View allAll Photos Tagged Queue,
The Postcard
A postally unused Comicard Series postcard that was published by E. Marks, Fine Art Publishers, Torbay Road, Kilburn, London N.W.6.
The publishers were obviously operating under a fairly broad definition of what constitutes 'Fine Art'.
The artwork is by Joner, and the card has a divided back.
After queueing for an hour to walk out, we queued for over 2 hours to drive out of the field. There was no marshalling so it was a free for all. Everyone just pointed their cars at the exit and hoped for the best. Most were pretty good and filtered considerately (with one noteable exception!). When we got to the gate there was one poor girl sending cars through one at a time.
If they'd had four or five proper queues it would have been quicker because she could have let, say, five cars from each queue go through at a time. Very badly organised.
If I hadn't already mentioned it, the past week was Armory Arts Week where tons of art happenings and events took place in New York City. This is art by Kenjiro Kitade at Lorimoto Gallery in the Ridgewood-Bushwick border of Queens and Brooklyn.
Saturday 12 June 2010 and people are queueing for plots on the Victoria Jubilee Allotments, Handsworth, Birmingham
Wonderland 2005
It was labour day 2005, when all the school kids spend one last day at Wonderland before going back to school, so the queue lines were packed. Never have I seen Dragon Fire's queue line so packed. There's still about 5x as many people waiting inside the hut.
Shot with Canon A-1 50mm f/1.4 on Kodak T-MAX 400 with orange filter. Possible issues in scanning and/or development?
Don't think it's a light leak since I don't (think I) see it on other films. But...who knows. Worth checking...
Article about this mega burger on Crunchgear:
The real life Burger King Windows 7 Whopper is a disgusting joke to humanity
0021:
The queue at Roseacre Junior School Maidstone Kent where over 400 children and parents queued for the loo and raised over £550.
0031: They donated to Water Aid in a large 'toilet' outside the school that was at the head of the queue.
This was just the start, of *epic* queues of people to get home. By bus, taxi, any means possible. Roads immediately gridlocked, no-one could move and it stayed like that for days. Having an impeccable public transport system allows unimaginable numbers of people to commute long distances every day. One glitch, and those millions (I have heard it's something like 20m commuting in/out of Tokyo every day) are stuck. Japan's normal efficiency became a handicap in all areas of life during the disaster b/c unlike the residents of other countries, where ppl are used to periodic failures and the general uselessness of both public and private services -- so don't rely on things working well -- the Japanese rely on the system running almost perfectly every time.
Queue de Castor
Cuisson : Frire dans l'huile chauffée à 350F (175C)
Ingrédients
1 c. à table de sucre
1/2 tasse d'eau tiède
1 c.à table de levure sèche, active (1 sachet)
1/4 de tasse d'huile végétale
2 1/3 tasses d'eau tiède
1 c. à thé de sel
4 c. à table de sucre
4 tasses de farine tout usage
4 tasses de farine de blé entier
Pour la garniture:
1 c. à table de jus de citron
3 c. à table de sucre blanc
1 c. à thé de cannelle
Étapes
Dissoudre 1 c. à table de sucre et la levure dans 1/2 tasse d'eau tiède. Laisser de côté jusqu'à ce que la levure mousse. Dans un grand bol, mélanger l'huile, 2 1/3 tasses d'eau tiède, le sel et le reste du sucre.
Ajouter la levure et y rajouter graduellement la farine, jusqu'à l'obtention d'une pâte élastique. Déposer dans un bol graissé et laisser lever recouvert d'un linge propre dans un endroit chaud pour environ 90 minutes.
Façonner la pâte en boules de la grosseur d'un oeuf et aplatir jusqu'à environ 1/4 de pouce. Cuire.
Saupoudrer du mélange de sucre et cannelle et arroser de jus de citron.