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Target "Share a Coke" Exclusive Poster. "Share A Smile" Promotion www.ShareACoke.Com/Target by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube

Mall entrance for Target Ward Parkway Plaza Kansas City Missouri. Montgomery Ward was the anchor at this end of the mall, building was torn down. Target built a new store on the site.

Picture taken 6/25/23

 

Target | 2205 Walker Lake Rd, Ontario, OH

 

Please contact me via FlickrMail, or on Gmail if you'd like to use any of my photographs.

retaimings@gmail.com

Collaboration with EVO, for diorama Elysium in 2014 CIFIMAD Thanks Mate

365/169

I have wake up to a new morning, a morning i have not seen for long time, like an old good friend has make me smile.....new hopes and dreams are floating around my head....and love poems whisper in my ears....dreams comes in waves to my heart....and memories are now more dear.....

this morning i wake up full of life!!!!

by

V.L.G.

Target #1931 (127,324 square feet)

7107 Forest Hill Avenue, The Shops at Stratford Hills, Richmond, VA

 

This location opened on March 6th, 2005.

Winnipeg will welcome another high-profile retailer to town when Target opens a pair of stores on Tuesday, May 7, 2013.

 

The Minneapolis-based company will cut the ribbon on locations at Kildonan Place Shopping Centre and Southdale Centre, as well as at Shoppers Mall in Brandon. Another store at Grant Park Shopping Centre is scheduled to open this fall or winter.

 

The Manitoba stores are part of a national roll-out that will see 124 Target locations open across the country this year.

 

Derek Jenkins, senior vice-president at Target, said he’s not sure what kind of crowds to expect in Winnipeg – a city notorious for going crazy for new store openings – but the staff is prepared to handle whatever throng might show up before the 8 a.m. opening.

for Strobist Sundays: Minimalism

 

Strobist:

shot in darkened room

100w daylight bulb into big silver reflector (back side of piece of insulation board) at diffuser (big pice of white sports nylon) 2' behind subject

black foam core directly in front of diffuser

black foam core flags each side of subject

Crop and levels adjust in PS

 

Really fun assignment. I loved playing with different objects in front of the camera and watching the effect of the light on each one. I had to tweak the black board behind the bottles until it was at just the right height to give light across the top and with turning the flags until only thin slivers of light were outlining the sides. Dark glass bottles eliminated any light coming through to make them appear flat. A crop in PS took the top off the left bottle and a levels adjust brought up the blacks.

 

bigger is better

i am obsessed with stickers!! i found these at target and just had to have them. i guess i can share them with my class......if i really have to :)

 

Target #2501 (142,233 square feet)

5001 Holt Ave, Peninsula Town Center, Hampton, VA

 

This location opened on July 26th, 2009; it was originally located here.

Target, Waterbury, CT 8/2014 by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube.

Topanga Plaza Mall under renovations. Photos taken in late May 2007. The Topanga Plaza Mall originally contained May Co, The Broadway, Ohrbachs and Montgomery Wards. There was also an Ice Skating Ring.

 

The May Co converted in 1993 to Robinsons May Department Store by the May Department Stores when they combined May Co and Robinsons. In 2006, this store was converted to a Macy*s Department Store after Federated purchased the May Department Store Chain.

 

The BROADWAY closed in 1996 after Federated sold the site to Sears Department Stores. Sears opened in late 1996.

 

Nordstoms Department Store relocated in 2007, it took over a portion of the original parking lot, near the new Sears (former The Broadway Department Store).

 

The original Nordstroms, which opened around 1987, was demolished after closing and is now a Neiman Marcus Department Store.

 

The Montgomery Wards closed in the early 2000s, sat vacant for a few years and was finally demolished to make way for the expansion of Topanga Plaza and a new Target.

 

The above pictured Target opened in 2007 and is in the general area of the former Montgomery Wards Department Store. Photo of the Target Department Store, rooftop entrance.

Typical storage boxes contain your items, but the inside becomes cluttered – making it difficult to find what you need. Rubbermaid’s Bento collection is designed to organize items, rather than just store them. The Bento Boxes have internal flex dividers, which enable you to divide the space by creating unique sections when needed. Boxes can stack vertically, or fit inside each other. Bento Trays can act as trays or covers, providing an extra layer of organization for the Bento Boxes, or hiding what’s inside. The Bento Collection is made from sturdy materials, and the heavy-duty decorative fabric enables it to remain out in your social spaces while complementing your home’s décor.

