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Decorated toolbox on a crane in Ahmedabad.

I didn't take the picture, but isn't it hilarious?

Ballarat . Victoria Australia .

I prefer neon...but this little guy stole my heart...

Large. A 14-second exposure.

 

330 N. Arlington Ave.

Reno, NV

Your smile adorns the evening.

 

¡Gracias a Rosita Fragel por mencionar este set en su blog!

 

Conchello y José Martí @ Monterrey, NL, MX [?]

The Barking Dog is one of Boston's favorite restaurants.

This is a copyrighted photo. If you wish to purchase this photo or any other of my fine art prints, please visit my website at; jerryfornarotto.artistwebsites.com/

 

Watermark will be removed from all prints purchased.

Cool little sign with a star... and hidden arrow.

Feel free to use this image but give credits to www.heyexplorer.com

Antigo, WI; part of the sign collection at the Northern Advertising sign shop.

I can't tell you how much I love what 600 film does with bright blue skies, all the more when there's something bright red or yellow to frame against said sky -- so this was too good to pass up!

The Enchanted Forest is a now-closed theme park in Ellicott City, Maryland, on U.S. Route 40 (Baltimore National Pike) near the intersection with Bethany Lane. Other theme parks with the same name have since opened elsewhere.

 

The Enchanted Forest officially opened on August 15, 1955, following a preview party the afternoon before — one month after Disneyland Park's opening. Appealing mostly to families with small children, the park had a nursery rhyme theme. The park featured fairy tale buildings and characters, but no mechanical rides originally. Track rides were added later, including the Alice in Wonderland ride with teacup-shaped cars, a Cinderella's castle ride with mice for the cars, the "Little Toot" boat that took children to Mount Vesuvius for giant slides, and the Jungleland Safari which was driven by open Land Rover-type vehicles. Children's birthday parties were often held in the picnic areas among the attractions; many local teenagers worked as ticket-takers at the park. Unlike many other attractions of the time, the Enchanted Forest was integrated from the day it opened.[1]

 

Admission was one dollar for adults and fifty cents for children. At opening, the park was 20 acres (81,000 m2), but it later expanded to 52 acres (210,000 m2). At the height of its popularity, the Enchanted Forest welcomed 300,000 children per summer season. After its original owners, the Harrison family, sold the park for $4.5 million to JHP Development in 1988, the park closed for the first time in 1989. After turning more than half the land (primarily the parking lots) into the Safeway-anchored Enchanted Forest Shopping Center in 1992, JHP Development reopened the park for the 1994 summer season, predominantly for children's birthday parties.

Willie the Whale in 1972

 

From when the park was permanently shuttered in 1995, to 2005 when active preservation began, much of the theme park sat undisturbed yet neglected behind a chain-link fence. In 1999, the Friends of the Enchanted Forest was formed with the goal of reopening the park and then in 2003 the Enchanted Forest Preservation Society was formed with the long-term goal of reviving the Enchanted Forest.[2] Their work focused on preventing the artifacts from being lost forever.

 

The owner of the land, Kimco Realty Group, agreed in 2004 to allow most of the fairy tale structures and figures to be moved to nearby Clark's Elioak Farm for display and preservation. Moving and restoration began in 2005. Contributions were still being welcomed in 2011, although many of the exhibits had been restored and returned to service at the farm.

Open since the late 1940s. 10825 Sepulveda Blvd., Mission Hills, CA.

©1972 / Jacket Design by Geoffrey Hodgkinson

Oconee County (GA) Copyright 2009 D. Nelson

Walking along the verge to take my shots I was surprised just how many motorists ignored this and tried to pebbledash me in the process.

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If you would like to use THIS picture in any sort of media elsewhere (such as newspaper or article), please send me a Flickrmail or send me an email at natehenderson6@gmail.com.

"Food Spirits"? Are they what's haunting Oprah?

Vallejo, Ca

. . .

 

I didn't know about this neighborhood but looked questionable so I didn't stay long. I also didn't know if this had turned into yet another liquor store and it's no longer a cafe. I have never seen a concentration of liquor stores in a town quite like Vallejo's. So many liquor stores.

 

But I wasn't there to criticize about the town. I just wanted to shoot this classic sign when I spotted it. Have a Coke and enjoy life... ;- )

 

This place has been out of business for quite some time.

old Kodak sign ,Paignton,Devon

© This photograph is copyrighted. Under no circumstances can it be reproduced, distributed, modified, copied, posted to websites or printed or published in media or other medium or used for commercial or other uses without the prior written consent and permission of the photographer.

I'm scanning and uploading a bunch of old film images. I haven't shot film for so long, but I like the graininess in these shots.

 

I love love love this sign.... I was taking pictures of signs before I even realized I was taking pictures of signs.

There may have been a Clock at one time within the letter O.

The glass was too cloudy to tell. January 31, 2005

 

4006 N Milwaukee Avenue. Chicago, ILL.

The Portage Theater is just up the block.

 

Update: 2/112/2012 This sign is no longer here.

This is located in the same small plaza as the florist.

Internet 20 miles

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