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A desperate plea on the window of Tammy's Gifts & Things at 26901 Twenty Mule Team Road in Boron, CA.
Well.... I got lucky.... And I got a double head shot with a single bullet..... that saved bullet really helped later on.
Raindrops on a protective newspaper bag imprinted with an important reminder.
Alas, harvesting this Hâ‚‚O off this wrapper for anything useful is a little difficult.
DECCW Director General Lisa Corbyn with librarian Louise Mahon and one of the new Save Power Kits available to borrow from libraries across NSW.
Workers are preparing the bird-cage as one venue of Gowa Discovery Park which is constructed on site of Somba Opu Fort. Mainly the workers are coming from outside Sulawesi, i.e. Java.
Title: POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT MAIL WAGONS
Creator: Harris & Ewing photographer
Date Created/Published: 1916.
Medium: 1 negative : glass ; 5 x 7 in. or smaller
Part of: Harris & Ewing Collection (Library of Congress)
Reproduction Number: LC-DIG-hec-07643 (digital file from original negative)
Rights Advisory: No known restrictions on publication.
Call Number: LC-H261- 7086 [P&P]
Repository: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
Notes:
Title from unverified caption data received with the Harris & Ewing Collection.
Gift; Harris & Ewing, Inc. 1955.
General information about the Harris & Ewing Collection is available at hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.hec
This is my personal project and I need a small favor from your side, please comment how do you feel about this design/artwork/poster. Trust me it won't take too much time. :)
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Various UNFI-supported independent retailers in the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area collectively operate and advertise under the SHOP ‘n SAVE banner.
This location on Library Road in Bethel Park, Pennsylvania is owned by the Duritza family.
While inherited from SUPERVALU, the Pittsburgh-area SHOP ‘n SAVE stores operated separately from the defunct Shop ‘n Save chain in the St. Louis, Missouri area, which was directly owned and operated by SUPERVALU.
Unrelated to the independent retailers supplied by Hannaford in New England.
If you have a minute, take a look at the series here. Sorry about the large number to go through but I have uploaded these for our son and his fellow band members to see.
On Friday 1 October, 2010 our son's band Clean Slate were the "hosts" as it were for a benefit evening of music with several bands for a fellow band member who had fallen into some hard times.
The music was good, the crowd enjoyed the bands that were all there playing at no cost to help out a fellow musician.
I was asked to photograph the evening. Not having ever photographed a band before and, not being that comfortable with the people shots thought well this would allow me to step outside that comfort zone once again and try to do something different.
I read up on photographing rock concerts noting that manual mode, a fast lens, bump the ISO up as high as it would go, and trying to get a shutter speed that would not cause alot of blur was hard to say the least. These bands were all fast! They moved quick and the lighting of course was mainly just what they had for the venue.
Still I am pleased with how some of these ones have turned out...I think I have trashed about 60 photos from the over 200 I took for youngest son. These are no where near the quality of my flickr friend Jane's concert photos but to me, she is the concert master of all my fiends here, but still, as I said I am pleased none-the-less.
Thanks Clean Slate, Setting the Standard, Some Assembly Required, Weapons Against Evil and Transit 14 for the opportunity to photograph you all, Thanks to oldest daughter who grabbed my camera when her brother was in the spot light and managed to get some great shots and thanks to those bands who entertained not only the "young" crowd there but also, GP and I.
Greenpeace environmental activists welcomed office workers at Kimberly-Clark’s newest outpost with a protest over the tissue-maker’s limited use of recycled fiber in its products. Posing as movers, activists entered the Franklin, MA office June 30, 2008 with moving boxes full of recycled toilet and tissue paper and urged the staff to sign a document calling on the company to stop destroying one of North America’s wildest forests to produce disposable products. The activists locked themselves to the boxes and offered to leave voluntarily if Kimberly-Clark would agree to stop using endangered forests to make their products.