View allAll Photos Tagged SafetySigns
Used at nowlearning.com.au/resources/occupational-health-safety-i..., and unitedsafetyassociates.com/about-us.html, and nebinfo.com/blog/health-safety-essentials-manufacturing-c..., and www.ohsglobalrisk.com/top-5-workplace-health-safety-myths/, and rabble.ca/blogs/bloggers/policyfix/2014/10/workplace-heal...
Safety Signage is being used vastly in various places like working areas, under construction buildings, office premises etc. It is generally designed for keeping the people safe from any danger. A large number of sign making firms are involved in printing such designs on various materials according to their clients' needs. Know more about such tools from www.aptsigns.ie/products.php?cid=17
Image Source: www.aptsigns.ie/gallery.php
Photo © Tristan Savatier - All Rights Reserved - License this photo on www.loupiote.com/4201429250
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Construction Worker
Actually it's not really a self-portrait, the photo was taken by one of my co-workers.
If you like this photo, follow me on instagram (tristan_sf) and don't hesitate to leave a comment or email me.
Local call number: c011258
Title: [Mallard ducks swimming in front of warning sign at Weeki Wachee Springs]
Date: Photographed on May 26, 1949.
Physical descrip: 1 photoprint : b&w ; 5 x 4 in.
Series Title: (Commerce Collection.)
Repository: State Library and Archives of Florida, 500 S. Bronough St., Tallahassee, FL 32399-0250 USA. Contact: 850-245-6700. Archives@dos.state.fl.us
Persistent URL: www.floridamemory.com/items/show/68975
Safety sign made of reflective aluminum
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HOLGA 120 GCFN - Kodak Ektachrome E200 (ISO 200) expired in 2007 and cross-processed
Scan from print (Epson Perfection 3490)
Visible signs on a deck in a coastal area communicate important safety messages, emphasizing the need to stay on designated surfaces to protect the structure.
I have been taking pictures of Russell Mills #1 Mill before it is completely demolished. The mill was built in 1902 and many of my family members have worked there. Fruit of the Loom bought the business and moved it out of the country. Remember that the next time you see a Russell Athletic jersey.
14:366
"Teenager in the house - Brain under constrution" - "Teenager im Haus - Gehirn ist noch eine Baustelle" :-)
Photo © Tristan Savatier - All Rights Reserved - License this photo on www.loupiote.com/22991216
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A classic
Found in an abandoned factory in France
I took it before the plant was demolished, and now it's on my bathroom door :)
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My local bus garage. Saw a possibly shot going on the bus towards Acocks Green, and took it walking back.
It is on Fox Hollies Road, directly ahead of Westley Road.
Safety sign on the bus garage
Photo © Tristan Savatier - All Rights Reserved - License this photo on www.loupiote.com/87749538
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Ouch, it hurts the eye! - Danger! High Voltage (Vietnam)
Cấm trèo! điện áp cao nguy hiểm chết người
I think this means: Don't climb, high voltage, danger of death!
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A funny name, but a serious phenomenon - FOD or "Foreign Object Damage", the debris left around that could damage an aeroplane or the people in and around it.
This location is just north of Cook Road in Skagit County where the Great Northern (Seattle and Montana) Railroad made its left hand turn in the building of the Chuckanut cutoff to Bellingham in 1901. This was the town of Belleville at one time. The depot was removed in 1940.
The track originally went straight at this location to Bellingham and was later used as a branch line as far north as Alger until 1933 when it was torn up and Highway 99 (bridge) was built over the old grade north to the fish hatchery on Friday Creek (S&M Junction, junction of where the Fairhaven & Southern (F&S) met with the S&M).
Oh, yes, and as for those signs the "T" is the Amtrak Talgo passenger speed, the "P" is regular passenger speed and the "F" is for freight. The lower horizontal signs are the speed for the curve you see and the angled signs are a 2 mile warning for another curve up ahead. It's quite obvious that the Talgo system allows the train take the curves at a slightly higher speed. Oh, BTW, if the locomotive is not approved for Talgo speeds, the train must stay at the regular passenger speeds that are posted.
UPDATE: January 2017. The Old 99 bridge over the track is due to be replaced starting this year.
UPDATE: March 2021. New bridge is long since finished and underpass is set up for future double track. Until that happens there is no reason not to realign this curve for faster speed. (In 1955 the GN had a blueprint plan for this but nothing ever became of it at the time.)
