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Post com looks de tricots: saia, vestido, blusas, e tem ate uma bolsa lindona!
Confere la gente:
buskinandheels.wordpress.com/2012/06/04/who-likestrico/
Bom fim de semana gente ;D
Taken at the wrecking yard near the office. I just felt this one came out looking almost post-apocalyptic in a way.
On the old Post Office railway under London. It used to link various London mail sorting offices and the trains used to be unmanned, carrying post and parcels only. It closed in 2003, but re-opened last year as a visitor attraction. It is well worth seeing. The tunnels are a lot smaller than the London Underground!
Post Office circa 1990. Located at 130 W Franklin St. From a slide collection from the Neenah Historical Society.
The Post Office have announced that they are to discontinue using bicycles to deliver the mail. It seems a retrograde step when the government is trying to persuade people to cycle more.
(Notice the red bands :)
And yet another front shot. Positioned the guns better in this shot. You can see that the base isn't that sturdy. Need to do some more work on it.
sticker design sketches for a contest which ends in like 3 hours...gotta hurry up
rules:
has to be 3x3 inches
only red, black and white
make it look kick-ass
any favorites?
Post-Mortem Examination / Autopsy
@ Rumah Sakit Umum Abepura
General Hospital Abepura / Jayapura ~ Papua
Sep 30, 2007
The Old Post Office in Dawson City, Yukon, was built in 1901. It was designed by Thomas Fuller, a renowned Canadian architect at the time. It is among the oldest buildings in the Yukon. Mail was a vital part of Dawson life since the town was formed in 1896 because it allowed the gold miners to keep in touch with the outside world.
The building contains a large vault, 1775 assorted brass-faced boxes, and drawers to hold the mail. There is also a postmaster's office, delivery offices, and a telegraph receiving room. On the second floor are ten offices. These were inhabited by the Customs Service, the Crown Lands Department, the Registrar of Crown Lands and the Telegraph Service. A small elevator for messages and parcels connected them with activities on the floor below. An annex on the side of the building housed Fuller's office; later it became the telegraph office.
the people all huddled by the door are actually surrounding a heater that shot out open flames. It was nice that the building had a heat source, but it reminded me of how many famous projects have burned down. and why?
Funnily enough, it's no longer the Post Office.
This building replaced the General Post Office building built only 25 years earlier further along Meadowside which was demolished to make way for the Courier Building.
This building, itself superseded by something not even worth mentioning, appeared to be empty - languishing as a former nightclub. Oh, the indignity.
Jim Leyland had just been tossed, and I guess figured that once he was out of the game, he may as well REALLY tell the umps his thoughts.
Covington County. Photo by J Gallagher, Jan. 1992.
Part of the Post Mark Collectors Club (PMCC) collection.
Journal Entry three.
Date: Unknown
"Hmm .. Can't really say how many days i have been since we left that working spot, i guess around Two og Three, Anyway me and pete followed the tracks of the Murderes or Killers. we followed the road a day i think and then the tracks startet going in to the forrest kinda. after some time we enden up in at place where there wasent that many trees and we could se one of the killers but i think hey where hill billys you know the stereio type you know the one that cant read and likes gun, hmm .. That Guard was not a problem Pete ended his life fast and i took his ak and gave pete my gun. we wen't up to the camp. the walls wasen't that big, big enough to i coulden see over it and just spary with my new ak and pete startet shooting to it diddent take long time for us to end them. we took there ammo and food and left in case there would be more og them."