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A collection of 150 exceptional text based logos to showcase different types and styles of logo designs that will be an inspiration for your own design projects
Learn the essentials of Vertebrate Zoology with the help of highly qualified and experienced zoology tutors. This course helps anyone who is working with animals or provides a sound basis for further studies.
North Eastern Railway trespass sign, Kirkby Stephen (East) railway station, Cumbria. Sunday 04 August 2013.
Photograph copyright: Ian 10B
On my recent trip to Chicago I managed to get out and shoot for a little while. I had half a day to wander and any night I could muster after a long day "working".
All were shot with my Canon F1 and either my 28mm f2.0 or a 35-105 f3.5 zoom. Kodak BW400CN and Ektar were the films used. No built-in meter, either Sunny 16 or meter on my iPhone.
A sign at the site of the former Checkpoint Charlie on the Berlin Wall - the most famous of the crossings between the American and Soviet sectors.
The Berlin Wall was the greatest symbol of division between East and West Germany, communism and democracy, from its construction in 1961 until its fall in 1989.
Overnight on August 13, 1961, 40,000 East German soldiers, policemen and officials closed U-Bahn and S-Bahn lines and spread barbed wire across streets that divided the two sides of Berlin, cordoning off the Soviet sector.
Over the coming weeks, months and years, the wire was replaced by a wall, with a no-man’s zone in the middle, with watchtowers and soldiers in place to stop East Berliners fleeing to the West.
The area between the two walls became known as the death zone as desperate East Germans were gunned down trying to reach the West.
The wall became a symbol of communism, the checkpoints along its length keeping families and friends apart for close to 30 years, with those from the East not allowed to cross over.
On November 9, 1989, when the East German government lifted travel restrictions, jubilant Berliners flocked to the wall, catching guards unaware. The soldiers let them through and TV pictures were broadcast around the world showing people climbing the wall and partying on top.
Most of the wall has now been demolished, although one section still stands as it did, complete with watchtowers, as a memorial and another has been turned into the East Side Gallery.
Page 1 of the letter:
Petawawa Camp / July 7, 1916 (Not 1919)
Dear Nellie, Received your letter last night and by the sound of it, you are not having very much time to yourself. You must of been a buissie (busy) little girl, and Mr. Spencer is going to Camp Borden, I hope he likes it better than the fellows do here. I expect to go down to Pembroke on Saturday night, it will be the first time out of camp for me, we are going right to the hotel and eat, I guess that will be all we will have time for. Had a quiet time this morning, the Major came up to my lead driver and made him a casualty, that started the fun, before he finished every mounted man was a casualty, we did not even stop the teams, when he put me out of business, I told Mort Gordon to take my place, and when he was getting on, my horse ran away and put him off, but did not hurt him, it was good fun, and the fellows enjoyed it, the Major tried every way (end of page one)
This is a link to Mort Gordon - he talks about him on page 1 of this letter...
www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/databases/cef/001042-119.01-e...
FIVE LESSONS I LEARNED FROM JERRY GOLDSMITHS CAREER THAT MAKE ME A BETTER ARTIST
#1. YOU'LL SPEND YOUR CAREER WORKING ON MOSTLY BAD MOVIES
I like to say that Jerry Goldsmith made the best music to the worst movies, often in the shadow of more prominent ones, but that never stopped him from doing an amazing job. John Williams got Superman, The Poseidon Adventure, Towering Inferno. Jerry got Supergirl and The Swarm. Bernard Herrmann scores Psycho, Jerry gets Psycho II. The list is almost endless. And yet, when you listen to his scores, you wouldn't know that the movies weren't good - his scores are complex, sensitive, exciting, authentic, artistic.
I was making some prints from a customers 35mm transparencies when I found this Agfa 1973 advert enclosed in the slide box. So I did a quick scan of it for myself/
@C_MichelleJKT48 : Yuk Sahur bareng Aku 🙆dan member JKT48 🙆🙆🙆🙆🙆🙆🙆🙆🙆🙆🙆🙆🙆🙆🙆lainnya. 😆😆 t.co/ZCi4VJ5DvK (via Twitter twitter.com/C_MichelleJKT48/status/740923090046058496)
Text: Birthplace of American Methodism / Robert Strawbridge d. 1781 / ..The pioneer preacher of American Methodism purchased from John England, Sr. this house and farm March 2, 1773. A part of England's Chance and bothers' inheritance, on which he had lived for 13 years since his coming to America 1760. Here he formed / ..The First Class of Methodism / John Evans, his wife Eleanor Evans, his nephew Job Evans, and Mary Evans his wife, Nancy Murphy and Mrs. Hoy. "Here Mr. Strawbridge formed the first Society in Maryland and America." From Asbury's Journal, May 5, 1801...The First Society of Methodism / John Evans, William Durbin, Andrew Poulson, John England, William Daman, Benjamin Marcarel, George Havener, Richard Smith, Thomas Leakin, James ... Daniel Stephenson ... (incomplete)
A look at 'Made You Look', an exhibition at the Photographer's Gallery, London, examining style Dandyism And Black Masculinity, curated by Ekow Eshun.