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This is a frame capture from HD video using the Canon EOS Rebel T6 camera, with the Canon 18-55mm zoom lens.
This image does turn up near the end of the video I shot and edited of the event. To see it, click on the link below to my YouTube channel:
This attractive Dr. Pepper ghost sign is located on the side of a building on Main Street in downtown Gordonsville, Virginia.
Just living is not enough... one must have sunshine, freedom, and a little flower.
Hans Christian Andersen
kami.pk photography
Hardee's #2830 (3,467 square feet)
8 Semple Farm Road/3360 Commander Shepard Boulevard, Hampton, VA
Built and opened in 1987, renovated in 2013
Photographed using the Kodak Star 275, and Kodak Ultramax 400 film.
Taken in Sassafras, Victoria, Australia.
The blade sign of the Paramount Theater, reflected against the building opposite it on the Downtown Mall in Charlottesville, Virginia.
An excellent eating establishment. Sign was repaired and repainted (as it was previously) after the diner was damaged by a fire in 2011.
Wildwoods Convention Center, located on the boardwalk at Rio Grande Ave. in Wildwood, N.J., is a very nice state-of-the-art facility capable of holding up to 10,000 people.
This is the sign that sits on top of the building.
(perhaps another contender for the next tourist book cover!)
Hmmmm, it probably means PMS... Hehehe Any ideas? Let your imagination run wild and share your interpretation. Hehehe
*I noticed this sign hanging on a VW van as I parked behind it near Piedmont Ave. I thought the sign was sort of funny so I snapped a couple pictures and took the risk of getting caught by the owner... :D
Welcome to the village of Banstead in Surrey – and here’s a fine sign which illustrates the village’s long history. But who’d have thought that this attractive traditional design could have created controversy among the locals? Read on…
Clockwise from the top left: A woolpack, representing Banstead’s historic association with wool and sheep; All Saints parish church, which dates from the 12th century; a wheatsheaf, commemorating Banstead’s farming roots; the 18th century Old Well; and finally, the extensive lavender fields, which attract visitors from miles around.
And it’s this depiction of the lavender fields that has caused the raised eyebrows, because purists say that the fields aren’t in Banstead at all; they’re just outside the boundary and actually lie within the neighbouring London Borough of Sutton. And, it has to be said, the purists are right.
But then there’s the question of Banstead’s status as a village. It’s not a village at all, but actually a small (and very pleasant) town with a population of around 16,000. The ‘village’ refers to the half-mile long high street and adjoining roads... the scenes of my long-ago childhood escapades.