View allAll Photos Tagged Staffing
Low unemployment levels (the lowest since 1974) in the UK mean staff shortages across the hospitality industry.
as part of their elk monitoring and studies staff tranquilized this cow elk as her 'calf' looks on...this cow will get a new 'necklace' used in monitoring her location and gathering information...
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Done this one before but it is still one of the nicest spiral stairs in London. The bottom is kind of a staff room now, so best to ask nicely :-)
X1030 "Mooroon" pauses at Yalgoo Railway Station for a staff change before departing on a goods train in November 1977. Photo: Jim Bisdee.
Temporary partitions screening off a gallery at the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery that is being worked on.
Bangour Village Hospital. I love this place. The grounds are totally vast, the scenery is beautiful, and there are some lovely old buildings. But it's a shame how neglected this place is quickly becoming. Security do a grand job with regard to the vandals, but the grass and shrubbery are starting to reclaim the land, and in some cases, obscure the buildings.
It was dark here, it took a great deal of effort to organise a 10 minute shoot & as a consequence it felt rushed. This is in a City of London Hotel in a closed area not available to the public unless....you beg!
Splendid Staff Nami, League of Legends Photographer: A.Z.Production Cosplay Photography (instagram.com/azproductioncosp) Cosplayer: Inaste (www.instagram.com/inastes_tears/) Setup: Main: Godox AD360 with Phottix Para-Pro 1.5m;
Celeb 66711 passes North Staffs Jn on 20/09/21 with 4F62 East Midlands Gateway-Seaforth containers. Note the view here is badly compromised by the birch tree that can be seen to the right of the loco, and also note the birches between the Burton & Stoke lines which compromise shots of Stoke bound trains.
Three light set up, two on background, key light camera left, into large reflective umbrella.
Intermit 150.
Now long abandoned this area was used for station staff at Baker Street tube station. It had its own cafeteria and even a shooting range. Now long abandoned this heavy door is locked and no one knows where the key to it is. But that concludes a very fascinating tour of the abandoned areas of Baker Street, so until next time.
GBRF`s 66314+66313 top & tail with 57310 " UK Railtours" pass Burn working 1Z58 the 13.47 Newcastle to Peterborough GBRF staff charter 18/06/2025.
66313 was named "Lucie", 66314 was named "Katie" but if you look closely the plates are still covered on this side of the sheds
File: 2025005-0030
At the Severn Valley Railway, Kidderminster, Worcestershire, England, United Kingdom, on Saturday 7th June 2025.
About the photograph.
They are re-enactors dressed up in 1940s kind of clothes, and runs what appears to be a 1940s style shop.
Back in those days, shops were not really self-service, and in order to do the shopping, customers would have to tell the staff what they want.
As you can see, most of the food is found on the shelves behind them, which is why staff often have to fetch what you want, then ring up the costs.
They were chatting with visitors whom are interested in learning what shops of this era was like, and apparently someone must’ve said something funny, hence the shop girls having a laugher, and that was when I caught the monment.
I originally thought about turning it into black and white, but figured for the moment, leave it in colour so you, the viewers, could see what the 1940s packaging colours are like.
Notice the box of KitKat chocolates in the lower left corner of the photo, is in blue coloured wrapper.
That was because of milk shortages during the Second World War, so KitKat switched from milk chocolate to dark chocolate, and thus the packaging switched colours to remind customers of the switch in recipe. The red packaging returned in 1947 as they switched back to milk chocolate recipe.
About Severn Valley Railway.
The Severn Valley Railway is a 16 miles single track heritage railway line in Worcestershire and Shropshire, between the towns of Kidderminster and Bridgnorth. The railway line follows the course of the River Severn along the Severn Valley.
The train services are often hauled by a mix of vintage steam locomotives, and classic diesel locomotives, usually pulling resorted heritage carriages.
The Severn Valley Railway often holds special events during some weekends, and the Step Back to the 1940s event is one of the many events.