 

For more information please visit our website at: www.rubbermaid.com/Category/Pages/SubCategoryLanding.aspx...

The hatch of the engine bay is dislocated by the impact of the Paveway II Laser Guided Training Round

Here they are making way for the new spot for Electronics. The picture of it is below.

Picture taken 6/25/23

 

Target | 2205 Walker Lake Rd, Ontario, OH

 

Please contact me via FlickrMail, or on Gmail if you'd like to use any of my photographs.

retaimings@gmail.com

Colt Target Python, 8 inch Barrel

.38 Special

TARGET TRAVEL, PLYMOUTH, OPTARE SOLO YJ55YHO, 04.08.13

I used to have cabbage patch kids as dolls when I was a kid.

 

These are the mini ones. I was trying to find the one with cat outfit but this store didn't have that one :/

One of the Target's I went to still had some clearance things to be found. Curvy $5.09, Proud Family $5.99, Mini Bratz $2.99, Mermaze $9.59, OG fashion $5.39. The rabbit topiaries are $3. Polly Pocket $4.99. I think the signs are $3

Mikey and Eric prepare to blash away at crap.

There is a coupon on Target.com for $5 off an ottoman, and my Target had these storage ottomans on clearance. I can never have enough places to tuck away toys!

 

Total retail: $40.22

Total out of pocket: $21.01

Total savings: $19.21

...sia il Viandante che il Siciliano mi hanno nominato. La sfida era postare una foto che mi ritraesse da ciottolo. È stata dura, ma ne ho trovata una.

Ora i miei nominati per fare altrettanto:

SweeneyTot

theAmir

Alessio Lombardi

Ranger78

Sharkoman

-senza alcun obbligo o maledizione ancestrale, ovviamente. È un gioco. Partecipate se vi va di giocare... :-)

♫♫♪♫♫ Ascolta ♪♫♫♪♫♫♪

Last weekend, I did three churches in a small area near Tenterden, but Smallhythe was my target, as I always found it locked.

 

It is usually open when Dame Ellen Terry's house, Smallhythe Place is open, so after checking that's opening times, I set of from home.

 

St John is quite plain inside, but does have the original rood screen in place, which is simply carved on one side. Sadly, with the late summer sun pouring in through the east window, the carvings were almost impossible to photograph looking into the bright sun.

 

-------------------------------------------

 

Built of brick in 1516 after a large fire destroyed the whole village, Smallhythe church is a simple rectangular box, rather taller than it need be, its exterior height emphasised by the crow-stepped gables that rise in ten steps. The west wall has a little image niche under the gable. The interior is as plain as the exterior and has a wooden chancel screen and nicely tiled floor. Yet the church receives numerous visitors on the strength of its associations with Dame Ellen Terry, the actress, who lived at nearby Smallhythe Place which is open to the public. Without the fame of this former resident and the dedication of its congregation, this church might not have such an assured future.

 

www.kentchurches.info/church.asp?p=Smallhythe

 

------------------------------------------

 

633/3/82 SMALLHYTHE ROAD

08-MAY-50 SMALLHYTHE

(East side)

CHURCH OF ST JOHN THE BAPTIST

 

(Formerly listed as:

SMALLHYTHE ROAD

SMALLHYTHE

St John the Baptist's Church)

 

GV II*

The church was completely rebuilt in 1516-17 following a fire that destroyed the town. The chancel was reroofed in the C18, and the whole church was restored in the C19, when the window tracery was renewed. The stone E window is 1884.

 

MATERIALS: C16 brick in English bond, with stone tracery and dressings on E window. Tiled roof with small timber bell cot.

 

PLAN: Unaisled nave and chancel without structural division. W porch and small timber bell cot over nave W end.

 

EXTERIOR: The nave and chancel are continuous externally, and there are crowstepped gables at the E and W ends. Diagonal buttresses with off-sets at the corners and a pair of off-set buttresses on either side. The C19 E window has stone tracery in a Perpendicular style, and is set within the blocked, four-centred opening for the C16 E window.

 

The nave and chancel N and S windows have restored Flamboyant brick tracery with mouchettes and super mullions. The N and S doors have stone dressings, four-centred heads with hood moulds.

