View allAll Photos Tagged RedTape
My pair of Sketchers have worn out, and one of them got torn yesterday. :( One of the best casuals I have worn.
Sketchers aren't available in my country, and I am craving for a pair of Diesel shoes, to be bought when and if I travel to the US anytime soon.
Meanwhile, I have bought this pair of Red Tape casuals. They look good, and are not too expensive. Perfect for work!
Michael Ramirez from Creators Syndicate
www.creators.com/editorialcartoons/michael-ramirez/15856....
Strobist Sundays -- theme: found object(s)
First I found the pink Capezio tights in the middle of the street here. (Some up-n-coming tiny tot ballerina suffered a set-back, I'm sure.) I knew right off I wanted to use it for a rear-lighted backdrop. The rest of the stuff fell into place during subsequent walks. Altho there is only a small piece of the white packing foam in the shot, I found a wad of it and used some as diffusion in front of the main light and also between the rear flash and the tights.
Lighting setup was simple: gently blast a Canon 430EXII at very low power thru the doubled-over, hanging tights. (I wanted lots of overlapping folds). To camera-left I had a small softbox with a Canon 580EXII at medium-low power. On the right side of the subject was a white bounce card.
The concerns:
= Keep light from main light off the tights (used scrims)
= Balance the light from the two flashes
= Turn the leaves so they had an aesthetic angle AND caught the main light nicely
= Pick a lens and f/stop to give appropriate perspective and DOF. (I did not want the tights to go too blurry. I wanted them to still be recognizable and to show as much as possible, but still I wanted separation with the subject.)
= note: an easy way to experiment with DOF between two f/stops without readjusting the lights is to use an ND (neutral density) filter. Don't have an ND filter? Use your polarizer filter for a 2-stop difference.
Withholding water allowances
Near Bakersfield, Calif.
IBD Editorials
www.investors.com/NewsAndAnalysis/Article.aspx?id=531662&...: EditorialRss (Editorial RSS)&utm_content=Bloglines&p=2
Bound in red tape, official documents and government records were kept in a metal file such as the one shown here, which were then stored in filing cabinets of various sizes. The easiest way to open a group of documents such as these was to cut through the red tape.
the legal version of red tape on display outside one of the court buildings in George Street, Brisbane
BC's liquor manufacturers can now offer customers alcohol of all types in their lounges and special event areas, thanks to the latest BC Government liquor update. Minister of Justice Suzanne Anton made the announcement at Vancouver's Odd Society Distillery, where she was joined by Parliamentary Secretary John Yap and Joshua Beach on a tour of the facility.
Learn more: news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2015JAG0182-001191
A holga shot from the back seat of my wife's moving car (where I was hanging out with our baby son) on Highway 30. I had hoped to capture all of the squad car's lights, but instead they are cropped off right where they begin. The red comes from the tape I used to tape over the counter window since I was using 35 mm film.
BC's liquor manufacturers can now offer customers alcohol of all types in their lounges and special event areas, thanks to the latest BC Government liquor update. Minister of Justice Suzanne Anton made the announcement at Vancouver's Odd Society Distillery, where she was joined by Parliamentary Secretary John Yap and Joshua Beach on a tour of the facility.
Learn more: news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2015JAG0182-001191
At a family-run estate winery in the vineyard-lined Okanagan Valley, Premier Christy Clark announced the B.C. government's support for a set of 12 key liquor recommendations that will expand consumers' choices, open up new development opportunities for B.C. businesses, promote local products and cut red tape.
Learn more: www.newsroom.gov.bc.ca/2013/12/liquor-changes-plant-seed-...
At a family-run estate winery in the vineyard-lined Okanagan Valley, Premier Christy Clark announced the B.C. government's support for a set of 12 key liquor recommendations that will expand consumers' choices, open up new development opportunities for B.C. businesses, promote local products and cut red tape.
Learn more: www.newsroom.gov.bc.ca/2013/12/liquor-changes-plant-seed-...
Fancy a shave and scotch? How about a mani-pedi-champagne? New policy changes from the Province will allow all types of B.C. businesses to apply for a liquor licence, opening up possibilities for new revenue streams and diversified business services.
Learn more: news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2016SBRT0064-002372
In a speech to council leaders in Marylebone, Local Government Minister Grant Shapps urged councils to move away from Whitehall control and make the most of the new freedoms they have been given.
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At a family-run estate winery in the vineyard-lined Okanagan Valley, Premier Christy Clark announced the B.C. government's support for a set of 12 key liquor recommendations that will expand consumers' choices, open up new development opportunities for B.C. businesses, promote local products and cut red tape.
Learn more: www.newsroom.gov.bc.ca/2013/12/liquor-changes-plant-seed-...
At a family-run estate winery in the vineyard-lined Okanagan Valley, Premier Christy Clark announced the B.C. government's support for a set of 12 key liquor recommendations that will expand consumers' choices, open up new development opportunities for B.C. businesses, promote local products and cut red tape.
Learn more: www.newsroom.gov.bc.ca/2013/12/liquor-changes-plant-seed-...
In a speech to council leaders in Marylebone, Local Government Minister Grant Shapps urged councils to move away from Whitehall control and make the most of the new freedoms they have been given.
