IV. Scene III.

Last month most of the Swedish media had the same story on the front page. Former rocker Tommy Nilsson was changing his name to Black. He had turned fifty and needed a new image with his soon the be released new album. The next day it was revealed that it was all a ploy. Marabou's new licorice chocolate was called Black. So since that day I always ask for a Tommy Nilsson when I want this chocolate.

Rosary Cemetery, Norwich, Norfolk, England, UK

Going down....

Oneword Round Six Voting Now Open through November 9th! onewordsl.blogspot.com/2014/11/oneword-round-six-voting-n...

 

Our words to vote upon are Positive, Fairytales, Dream, Frostbite, Resolution

OLYMPUS DIGITAL KAMERA

Piran, Slovenija - June 2011

On a sharp bend approaching a crossroads in the Cheshire village of Whitley. The village has quite a gothic feel with tall trees and crumbling brick walls surrounding historic houses. I think this b&w image conveys the slight feeling of unease that I associate with gothic stuff and the word of warning, really meant for speeding drivers, contributes to this.

TV remote control button.

My new Starck glasses - fantastic frames!

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