View allAll Photos Tagged RedLetter
beige/coffee cream
I took this shot while I was out today. I was stopped at the intersection of University and Central Avenues. This colour is very typical in the area.
Some of my favorite things are birds, jewels, game pieces, and flowers and this necklace has them all.
8/5/10. Portland. While riding. Nikon Coolpix S8000. Handheld. SOOC.
Ford F-350, KMC XD-Series 778 Monster 20 inch rims
1479 v 12/1/15
Letters from Sue and Ian at Parmiters Antiques - borrowed for the Strong Island at The Round Tower exhibition starts 15th April.
thanks to www.ianparmiter.co.uk/
Final version of a brand for a new sermon series at LCC. The series will cover the Sermon on the Mount, and mostly deal with what it looks like to live a christian life.
My new found object necklace does contain a letter. The letter "S" for my first name...after all it is my "Red Letter Day". I grouped my red and gold buttons, beads and found objects, including some red velvet ribbon and picked some of my favorites. I particularly liked the vintage red buckle in the center.
If it's red and kind of quirky, I'll use it. I included a red guitar pick and tore apart some vintage rings and earrings to add to this necklace. If the button didn't have a shank, I made one by wire-wrapping.
While waiting for my doc in the examining room this morning I spotted this label. I'm sure it's an abbreviation or something, but it struck me as funny. Probably because I've been watching a lot of BtVS lately.
Young male adults sitting on a curb, eating, as three dogs watch them eat, Ecuador
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West Virginians are proud of 304 and they proclaim the number everyplace as a shorthand expression of identity. I'm able to picture paintmen in cherrypickers, lifted to the tops of pump canopies statewide.
The upside-down apostrophe in "FERGUSON,S TIRE'S" is a regional variant on ¡-! ¿-? practices, which originally came up here from Mexico.
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In the Guyandotte neighborhood of Huntington, West Virginia, on January 2nd, 2011, at the northwest corner of Bridge Street (West Virginia Route 2) and Richmond Street.
may 23rd 2008 - STORAGE! from spring break in SF 2007. i thought there were too many flower pictures (surprise surprise) and a more industrial picture might balance it out.. a little? haha. anyways, this picture brings back some memories, and i've kind of gotten sick of my recent pictures i've taken. but! im going to palm springs for the weekend, so ill get some new pics from there! who knows, maybe even some photos of.. PEOPLE! *legasp!*
have a nice memorial day, everyone!
This originally was designed and built in 1891 by architects Furst & Randolph for the Braun & Fitts Butterine Factory. The later 1917 addition and remodeling was done by Postle & Fisher with more alterations in 1947.
In downtown Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on July 12th, 2020, the Law and Finance Building (built 1927-1928) at the northeast corner of Fourth Avenue and Cherry Way; and The Pittsburgher (built 1928-1930 as the Pittsburgher Hotel, later known as the Lawyers Building) at the southeast corner of Forbes Avenue and Cherry Way, as viewed from the southeast corner of Fourth Avenue and Grant Street. The buildings are "contributing properties" to the Pittsburgh Central Downtown Historic District, 85003216 and 13000251 on the National Register of Historic Places.
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Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names terms:
• Allegheny (county) (7013272)
• Pittsburgh (7013927)
Art & Architecture Thesaurus terms:
• beige (color) (300266234)
• brick (clay material) (300010463)
• central business districts (300000868)
• glare (300056032)
• historic buildings (300008063)
• historic districts (300000737)
• hotels (public accommodations) (300007166)
• light brown (300127503)
• oblique views (300015503)
• office towers (300007046)
• signs (declatory or advertising artifacts) (300123013)
• skyscrapers (300004809)
Wikidata items:
• 12 July 2020 (Q57396813)
• 1920s in architecture (Q11185486)
• 1928 in architecture (Q2811466)
• 1930 in architecture (Q2744912)
• 1930s in architecture (Q16482516)
• contributing property (Q76321820)
• Downtown Pittsburgh (Q11331506)
• Forbes Avenue (Q5467227)
• Fourth Avenue (Q18150376)
• Grant Street (Q5596466)
• July 12 (Q2688)
• July 2020 (Q55281154)
• National Register of Historic Places (Q3719)
• Pittsburgh Central Downtown Historic District (Q7199245)
• Treaty of Fort Stanwix (Q246501)
• Western Pennsylvania (Q7988152)
Library of Congress Subject Headings:
• Brick walls (sh85016796)
• Hotels—Pennsylvania (sh85062502)
• Office buildings—Pennsylvania (sh91002286)
This building is all business.
In my household we continue to use Doctor Pepper as a brain tonic, dentifrice, and dentifacient.
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In Fort Wayne, Indiana, on September 7th, 2014, outside a Pepsi Beverages Company building on the west side of North Harrison Street, north of 1st Street.
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Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names terms:
• Allen (county) (1002143)
• Fort Wayne (7013933)
Art & Architecture Thesaurus terms:
• bottling plants (300006340)
• paint (coating) (300015029)
• shop signs (300211862)
• windows (300002944)
Wikidata items:
• brick architecture (Q41955438)
• Dr Pepper (Q623561)
• PepsiCo (Q334800)
• Red White and Blue (Q7305222)
• September 7 (Q2852)
• September 2014 (Q12580529)
Library of Congress Subject Headings:
• Color in architecture (sh85028595)
does every church have a shelf where they put really old bibles, perhaps just for the sake of not wanting to throw away bibles?