View allAll Photos Tagged Referencement
Reference: APAAME_20081029_MJN-0170
Photographer: Michael John Neville
Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works
Reference Section session "Helping Your Patrons Understand the Global Financial Crisis" with Celia Ross
Reference: APAAME_20160523_RHB-0430.jpg
Photographer: Robert Howard Bewley
Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommerical-No Derivative Works
Syed Ghous Ali Shah enters in the place. The group of ABWA is welcoming. For details visit abwaorg.com/2012-Activities/syed-ghous-ali-shah-provincia...
One of the turrets from the castle main entrance -- posted primarily to give reference to my Rapunzel, Rapunzel capture. Oh, and I like the rust and peeling roof. I am almost done with this series, I swear!
When I was taking this shot, I just liked the rusted and weathered old Referenzpunkt (especially against the other Berlin reference point, the Fernsehturm). Then I noticed the slight error in translating the German into English, where they used the German 2nd person singular familiar (du) instead of the English 2nd person (you).... so presumably one's betters are free to disturb as they please.
OK, really, it's no more than a typographical error. But clearly one of long standing. And it made me laugh.
Our Catalogue Reference: ZSPC 11/256
Description: Normalising oven on the portable rail welding plant
Date: c 1946
Images reproduced by permission of London Transport Museum © Transport for London
Reference: APAAME_20170927_MND-0006
Photographer: Matthew Neale Dalton
Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works
these are gustavo and aline. they're getting married. that's their reference board. i'm shooting the wedding.
no one knows what the pictures are gonna be like, but we're sure we'll have a lotta fun.
Reference shot.
..after several months of open storage (mostly on the apron at J.L. LAGARDÈRE), this airframe is now undergoing fuel tank tests at the H. ZIEGLER wash station.
Such tests are usually undertaken at "Stations 18" outside the ADER FAL in the main C. ADER plant.
These are the image references that I used for my models ears. As my character lack some features when modelling the head, I ended up giving it ears to make it different.
Both characters has different ears. The main references that I use for the ear is "Prep and Landing", an amazing Pixar short animation for last year christmas.
08/12/2010
(blog 4.2)
D5705 Co Bogie reference pics. These bogies were dragged up to Castlecroft depot and a thorough overhaul is well under way.
Italy. Firenze - Florence.
Santa Maria Novella is a church in Florence, Italy, situated just across from the main railway station which shares its name. Chronologically, it is the first great basilica in Florence, and is the city's principal Dominican church.
The church, the adjoining cloister, and chapterhouse contain a store of art treasures and funerary monuments. Especially famous are frescoes by masters of Gothic and early Renaissance. They were financed through the generosity of the most important Florentine families, who ensured themselves of funerary chapels on consecrated ground.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basilica_of_Santa_Maria_Novella
In the groin-vault are four Evangelist portraits; they write or show their work (apart St. Mark, who is cutting his pen with a knife), flanked by their symbols.
In reference to the figure, they are:
St. John the Evangelist
St. Matthew
St. Luke
St. Mark
As in the Sassetti Chapel, and despite being distant from the viewer, the paintings are very well executed, being largely by Ghirlandaio himself. This can be seen, for example, in the realistic rendering of Luke's ox.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tornabuoni_Chapel#Scenes_from_the_l...
Photographed from a northbound train, a modern zero mile marker in Newcastle station.
The Network Rail infrastructure in Britain is measured in miles and chains (1 mile = 80 chains) from various points. There isn't a single point because distances by different routes can conflict and in any case the complexity of the network would make that difficult. That much I knew but curious about what boundary this is I searched the internet and found this excellent website;
www.railwaycodes.org.uk/index.shtml
So now I know the proper terminology for this marker is an Engineer's Line Reference (ELR) boundary marker. Each segment of line has an ELR and in this case the boundary is between two East Coast Main Line (ECM) segments - ECM6 Newcastle West to Newcastle Station and ECM7 Newcastle Station to the Scottish Border.
This illustrates two things. First that line segments can vary in length considerably and second that mileages don't necessarily start a zero at one of their boundaries.
ECM6 is only 11 chains long and covers mileages 80.05 - 80.16 from the previous zero point of ECM5 at York (though actual mileages are 79.74 to 80.09 because of a track realignment since the mileages were calculated).
ECM7 covers 69 miles 67 chains to the border and terminates at the end of ECM8, in which segment mileages are from Edinburgh Waverley - so the mileages count down as you head north from the border.
What I do find odd is that the ELR segment it refers to does not appear on the sign. Presumably the orientation of the sign indicates the boundary point (so it "points" to zero and the mileage increases in the opposite direction). Structure plates (such as those on bridges) carry both the ELR and the mileage.
Maps with detailed information can be purchased from Track Maps: www.trackmaps.co.uk/