Not really a rover, but still a planetary surface transport vehicle. These cars were used by officers and higher-ranking civilian staff on the larger colonies and were quite ubiquitous on the streets and byways of Federation worlds.
- Bonus upload for Febrovery 2016 Leap Day. Enjoy!
A video showing the function that I put into his staff.
Part of my entry to the Makuta Contest so far. It's turned out pretty well, but I would greatly appreciate any suggestions on how to make the textures a little more consistent. Also, do the legs and arms look better without all the gold armor? Thank You for your comments.
This moment before Houdini's daring feat is just one of the photographic slices of time featured in the “Not an Ostrich” exhibition currently on display in Los Angeles, California. Read more about the photos included in the exhibit in our recent Picture This blog post “Not an Ostrich”—Exhibition of Library of Congress Photos.”
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Thurston, John H. (John Henry), 1852-, photographer
[Houdini jumps from Harvard Bridge, Boston, Massachusetts] / John H. Thurston, stereopticons
[1908 April 30]
1 photograph : glass lantern slide ; 82 x 102 mm.
Summary: Photograph shows Houdini standing by the side of the Charles River wearing chains and handcuffs.
Notes:
• Title devised by Library staff.
• Master of the "Impossible Possible," Houdini performs one of his stunning manacled jumps from Harvard Bridge, followed by an under-water escape in the Charles River. As with his upside-down straitjacket escapes, Houdini's jumps drew huge crowds and publicized his stage appearances. In 1908, he appeared in Boston for two weeks at Keith's theater, a major venue on the Keith Vaudeville Circuit.
• Forms part of: McManus-Young collection of pictorial material relating to magic.
• Exhibited as a digital copy in: "Not an Ostrich: And Other Images from America's Library" at the Annenberg Space for Photography, 2018; Arts section.
Subjects:
• Houdini, Harry,--1874-1926--Performances.
• Magic--Massachusetts--Boston--1900-1910.
• Magicians--1900-1910.
• Bridges--Massachusetts--Boston--1900-1910.
• Jumping--Massachusetts--Boston--1900-1910.
• Handcuffs--1900-1910.
• Escapes--Massachusetts--Boston--1900-1910.
Format:
Lantern slides--1900-1910.
Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication.
Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
Higher resolution image is available (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cph.3a27316
Call Number: LOT 7427 [item]
Staff is that rocky peak on the left side. It is a three hours walk from the car park at the end of GoldeckStrasse.
I see this peak almost every day when going home. It was time to climb it.
Shepherd, Nicholas H., photographer.
[Abraham Lincoln, Congressman-elect from Illinois. Three-quarter length portrait, seated, facing front]
[Springfield, Ill., 1846 or 1847]
1 photograph : quarter plate daguerreotype ; plate 4 1/4 x 3 1/4 in.
Notes:
This daguerreotype is the earliest-known photograph of Abraham Lincoln, taken at age 37 when he was a frontier lawyer in Springfield and Congressman-elect from Illinois. (Source: Ostendorf, p. 4)
Attributed to Nicholas H. Shepherd, based on the recollections of Gibson W. Harris, a law student in Lincoln's office from 1845 to 1847. (Source: Gibson William Harris, "My Recollections of Abraham Lincoln," Women's Home Companion (November 1903), 9-11.) Robert Lincoln, son of the President, thought the photo was made in either St. Louis or Washington during his father's term in Congress.
Published in: Lincoln's photographs: a complete album / by Lloyd Ostendorf. Dayton, OH: Rockywood Press, 1998, p. 4-5.
Title devised by Library staff.
Gift; Mary Lincoln Isham; 1937.
Forms part of: Daguerreotype collection (Library of Congress).
Subjects:
Lincoln, Abraham--1809-1865.
Format: Portrait photographs--1840-1850.
Daguerreotypes--1840-1850.
Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication.
Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
Part Of: Daguerreotype collection (Library of Congress) (DLC) 95861318
Persistent URL: hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cph.3g02439
Call Number: DAG no. 1224