View allAll Photos Tagged Store
Apple Store in Florida Mall.
@ Orlando, Florida.
In the morning before apple store opens, some people were waiting in front of the store to buy some cool stuffs.
Look Lilx! Really funny! :D~
Wellsville, NY. May 2017.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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
A couple of days after Super Fresh left the building at the store I worked at a liquidator took over and sold off equipment and stripped out the interior. Seeing this gave me some closure since it still didn't seem to really happen.
Sneak peek at the upcoming Disney Fairytale Designer Collection series’ newest installment of couples. Featured are: Cinderella with Prince Charming; Aurora as Briar Rose with Prince Phillip; Tiana with Naveen; Pocahontas with John Smith; and Mulan with Li Shang. Be sure to check out the official Disney Store blog soon for more photos and details about the collection and release dates.
48 Hour Store PROMO:
❤︎ Karmen Dress ❤︎
20 Dres +Belt Textures/3 Metals
Fits:
✔︎ Maitreya
✔︎ Legacy + Perky
✔︎ Erika
✔︎ Kupra
✔︎ Reborn
TAXI: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Netherfield%20Forest/192/1...
The Whitakers department store in Bolton expanded into a large buff terracotta-faced building in 1920. This was extravagantly decorated with towers and domes and covered in a wide range of ornamentation. By the time of this view the shop was trading as Beales and closure came in 2016. The building has since been divided into a range of retail units.
My convenience store diorama is finally complete. I had it done over a year ago, but had to disassemble it when my home had to be packed up. Put it back together again and finally had enough light again to take some pictures.
To view the full photo set visit: flic.kr/s/aHsjE6F8vv
Used the following series (though not sure if I got them all):
7-MIMO Convenience Store
MIMO Fruit Dessert
Re-ment Room (2)
Megahouse Import Market
Megahouse Gift for You
Megahouse Panda Candy Shop
Megahouse Cheers Everyone
Megahouse Festival Days Amusements
Re-ment Drugstore
Re-ment Puchi Drugstore
Re-ment Dreamy American Life
Re-ment Asian Shop
Re-ment Natalie's French Shop
Re-ment Retro Appliances
Re-ment Storage Beauty
Re-ment Supermarket
Re-ment Yummy Meals
Re-ment Vegetable Market
Re-ment My Favorite Stationery
Re-ment At the Convenience Store
Re-ment Convenience Store Grand Opening
Re-ment Elementary School Kid
Re-ment Gift
Re-ment Delicious Farm Produce
Re-ment Mushroom Shop
Re-ment Japanese Zakka
My convenience store diorama is finally complete. I had it done over a year ago, but had to disassemble it when my home had to be packed up. Put it back together again and finally had enough light again to take some pictures.
To view the full photo set visit: flic.kr/s/aHsjE6F8vv
Used the following series (though not sure if I got them all):
7-MIMO Convenience Store
MIMO Fruit Dessert
Re-ment Room (2)
Megahouse Import Market
Megahouse Gift for You
Megahouse Panda Candy Shop
Megahouse Cheers Everyone
Megahouse Festival Days Amusements
Re-ment Drugstore
Re-ment Puchi Drugstore
Re-ment Dreamy American Life
Re-ment Asian Shop
Re-ment Natalie's French Shop
Re-ment Retro Appliances
Re-ment Storage Beauty
Re-ment Supermarket
Re-ment Yummy Meals
Re-ment Vegetable Market
Re-ment My Favorite Stationery
Re-ment At the Convenience Store
Re-ment Convenience Store Grand Opening
Re-ment Elementary School Kid
Re-ment Gift
Re-ment Delicious Farm Produce
Re-ment Mushroom Shop
Re-ment Japanese Zakka
If you like country stores in the Blue Ridge Mountains, you will enjoy visiting the Cove Creek Store in Sugar Grove NC off 321. Not too far from Boone. When I stopped there they had lots of plants, herbs and neat rustic handmade items. And... delicious baked in store goodies and breads.
definite spring theme here. I love it when you get your treasures home, lay them out on a table and they all seem to go together . There are some never been used vera napkins there .