BC's liquor manufacturers can now offer customers alcohol of all types in their lounges and special event areas, thanks to the latest BC Government liquor update. Minister of Justice Suzanne Anton made the announcement at Vancouver's Odd Society Distillery, where she was joined by Parliamentary Secretary John Yap and Joshua Beach on a tour of the facility.
Learn more: news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2015JAG0182-001191
At a family-run estate winery in the vineyard-lined Okanagan Valley, Premier Christy Clark announced the B.C. government's support for a set of 12 key liquor recommendations that will expand consumers' choices, open up new development opportunities for B.C. businesses, promote local products and cut red tape.
Learn more: www.newsroom.gov.bc.ca/2013/12/liquor-changes-plant-seed-...
Once upon a very kinky Halloween…
She lit the candles, slipped into shiny black, and waited to be wrapped up like a sweet, sinful surprise. 🍬✨
This red tape vixen still gives us chills—in all the right ways. Bound in glossy crimson from heels to wrists, gagged and blindfolded beneath candlelight, she was the perfect Halloween centerpiece. ️
Witchy? Yes. Willing? Definitely. Wrapped tighter than a mummy? Always.
—
Get your own red-hot restraint look with our classic Bondage Tape, now available in many devilish colors at Sub-Shop.com
. 🔥
BC's liquor manufacturers can now offer customers alcohol of all types in their lounges and special event areas, thanks to the latest BC Government liquor update. Minister of Justice Suzanne Anton made the announcement at Vancouver's Odd Society Distillery, where she was joined by Parliamentary Secretary John Yap and Joshua Beach on a tour of the facility.
Learn more: news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2015JAG0182-001191
BC made the grade and received 3rd 'A' in a row on red tape reduction on the Red Tape Report Card released by the Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB). Naomi Yamamoto, Minister of State for Tourism and Small Business, also announced five new government strategies for continued red tape reduction for small businesses while visiting Nicli Antica Pizzeria in Vancouver BC with Ian Tostenson, president and CEO of the British Columbia Restaurant and Food Service Association and Mike Klassen, Director, Provincial Affairs, British Columbia for CFIB.
Learn more: www.newsroom.gov.bc.ca/2014/01/bc-only-province-to-receiv...
At a family-run estate winery in the vineyard-lined Okanagan Valley, Premier Christy Clark announced the B.C. government's support for a set of 12 key liquor recommendations that will expand consumers' choices, open up new development opportunities for B.C. businesses, promote local products and cut red tape.
Learn more: www.newsroom.gov.bc.ca/2013/12/liquor-changes-plant-seed-...
At a family-run estate winery in the vineyard-lined Okanagan Valley, Premier Christy Clark announced the B.C. government's support for a set of 12 key liquor recommendations that will expand consumers' choices, open up new development opportunities for B.C. businesses, promote local products and cut red tape.
Learn more: www.newsroom.gov.bc.ca/2013/12/liquor-changes-plant-seed-...
Michael Ramirez from Creators Syndicate
www.creators.com/editorialcartoons/michael-ramirez/15736....
At a family-run estate winery in the vineyard-lined Okanagan Valley, Premier Christy Clark announced the B.C. government's support for a set of 12 key liquor recommendations that will expand consumers' choices, open up new development opportunities for B.C. businesses, promote local products and cut red tape.
Learn more: www.newsroom.gov.bc.ca/2013/12/liquor-changes-plant-seed-...
Full Committee Hearing
September 14, 2011 | Washington, D.C. This official Congressman Darrell Issa photograph is being made available only for publication by news organizations and/or for personal use printing by the subject(s) of the photograph. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way and may not be used in commercial or political materials, advertisements, emails, products, promotions that in any way suggests approval or endorsement of Congressman Darrell Issa, the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, the U.S. House of Representatives, or any Member of Congress.
Growth in the province’s small business sector remained strong through the fourth quarter of 2016 as outlined in B.C.’s Small Business Quarterly Report.
Learn more: news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2017SBRT0015-000704
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THE COMPLEX LICENSING REQUIREMENTS AND POLLUTION CONTROL REGULATIONS HAVE FORCED NUMEROUS AMBITIOUS PRIVATE ENTERPRISE HORATIO ALGERS TO CONCEAL IDENTITIES IN ORDER TO EARN MINIMUM PROFITS. "The cost for all of the licenses and permits are too exorbitant to absorb and show a profit," stated one parade salesman of souveniers and stickers. "If I waited until all of the EPA tests came back to determine if the glue on my stickers was environmentally safe for the public, it would be at least a year, and then the cost for the permit would have to be sent to Washington for approval by six different departments. Man, by then, the parade would be long gone and the stickers outdated. I can't afford all of this B.S. and agency fee nonsense simply to sell bumper stickers that promote a ball team," said. John, (not his real name). He said he felt more at ease wearing a partial mask to conceal his identity because he had seen at least seventeen federal agents with clipboards keeping tabs on his specific ambitious sales unit as the parade moved south on Main. "I am praying for the day when a new adminisration will cancel all of these executive orders that are keeping me from making a living." He further added that once the new law is passed he, like many others who want to begin new businesses, will probably be forced to immigrate to another nation where the laws are more "free enterprise friendly." Asked if he had considered applying for a government grant or funding for his business, he lifted his mask and laughed, "Do you really think I look like I would qualify for those programs?"
BC's liquor manufacturers can now offer customers alcohol of all types in their lounges and special event areas, thanks to the latest BC Government liquor update.
Learn more: news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2015JAG0182-001191