 

The W porch, an unusual feature, is also brick. The gable is stepped at the outer ends like small buttresses. The outer opening is of three orders with a hood mould. The outer two orders have square heads with continuous jambs, the inner is segmental. The central section of the middle order has been renewed. The W window is of five cusped lights with a transom in a four-centred head. There is a small statue niche with a four-centred head and square hood mould above. There is a tiny weather boarded bellcot over the W end of the nave. The W door is four centred and has hollow chamfered mouldings and hood mould.

 

INTERIOR: The interior is plastered and painted, and has a timber panelled dado. The windows are renewed in stone on the inside. There is no structural division between nave and chancel, but the C16 screen remains in its original position. The W end of the nave is screened off with a late C19 or early C20 timber screen to form a vestry. The chancel roof was repaired or wholly rebuilt in 1747 and has four slender A-frames trussed with straight braces and two tiers of staggered purlins. It was formerly plastered and retains nails for former laths. The very plain nave roof is C16 and is of the tie beam and common rafter type. The W end of the roof was repaired in 1982 with steel brackets.

 

PRINCIPAL FIXTURES: The C16 screen is an unusual form, with a deep moulded cornice rather than cresting and is divided into wide bays with evenly spaced, narrow lights with cusped heads and carved spandrels. It apparently never had doors, and is very plain on the chancel side. The dado panelling of feather edged boarding with a moulded cornice is probably also C16 in origin, much repaired on the S side, but largely original on the N. C19 or early C20 timber reredos of blind ogee panels with cared details and a brattished cornice; similar design to choir stalls. C19 communion rail with timber brackets. C19 drum pulpit with open traceried sides. Small, octagonal font carved with quatrefoils on an octagonal stem. Nave benches of c.1900 with shaped ends terminating in carved roundels. C19 or early C20 carved timber screen at W end for vestry. Red tiled nave floor, C19 encaustic tiles in the chancel, mosaic floor to sanctuary. Some C19 stained glass.

 

HISTORY: The name hythe or hithe meant haven or landing place in Old English and Smallhythe was a port and major centre of ship building in the C14-C16 before the Rother silted up in the early C17 and changed its course. It now flows some way to the south. Henry VIII visited Smallhythe in 1537 to view progress on the construction of one of his warships. The town was devastated by fire in 1514 and the church was completely rebuilt in 1516-17. Dame Ellen Terry, the famous late C19 and early C20 actress, lived in the adjacent Smallhythe Place and her funeral was held in the church in 1928.

 

SOURCES:

Buildings of England: West Kent and the Weald (1969), 509.

 

REASONS FOR DESIGNATION:

St John the Baptist, Smallhythe is designated at Grade II* for the following principal reasons:

*A rare (and excellent) example of a complete Tudor brick church with some contemporary fittings including the chancel screen, W door and nave roof.

*The exterior, with its crow-stepped gables and curvilinear window tracery, strongly recalls North European brick church architecture and as such is a rare occurrence in Kent.

*The chancel roof is C18.

*It has historical significance as a reminder of the former prosperity of Smallhythe in the late middle ages and Tudor period.

 

www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-179816-church-of-st-j...

 

--------------------------------------------

 

In Roman times the whole of what is now Romney Marsh was a shallow sea with the coastline running from Appledore through to Hythe.

 

Later in the Middle Ages, Smallhythe was located in Dunborne, which was one of the six Boroughs of the ancient Tenterden Hundred. It lay on the banks of the tidal river Rother, which was then navigable from Romney along the course of the Rhee Wall, through Appledore and Reading (now Reading Street) as far as Newenden. In the 13th Century a series of storms of extreme violence blocked the channel to Romney and the river was diverted from Appledore past Ebony and Stone to the sea at Rye. This was, in fact, the second time the course of the river had changed and in earlier times it had found its way to the sea at Lympne.

 

A port and shipbuilding industry had existed in Smallhythe from early times and a church or chapel for the inhabitants and seamen had also existed. The earliest written reference to the church is in 1401, which records the gift of three shillings and fourpence from the Chamberlain’s Accounts of Romney to the chapel of St. John the Baptist, as a thank offering, to mark the successful launch of the Entwhistle, a sea-going barge built in the haven at Smallhythe.

 

In 1449, Tenterden, together with its port at Smallhythe and shipbuilding community at Reading was incorporated as one of the Cinque Ports as a ‘limb of Rye’.

