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Middletown, NY. October 2016.
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If you would like to use THIS picture in any sort of media elsewhere (such as newspaper or article), please send me a Flickrmail or send me an email at natehenderson6@gmail.com
Department Spokesperson Ned Price holds the Daily Press Briefing at the U.S. Department of State in Washington, D.C., on January 31, 2022. [State Department Photo by Freddie Everett/ Public Domain]
Street Price: (US) $ 1900
Body Material: Metal
CCD
Effective pixels: 4.92 megapixels
CCD size: 2/3"
Colour Filter Array: G - R - G - B
Max resolution: 2560 x 1920
Lower resolutions:
1792 x 1344
• 1280 x 960
• 1024 x 768
• 640 x 480
Image ratio w:h: 4:3
Image formats:
• JPEG (EXIF)
• RAW (2576 x 1924) - final output is 2560 x 1920
• TIFF (8-bit)
Quality Levels:
1/2.7
• 1/4
• 1/8
Sensitivity equiv:
• Auto
• ISO 80
• ISO 160
• ISO 320
Lens Thread: 62 mm
Zoom wide: (W) 35 mm
Zoom tele (T) 140 mm (4 x)
Zoom type: Mechanically linked
Lens Aperture: F2.0 - F2.4
Lens Construction: 14 elements in 11 groups
Digital zoom: None
Auto Focus: Contrast detection
AF Illumination lamp: Yes, Infrared
Manual Focus: 20 cm - Infininty (focus-by-wire ring on front of lens barrel)
Normal focus range: 60 cm - InfinityMacro focus range: 20 cm - 60 cm
Min shutter:
• Program / Aperture Priority / Shutter Priority: 2 sec
• Manual: Bulb, 60 sec
Max shutter:
• IS (2560 x 1920) 1/640 sec
• PS (1792 x 1344) 1/4000, 1/18000 sec
Noise reduction: Yes, can be manually enabled
Pixel mapping: Yes, menu option
Metering
Digital ESP
• Center-Weighted Average
• Spot
Exposure adjustment: -3EV to +3EV in 1/3EV steps
Auto bracketing: • 3 images
• 0.3 - 1.0 EV in 0.3 EV steps
Aperture priority:
Wide: F2.0, F2.2, F2.4, F2.8, F3.2, F3.6, F4.0, F4.5, F5.0, F5.6, F6.3, F7.1, F8.0, F9.0, F10.0, F11.0
• Tele: F2.4, F2.8, F3.2, F3.6, F4.0, F4.5, F5.0, F5.6, F6.3, F7.1, F8.0, F9.0, F10.0, F11.0
Shutter priority:
IS mode: 2, 1.6, 1.3, 1, 1/1.3, 1/1.6, 1/2, 1/2.5, 1/3, 1/4, 1/5, 1/6, 1/8, 1/10, 1/13, 1/15, 1/20, 1/25, 1/30, 1/40, 1/50, 1/60, 1/80, 1/100, 1/125, 1/160, 1/200, 1/250, 1/320, 1/400, 1/500, 1/640 sec
• PS mode additionally: 1/800, 1/1000, 1/1250, 1/1600, 1/2000, 1/2800, 1/4000, 1/18000 sec
Full manual: As above plus these shutter speeds:
• Bulb, 60, 47, 38, 30, 25, 20, 15, 13, 10, 8, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2.5 secExposure Modes • Program AE
• Aperture Priority
• Shutter Priority
• Manual
White Balance:
• Auto WB
• 3000 K (Tungsten)
• 3700 K (Tungsten - Warmer)
• 4000 K (Fluorescent)
• 4500 K (Fluorescent - Warmer)
• 5500 K (Daylight)
• 6500 K (Cloudy)
• 7500 K (Shade)
• Manual Preset
Continuous: IS: 2560 x 1920 - 2.5 fps max 4 images
PS: 1792 x 1344 - 4.5 fps max 7 images
Built-in Flash: Yes, pop-up (manually released)
Flash Range:• Wide: 0.6 - 8.9 m (2.0 - 29.2 ft)
• Tele: 0.5 - 7.4 m (1.6 - 24.3 ft)
Flash modes:
• Auto
• Red-Eye Reduction
• Flash On
• Flash Off
Flash compensation: +/-2 EV in 0.3 EV steps
External flash: Hot-shoe (Olympus FL-40 flash)
• PC Sync terminal
Tripod mount: Yes, metal
Self-timer: Yes, 2 or 12 sec delay
Remote control: Yes, supplied Infrared
Video out: Yes, E-20P - PAL, E-20N - NTSC
Storage media:
Smart Media (up to 128 MB)
• Compact Flash (Type I / II - Microdrive 1 GB supported)
Storage included: 16 MB SmartMedia card
Viewfinder: Optical, TTL (prism), 95% view
LCD: 1.8" TFT, can be tilted by 20 degrees down and 90 degrees up
Playback zoom: Yes, 2x, 3x, 4x
Connectivity: DC-In, USB, Video Out, PC Sync Terminal, Remote control jack
Timelapse: Yes
Battery: 1 x CR-V3 Lithium (non-rechargeable) supplied
Battery charger: 2 x CR-V3 Lithium, or
4 x AA batteries (NiMH recommended)