Gate and Safety signs by Strata. Made for a gated community to provide instructions at a motorized gate at the subdivision's entrance. www.customoutdoorwoodensigns.com
2016-02-19: If you are a motorist, this is truly excellent advice...
Weston, ACT.
© 2016 aus.photo@yahoo.com
This design came about due to a safety issue at service stations. While a service station attendant was kneeling down in the yard and checking the fuel reserve with a dipstick, a customer who had finished refuelling reversed back from the pump and, not able to see the kneeling attendant, nearly ran him down! Hence the need was seen for a trolley to carry a stack of witches hats, relevant documentation, gloves, warning lights, etc. Work in progress sign, reflective tape, rubber wheels and stoppers to prevent sparks, and the centre pole adjusts to put a flashing caution light 6ft from the ground. 140 of these were supplied in one hit to a chain of service stations in South East Queensland, and we have been supplying them intermittently to service stations throughout Queensland ever since.
This is the most sedate FDC sign I've ever seen! This would likely be a code violation in a lot of modern day cities and towns. Normally the signs look more like this: www.safetysign.com/images/fdc-sign-sizes.png. More pics from this Collierville Macy's coming soon, possibly next Monday.
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Macy's, 2005-built (as Parisian), Hwy. 385 at Houston Levee Rd., Collierville TN
Gaya, India - Jul 9, 2015. Unidentified people walking on the railroad track coming home in Gaya, India.
Photo © Tristan Savatier - All Rights Reserved - License this photo on www.loupiote.com/2700209871
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UXO LAO - Unexploded Ordnance (bombs) - Laos
You often see this sign in Laos. It indicates that an unexploded bomb, bomblet or landmine has been found. UXO LAO is the bomb disposal agency. Check the UXO LAO website.
Between 1969 ans 1973, the United States drops more than 2,000,000 TONS of bombs on Laos during more than 500,000 bombing missions (more that what it had dropped on Germany and Japan during all of World War II) in an effort to defeat the left-leaning Pathet Lao and to destroy North Vietnamese supply lines. The ordnance includes some 90 million cluster bombs (including the notorious BLU-64B), 20%-30% of which do not detonate.
For more information on the secret Laos war, read: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laotian_Civil_War.
Unexploded bombs and nasty cluster bomblets still kill and injures thousands of civilians each year in Laos.
If you like this photo, follow me on instagram (tristan_sf) and don't hesitate to leave a comment or email me.
landscape of railroad tracks in Indian cutting across the rural countryside along the outskirts of o Gujarat village near the city of Surat. Typical scene with litter thrown around and locals walking close by
To ensure adoption and workflow integration of display boards into visual management, users have the option of affixing document holders or dry erase sheets to the boards to make it easier and less time consuming for team members to update and change content.
The four water towers and old sign at the former Sunflower Army Ammunition Plant, southwest of DeSoto.
Johnson County, Kansas
Thursday afternoon 31 December 2020
I see this sign every time I travel by train from Felixstowe to Ipswich and have wondered about it for years.
Someone I know, who works on the railways, tells me that, when it was built, the loading gauge (the bridge profile) would have allowed passenger carriages and freight wagons of the time to pass without any problem. The introduction of container traffic in the 1960s (with square section 'boxes', as containers are known in the trade) reduced the clearance significantly between the top edges of the box and the bridge roof. The painted instruction therefore warns track maintenance gangs to not 'lift' the track and so cause the boxes to strike the roof.
Standard boxes were 8' 0" wide by 8' 6" high until the turn of the new century when 9' 6" high boxes were introduced. It became clear that international freight would rely on these new boxes and that without bridge and tunnel alterations, rail freight business from the port of Felixstowe would gradually decline. So it was decided to lift the roof of this and other bridges on the line - the modern concrete structure allowing these taller boxes to pass through is clearly visible in the photo.
At the same time (about 2004) the Ipswich tunnel, under Stoke Hill on the main line to London, had the track bed lowered to allow the new boxes to pass through.
So, the instruction 'DO NOT LIFT' [the track] is as valid today as when originally painted on the bridge brickwork.
A safety sign at the Timbuk2 factory. Not that the workers need it. They are amazingly adept at what they're doing.
The raccoons were mascots for subway safety. Here's a sign warning you not to get your hand stuck in the door pocket, at Shinjuku-sanchome Station
Tokyo, Japan, 06/26/10