 

Following a petition from the inhabitants in 1505, and on account of the distance from Tenterden and difficulties attending the Parish Church, Archbishop Warham issued a Faculty permitting the holding of divine service in the chapel and for the inhabitants to have a priest of their own. This was followed in 1509 by a further order allowing the inhabitants to elect their own priests subject only to his approval. This privilege, which was unique in the whole kingdom, was to last for more then 400 years!

 

In 1514 most of the hamlet was burnt down and the chapel suffered either partial or total destruction, and the present church building dates from then.

 

Of the very few ancient buildings remaining, that next to the church is known as the “Priest’s House”; and that which is now the Ellen Terry museum, now owned by the National Trust, was the harbour master’s house. A former house for the priest, on the other side of the road, was destroyed in the fire of 1514.

 

By the end of the 16th century the river had so silted up that there remained only a “creek of salt water” frequented by lighters and small vessels. Now there remains only a drainage ditch known as the Reading Sewer which flows in the opposite direction.

 

More recently the Benefices of St. Mildred, Tenterden and St. John the Baptist, Smallhythe were permanently united to form the one Benefice in 1928 but with the two parishes continuing distinct in all respects.

 

The present church was built in 1516-17 during the reign of Henry VIII to replace the chapel which stood on the same site and was destroyed by fire in 1514. It is an example of a Tudor church and is unusual in its use of red brick for its construction. It is thought that bricks may have been imported from the Low Countries in exchange for timber from the Weald of Kent. The stepped gables of the West front indicate a Dutch influence, and the beautiful Tudor brickwork is well worth studying. The porch was added in 1866.

 

The oldest features in the church are the mediaeval oak screen and the wainscot panelling. The panelling is mentioned in the records of the local history society as the oldest oak panelling known to exist anywhere. The pews in the nave are made of pitch pine and replaced oak family boxes in 1900. The pulpit and lectern were gifts from St. Mildred’s Church, Tenterden. The West window contains the only original Tudor tracery, but all the glass is modern. The window over the altar, which shows Christ victorious with a Paschal lamb and a mediaeval ship, was installed by the War Damage Commission in 1952, after the original window had been destroyed by a V1 Rocket in 1944.

 

The roof is a perfect example of a rectangular Tudor roof with two interesting repairs in evidence. The roof over the chancel was repaired in 1747 by the addition of oak side purlins fixed at right angles to the rafters. The roof over the West end was repaired in 1982 by steel brackets and stainless steel straps on top of the beams. These are fixed to wall plates set in concrete spreader beams on top of the walls, almost invisible, and so preserving the antiquity of the building. The cost of this last repair, still in recent memory, was £24,000. It is worth recording that this huge sum of money was raised by the small parish and the repairs carried out in under two years. During this time the church was closed and services were held at St. Mildred’s in Tenterden. The eventful story of how this was achieved will live on in the annals of the church and might almost be described as a miracle!

 

Dame Ellen Terry worshipped in this church and her funeral service was held here on 24th July 1928, conducted by the Rector of Wittersham, who was vicar in charge at that time.

 

www.tenterdencofe.org/?page_ref=275

Target #772 (123,960 square feet)

1180 Carl D. Silver Parkway, Central Park, Fredericksburg, VA

 

This location opened on March 10th, 1996.

Target Shopping Carts

 

The week I received my Nikon 50mm 1.8D lens I went out looking for some interesting items that would play well with the DOF control...something that I had forgotten about with my series of zoom-lens purchases. (Prime lenses ROCK!)

 

These carts were outside a brand-new Target store and are 100% plastic. I believe the metal frames of the 'old' style mostly likely became too expensive or frequently stolen by the metal freaks.

 

Anyway, the subjects were very gracious to have their photo taken and didn't move a centimeter!! Great fun and I hope you enjoy this image as well.

Target, Waterbury, CT 8/2014 by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube.

▌NUEVO POST: MI VIDA ESTOS DIAS... ▌

 

▌Julia Dávila [Fotografía] : Daniela ♥ Michael.▌

 

▌Facebook. ▌

 

▌Website. ▌

 

▌Twitter. ▌

 

If you wish to use any of my images for any reason/purpose please contact me (Chaulafanita@photographer.net ) or send me a flickr mail so I'll make them available for sale.

Target, Windsor, CT, 8/2014 by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube

Target cushions on the amphitheater seats on opening day in Seattle's Olympic Sculpture Park. See a close-up of the cushions here.

 

非法聚會 illegal gathering #6.2| 18th Feb 08

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