Weight (inc. battery) 1170 g (2.6 lb)
Dimensions (inc. grip): 128 x 103 x 161 mm (5.1 x 4.1 x 6.3 in)
Department Spokesperson Ned Price holds the Daily Press Briefing at the U.S. Department of State in Washington, D.C., on March 31, 2022. [State Department photo by Freddie Everett/ Public Domain]
Texas Tribune CEO and Editor-in-Chief Evan Smith moderated “The Price of Admission“ with Paul Cruz, Larry Faulkner, State Rep. Donna Howard, D-Austin, State Rep. John Zerwas, R-Richmond on March 31, 2016.
Strobist Info:
(x1) Yongnuo YN560-III at camera left shot through an 18" soft white Lumodi Beauty Dish.
I haven't been there for a good few years, so I can't comment on the current situation, but in the 1980s a trip to Northern Ireland could be guaranteed to turn up vehicular oddities.
This 'Renault' Commander (I suppose really genetically a Commer/Dodge) with Wadham Stringer Vanguard body featured in a 1986 Renault Trucks catalogue, a copy of which I have in my possession. In that publication, it wears this livery but without the fleetnames. It seems it was subsequently bought by Crazy Prices, a supermarket chain in Northern Ireland, who were using it for customer transport to their Coleraine branch when I came across it parked up just outside that town in 1986.
Pieces: 2741
Price: US $249.99 - CA $299.99 - DE 249.99€ - UK £169.99
Available from March 2014 via shop.LEGO.com and LEGO Stores
More information and pics up: THE BRICK TIME
Be sure to visit our BrickLink-Shop: THE BRICK TIME - Store
Support us on LEGO Cuusoo for new sets.
Department Spokesperson Ned Price prepares for the Daily Press Briefing at the U.S. Department of State in Washington, D.C., on March 31, 2021. [State Department Photo by Freddie Everett/ Public Domain]
Department Spokesperson Ned Price prepares for the Daily Press Briefing at the U.S. Department of State in Washington, D.C., on February 11, 2021. [State Department Photo by Ron Przysucha/ Public Domain]
Vincent Price on the red carpet at the 1989 Academy Awards, March 29, 1989 - Permission granted to copy, publish, broadcast or post but please credit "photo by Alan Light" if you can
Phoebe Price
The SeenON.com Launch Party - Red Carpet
Boulevard3
Los Angeles , California United States
December 6, 2006
Photo by John Shearer/WireImage.com
Department Spokesperson Ned Price holds the Daily Press Briefing at the U.S. Department of State in Washington, D.C., on April 20, 2021. [State Department Photo by Freddie Everett/ Public Domain]
The Postcard
A postally unused postcard published by C. H. Price of 62, High Street, Croydon. The card, which has a divided back, is a glossy real photograph.
Purley
Purley is an area of the London Borough of Croydon. It was part of the county of Surrey until 1965. It is located south of the town of Croydon, and 11.7 miles (18.8 km) south of Charing Cross. It had a population of about 14,000 in 2011.
Aviation
Kenley Aerodrome, to the east of the town, was one of the key fighter stations - together with Croydon Airport and Biggin Hill - during the World War II support of Dunkirk, Battle of Britain and defence of London.
Suburban Growth
Purley grew rapidly in the 1920's and 1930's, providing spacious homes in a green environment. Northeast Purley stretches into the chalk hill spurs of the North Downs.
Promenade de Verdun
One road, Promenade de Verdun, created by William Webb, has a distinction all of its own. It is 600 yards (550 m) long and has on one side Lombardy poplars planted in local soil mixed with French earth specially shipped over to the UK.
A plaque at one end of the road explains that the French ministry of the interior donated the soil from Armentières, as a memorial to the alliance of the Great War and the soldiers who died.
