View allAll Photos Tagged Recycle
Egg carton detail for the Smile on Saturday group, challenge: Recycled.
An egg carton can be made of various materials such as recycled newspaper and molded recycled paper pulp by means of a mechanized papier-mâché molding process.
While waiting for some work to be done on my Jeep, I asked the owner of the shop if I could wander around and capture a few photons. He said "go ahead". So I did.
Here's a bunch of old parts waiting to be picked up for recycling. Mostly disc rotors, but a few other pieces thrown in just give it a mix.
An empty cane train rumbles across the Pioneer River bridge at Marini. This used to form part of the QR network, but was taken over by the Marian Mill sugar cane network once the line was no longer required by QR.
Flower from the paper strips I have collected.
Background: One of my college projects I intend to frame :-)
CERES – Centre for Education and Research in Environmental Strategies, is an award winning, not-for-profit, sustainability centre located on 4.5 hectares on the Merri Creek in East Brunswick, Melbourne.
Als mein Sohn Beruflich für ein Jahr in #Kapstadt# war brachte er mir diese schöne Weltkugel mit...Sie ist in Handmade aus #Blechdosen# von Jugendlichen gefertigt worden...
Für:“Looking close on Friday!“ am 25.10.2024.
Thema:“Recycled,“Recycelt,Mehrfachnutzung,
Wiederverwendung.
😃Thanks for views, faves and comments 😃
Nature has ways of renewing life.
This photo was taken by a KИEB 88C medium format film camera with a MИP-26B 3.5/45mm lens and Чф-1x 82x0.75 filter using Kodak Ektar 100 film, the negative scanned by an Epson Perfection V600 and digitalized with Photoshop.
"The Girl Who Gets A Mango" -- The girls take part in a "green" photo shoot representing recyclable materials, on America's Next Top Model on The CW. (cycle 9) Pictured: Ebony
Photo: Freddie Reshew/Pottle Productions Inc
©2007 Pottle Productions Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Loved how they took this old red door with peeling paint and turned it into a garden plant holder. This was photographed on The Flowering Bridge in Lake Lure, North Carolina.
Tiny snail made from a teaspoon handle and copper wire by Barry Lewis, a sculptor based in Rhondda, south Wales. Taken for Macro Mondays' weekly theme "spiral"
A DENNIS Stockton-on -Tees plastic and cardboard recycling lorry driving along the A689 just outside Hartlepool.
Some of the contents of a large plastic box in our kitchen drawer where we put our recyclable items such as plastic bottles, magazines, flyers, food tins and drink cans. When it's full I take it out to the garage & tip everything in a big wheelie bin. This gets collected by a private company fortnightly, the other week they take our actual rubbish (trash) away, thankfully we don't produce much of that so often that wheelie bin only goes out once a month. Glass has to be taken to a bottle bank. I use to take gardening & bird watching magazines to our GP surgery for others to read but those days are gone.
We compost all our newspapers, cardboard packaging/toilet rolls etc & I reuse suitable plastic food trays to stand plant pots in. All available windowsills currently have trays with small pots containing tomato/chilli/pepper/courgette & sweetcorn seedlings, waiting for the current cold snap to pass so I can plant them out in the polytunnel.
For Macro Mondays theme "Trash" HMM!
Sebastopol, CA, has many monuments to recycling..This one is outside the Hardware store, and I had to stop and grab these images while Roma was in my Lexus RX. Details show how many different things make up the base.. He is on wheels and is moved in at night... There are many such scuptures in the town and surrounding area.. There is a huge metal dog of sorts in front of the Human Society also...
Stacked high at Eden Community Recycling's depot at Penrith.
Tenuous link: don't throw it in the bin! Recycle it!
In Sweden you pay a deposit on all bottles and cans. To get your money back you can go to a recycling point in a shop or like here at the rubbish dump.
2018 one photo each day.
52 weeks the 2018 Edition - urbex (Urban exploration)
You may have heard the old adage that Guinness is good for you. That may be so, but it is not good for the environment. An epic recycling fail here. The idiots concerned somehow remembered the basic rule of crushing the cans, then they forgot the most important part - don't toss the f*cking cans out of your car window 😡 Littering makes my blood boil. I carried these home & put them in our own recycling bin.
Photo 66/100 my 100 x photos this year will be of foliage: so woodland scenes, individual trees, wild/garden plants and fallen leaves 🍁🌿🌲🍂