View allAll Photos Tagged Pak

Global 7500 about to arrive on runway 24

 

TWFrZXI6MHg0YyxEYXRlOjIwMTgtNS0xNyxWZXI6NCxMZW5zOkthbjAzLEFj

dDpMYXIwMSxFLVksRS12ZXI6MjAxODExMjYuNTE0ODY4MC4wMDIuMDAwAQ==

 

Architect: Kamil Khan Mumtaz

Location: Keranwala Saidan, Pakistan

From Wikipedia

Pak Nai (Chinese: 白泥) is a wetland area, partly mud-bank, surrounded by mountain ranges, in the Yuen Long District while facing the Shenzhen Bay. As the landscape works in great diversity. Pak Nai makes up the coastline as Sheung Pak Nai (上白泥) and Ha Pak Nai (下白泥) geographically.

1 pak mới :( vs trình thảm hại :-<

Morning storm at Pak Nam Pran beach, on the east side of town facing the Gulf of Thailand, where the tourist resorts are.

 

The Pak 36(r) was a modified/upgraded F-22 M1936. Large quantities of F-22s were captured by the Wehrmacht during the opening phase of Operation Barbarossa and subsequently used against their former owners. Over 500 were so modified, and some were even mounted on Marder IIs and IIIs.

 

Special Thanks to CB and PA for the hard-to-find woodland helmets.

 

Sorry for all the artillery pieces, but I enjoy them :)

Bombardier Global 7500

HRH Prince Karim Aga Khan / Aiglemont

Dublin 27/6/2024

Summilux-M 1:1.4/35 ASPH

 

This image is protected by copyright, no use of this image shall be granted without the written permission from Jeffri Jaffar..

Summilux-M 1:1.4/35 ASPH

 

This image is protected by copyright, no use of this image shall be granted without the written permission from Jeffri Jaffar..

Bangkok, Thailand

July 2015

Attending a funeral in Tana Toraja with his 8 children and 19 grandchildren

So I recently finally gotten off my ass and actually built something "good", well, 2 weeks ago. I just had zero effort in taking photos due to personal reasons.

 

I had help with the center piece since I'm mental, but the rest is mine.

Wheels are green since I saw several images of anti tank guns had either tan wheels or green wheels, plus the fact I don't have any other colored wheels xD.

 

Enjoy!

I reworked "my" (it still is Antonio's, lol) PAK and now it is guarding a small road while fresh troops arrive.

 

Many thanks for taking a look!

way too small but what the hell

Summicron T 1:2 23 ASPH.

  

This image is protected by copyright, no use of this image shall be granted without the written permission from Jeffri Jaffar..

 

TWFrZXI6MHg0YyxEYXRlOjIwMTgtNS0xNyxWZXI6NCxMZW5zOkthbjAzLEFj

dDpMYXIwMSxFLVksRS12ZXI6MjAxODExMjYuNTE0ODY4MC4wMDIuMDAwAQ==

 

To be seen in my upcoming D-Day diorama.

And yes, I need to add another half pin to the barrel, I just forgot to do it before I too kthe pictures.

:P

;-D

Inspirated by Brian.

Sai Kung, Hong Kong

We let the pak choi go to flower. It was handsome in its edible stage (flic.kr/p/29A6ZnJ), but it is also nice as a flowering ornamental. And it will probably reseed.

 

P3137260.

 

TWFrZXI6MHg0YyxEYXRlOjIwMTgtNS0xNyxWZXI6NCxMZW5zOkthbjAzLEFj

dDpMYXIwMSxFLVksRS12ZXI6MjAxODExMjYuNTE0ODY4MC4wMDIuMDAwAQ==

 

Sai Kung, Hong Kong

Mysore pak originally called as Mysuru Paaka (Paaka means a sweet syrup) is an Indian sweet prepared in ghee that is popular in Southern India. It originated in Mysore in the Indian state of Karnataka. It is made of generous amounts of ghee, sugar, gram flour, and often cardamom.

 

Mysore pak was first prepared in the kitchens of the Mysore Palace during the regime of Krishna Raja Wadiyar IV, by a palace cook named Kakasura Madappa. Madappa made a concoction of gram flour, ghee and sugar. When asked its name, Madappa had nothing in mind, simply called it the 'Mysuru pak'. Pak (or paaka, more precisely) in Kannada means sweet.

Source: Wikipedia

Thick Margaret - Tallinn Maritime Museum

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

1 3 5 6 7 ••• 79 80