Batavia, NY. October 2018.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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
Period general store at the Heritage Farm Museum in Huntington, West Virginia. Offers virtual tour of 15 restored buildings which recreate and preserve the heritage of Appalachia, three bed and breakfasts, and a dining hall. 3x hdr
A General Store in Pont Landry, NB scanned from a 35mm slide. I took this photo around 20 years ago just after the renovations were done. It was the favorite store that I delivered groceries to at that time.
Orlando, FL. April 2019.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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
The Yellowstone General Store is located at the community of Mammoth a few miles south of the North Entrance at Gardiner, Montana. This is the only store in the park opened year round. The original residence and store was completed in 1896 and the flat roof portion of the store was added in 1914. The residence portion of the structure is now home to one of the park rangers.
Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, USA
© All Rights Reserved
The store is in pretty good shape, but little was done to it when Acme took over. At first, the store was crowded (as Pathmark always was)...but as Albertsons has raised prices and cut products left and right, "sales have fallen off a cliff", as one employee told me.
------------------------
The Acme (former Pathmark) of Ferry Street in Newark, NJ is having a going-out-of-business sale. The closing was announced by the UFCW local 1262 a few weeks back. Unfortunately, the closing is not surprising. In a gentrifying neighborhood full of immigrants from Portugal, Spain, Brazil, Ecuador and lots of other places--Pathmark, with its deep expertise in ethnic merchandising--was a perfect fit; by contrast, Acme makes little effort to carry the products that the people of the neighborhood want to buy. It’s like the company has one model for supermarkets, and they plop them down no matter what neighborhood they operate in.
The sad part is that Pathmark was so successful and high-volume in this neighborhood that, in 1995, they replaced an older store next door with this 65,000 sq. ft. super center. Once A&P took over, prices went up, but at least the store still carried the wide selection of fresh and dry goods that the neighborhood wanted. Acme cut tons of these products and greatly reduced the selection. They replaced the once vibrant international flavor of Pathmark with a WASPy supermarket that your grandmother might have shopped at.
I am sure this is only the first of many former A&P/Pathmark stores that will close under Acme's leadership. The stores are mostly devoid of customers. The owners of New Albertson’s never had a long-term strategy to be in the grocery business. This is a company run by Wall-Street money men who buy up companies, leech money out of them to make themselves rich, saddle the companies with debt, and then try to sell them quickly. And believe me, they are saddling New Albertsons with billions of dollars of debt, financing all these acquisitions and store renovations. Unfortunately for them, there has been low interest in an Albertsons IPO the two times they have tried to offer the company up for sale, and now that same-store sales are tanking, it seems even more unlikely. To top it off, the company still hasn’t had a single profitable quarter since it was formed and is losing tens of millions every quarter.
Employees are being offered opportunities to relocate to other stores, but the ones I spoke to said many of the stores are too far away, and after being put through the wringer over the years, I think they are ready to move on. No one has yet signed on to takeover the supermarket, but the buzz was that ShopRite was interested in the store. The Kearny ShopRite operates 3 miles away.
Cheektowaga, NY. October 2021.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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
One of the two passageways between the original section and addition at the Vineland NJ Sears store, looking into the original section.
My convenience store diorama is finally complete. I had it done over a year ago, but had to disassemble it when my home had to be packed up. Put it back together again and finally had enough light again to take some pictures.
To view the full photo set visit: flic.kr/s/aHsjE6F8vv
Used the following series (though not sure if I got them all):
7-MIMO Convenience Store
MIMO Fruit Dessert
Re-ment Room (2)
Megahouse Import Market
Megahouse Gift for You
Megahouse Panda Candy Shop
Megahouse Cheers Everyone
Megahouse Festival Days Amusements
Re-ment Drugstore
Re-ment Puchi Drugstore
Re-ment Dreamy American Life
Re-ment Asian Shop
Re-ment Natalie's French Shop
Re-ment Retro Appliances
Re-ment Storage Beauty
Re-ment Supermarket
Re-ment Yummy Meals
Re-ment Vegetable Market
Re-ment My Favorite Stationery
Re-ment At the Convenience Store
Re-ment Convenience Store Grand Opening
Re-ment Elementary School Kid
Re-ment Gift
Re-ment Delicious Farm Produce
Re-ment Mushroom Shop
Re-ment Japanese Zakka
Working on some more highly edited shots for my new store setup.. this be numbah 1 and ummmm me thinks its purty hawt haha ;p
Penn,s Store is located in the Forkland area of Marion, Boyle and Casey County, Kentucky. The property is listed on the National Registry of Historic Places
and is a designated Kentucky Historical Landmark, also is listed as a Kentucky Centennial Business.