At the other end stands an obelisk carved from a single piece of stone with the inscription:
"Aux soldats de France morts
glorieusement pendant la Grande
Guerre".
Purley in WWII
The 32nd. Surrey Battalion of the Home Guard was known as the Factory Battalion, and had the specific task of guarding the Purley Way factories: its units were mainly based on staff from the individual firms.
The factories adjoining Croydon Airport took the worst of the air raid of the 15th. August 1940: the British NSF factory was almost entirely destroyed, and the Bourjois factory gutted, with a total of over sixty civilian deaths.
A comprehensive history of Purley and its growth around Caterham Junction (now Purley Station) with the coming of the railways some 150 years ago is found in the Bourne Society's 'Purley Village History' and in its Local History Records publications.
The Webb Estate
The Webb Estate made headlines in a 2002 survey, which found that it had over the years attracted the highest-earning residents in the UK. In the same year Purley topped Britain's rich list, becoming the most affluent suburb.
Purley consistently features among the most affluent suburbs in Britain owing to its exclusive gated estates, large houses and greenery, yet it is less than 30 minutes from central London by train, thus attracting wealthy city workers.
Fictional References to Purley
-- On television the town became known in the sitcom, Terry and June where Terry and June Medford (Terry Scott and June Whitfield), had moved after the characters' previous series, Happy Ever After.
The sitcom was set on the cusp of Purley and Wallington (on Church Road in a house within sight of St Mark's Church) and the opening credits featured them searching for each other around the (now unrecognisable) Whitgift Centre – a shopping precinct in Croydon.
-- One of the houses used in Footballer's Wives is 7 Rose Walk, Purley, owned by former Crystal Palace FC Chairman Ron Noades.
-- Purley is famous for a reference in both the "Marriage Guidance Counsellor", "Nudge Nudge", and "Kilimanjaro Expedition" (mentioned in the film And Now for Something Completely Different) sketches by the Monty Python team.
-- The CBBC children's sitcom Little Howard's Big Question is based in Purley, and also features continual references to Croydon.
-- Mr Angry, a character on Steve Wright's Radio 1 afternoon show in the 1980's, is from Purley.
Notable Residents of Purley
Notable residents include:
-- Michael Arthur, Vice-Chancellor of Leeds University, and Provost of University College London from September 2013, was born in Purley.
-- Jay Aston, singer with Bucks Fizz, was born in Purley.
-- Ronald Binge and his wife Vera lived at 18, Smitham Bottom Lane in the 1950's. He composed the Elizabethan Serenade there.
-- Derren Brown, magician and mentalist, was born and grew up in Purley.
-- Peter Cushing OBE, actor, grew up and went to school in Purley.
-- Brian Fahey, composer of "At the Sign of the Swingin' Cymbal" (the signature tune to BBC Radio's Pick of the Pops).
-- Andy Frampton, former professional footballer, grew up in Purley.
-- Shelagh Fraser, actress, was born in Purley.
-- Laura Hamilton, TV presenter and Dancing on Ice Contestant, lives in Purley.
-- Nigel Harman, actor, was born and grew up in Purley.
-- Sir Bernard Ingham, Margaret Thatcher's former press secretary, lives in Purley.
-- Sir David P. Lane, oncologist best known for identifying P53, went to school and grew up in Purley.
-- Martin Lee, singer with Brotherhood of Man, was born in Purley.
-- Archibald Low, pioneer of radio guidance systems, was born in Purley.
-- Ray Mears, TV survivalist, went to school in Purley.
-- Ron Noades, former chairman of Wimbledon FC, Crystal Palace FC and Brentford FC and owner of the Altonwood Golf Group, lived in Rose Walk, Purley, from 1993 until 2013.
-- Innes Hope Pearse, doctor and co-founder of the Peckham Experiment, grew up in Purley.
-- Francis Rossi, lead singer of Status Quo, lives in the Webb Estate in Purley.
-- John Horne Tooke, an English politician and philologist, lived in Purley at the end of the 18th. century where he began writing Epea Pteroenta, Or, The Diversions of Purley.
-- Wilfried Zaha, footballer, Crystal Palace FC, lives in the Webb Estate.
Fisher Price Little people are characters in the James Gunn novel, The Toy Collector.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Toy_Collector
I found this bus in a second hand store, at first I thought it was a vintage toy, and I was surprised to see how well kept it was, then I learned it was a new version sold at Hallmark in 2009