.........................Penn's Store is the oldest country store in America run by the same family since 1850. The age of the store is not actually known. It can be traced back to 1845 when William Spragens at age 21 ran the store; however, others are known to have run it before Spragens.
Gabriel Jackson "Jack" Penn was the first Penn to own the store. In c.1870 ownership and operation of the store was transferred from Jack Penn to his oldest son, Martin Wilson "Dick" Penn. Dick Penn was born the second child of nine children on February 19, 1852. He married Isabelle May and they had one son, David Martin Penn. Dick and Isabelle lived in a little house next to the store.
Dick Penn was truly a man of many talents. Among his professions were being a surveyor, dentist, druggist, and postmaster. He was the community's first postmaster and Penn's Store was site of the first post office in the area known as Rollings, Kentucky. In c.1910 the post office moved to Gravel Switch to be close to the train, which would stop in the town to get gravel from the creek.
Dick Penn was given a grant by the governor of Kentucky to administer drugs. Penn's Store carried a wide assortment of drugs which Penn sold to the local people. Penn was also known to have a cure for skin cancer and treated many people with such afflictions. He was given the cure by a foreign doctor. It is believed that he came to the area to meet with Dr. Cleaver who had an office near the store. Dick Penn swore to secrecy the formula and never divulged its ingredients. Since no one in the family held Penn's love for medicine, on July 4, 1913, after a hot day of surveying, Martin Wilson Penn died from a heat stroke on the store porch. Thus, the cancer secret went with him.
Dick's son, Martin Penn, at age 36 became the new store keeper. Born March 24, 1877, Martin married Nina Sue Kirkland and they had 10 children. Five boys and five girls: Daisy (b.1899), Evelyn (b.1901), Theol (b.1904), Paulette (b. 1906), Haskell (b.1908), Gerald (b.1911), Jeane (b. 1913), Alma (b.1915), Hunter (b.1919), Miles (b.1922).
Penn's Store looked quite different in its younger years than it does today. There were many buildings that surrounded the store. There was a spirits shop to the right of the store, a poultry coop used to house chickens and assorted fowl that people brought to the store to trade for goods, and a storage building that Dick Penn used to keep his surplus drugs. Dick and Isabelle's house was to the left of the store, complete with a rock walk leading to the store. After Dr. Cleaver left the area, his office and house became the home of Martin and Sue Penn. The store then carried a wide variety of goods. There were shoes, fabric, farming tools, lanterns, and just about any thing that was needed by a rural inhabitant.
Martin Penn, with the help of his five sons, farmed while also tending to the store. However, one day in 1933, while raking hay with a team of horses, the team got spooked and ran off with him. Martin's legs were entangled in the reins and he was dragged along the creek bed near the store. Shortly thereafter he died from massive injuries.
Sue Penn, "Mammy" as she was affectionately called, became the new storekeeper. Along with all of the children she kept the store running. By this time, some of the children were married and had moved to other states, but some of the children had moved nearby and came daily to help. Haskell, who never married, stayed with Mammy to help work the family farm and help tend to the store. Alma, "Tincy", came daily to help with the store and do the "women's chores" around the house. In 1972, at the age of 92, Mammy died in her sleep.
This left Haskell as the next storekeeper, along with help from Tincy, who still would come and do the "women's work" plus stay in the store on occasion. Haskell tended the store for many years. He lived alone in the family house. Penn's Store had changed little over the course of the years. It was still the place to come to in the community and new residents would always make themselves known to Penn's Store. Haskell kept the store open seven days a week, rain or shine.
In 1993, after suffering a stroke, Haskell passed away. He was 84. He passed the store on to his youngest sister Tincy, who kept everything just as it was with little changes. Tincy received help from her daughter and grand-daughters in keeping the store open every day, seven days a week, rain or shine.
In June 2000, one of Tincy's granddaughters, Dava, passed away from a heart condition. In December 2001, Alma 'Tincy' Penn Lane passed away. She passed the store on to her daughter Jeanne Penn Lane and grand-daughter, Dawn Lane Osborn.