View allAll Photos Tagged TheFall
The Fall
Book :
Damien Hirst
Tate Publishing
2012
CD :
Spiritualized
Sweet Heart Sweet Light
Double Six Recordings
DS45
Design and Art Direction by Farrow / Spaceman
Special thanks to Roche and Haribo
iTunes :
The Durutti Column
Diazepam 10 mg
Kooky Records
KOOKY18
GMA drug has many side effects and should be used with caution ...
"I'm not saying that everything is survivable. Just that everything except the last thing is."
John Green (Paper Towns)
I tried many settings to try to do this sunset justice.It was wonderful to watch after a perfect autumn day.
This photo has copyright and belongs to me, LizzieDeb. No use of this picture without my written permission. Thank you. Message me on Flickr, or click my Alamy images link on my profile if you wish to see my available images.
Also, please check out my website on www.photoharvester.co.uk
happy birthday, david duchovny !!
-----
Please NOTE and RESPECT the copyright.
© 2014 photos4dreams - All rights reserved.
This image may not be copied, reproduced, published or distributed in any medium without the expressed written permission of the copyright holder.
for purchase information see my profile
WWW.NIGHTMARESFEARFACTORY.COM #FearPic #Nightmares #NiagaraFalls #Ontario #Canada #scary #HauntedHouse #NFF #FPOTD #Niagara #Attraction #CliftonHill #Fear #Funny #NiagaraFallsCanada #TheFalls #Haunted #HauntedAttraction #Fright #Night #ItsThatScary #HauntFreek #ghosts
Trees are great for the shade they provide in the South African summer but they do create extra work before the game in winter.
The Fall
Homage To Kirk Douglas
1916 - 2020
RIP
CD :
The Fall
Theme From Sparta F.C.
Action Records
TAKE23
Vocals . Mark E. Smith
Postcard :
Bands F.C.
The Fall
Sparta F.C.
2018
Use Hearing Protection
GMA
Queenswood Country Park and Arboretum.
This beautiful Acer grows inside a 47 acre arboretum, which is also home to over 1,200 rare and exotic trees from all over the world.
Herefordshire, England
November 2014.
The mushroom in the image might be a type of scalycap, likely the Shaggy Scalycap (Pholiota squarrosa) or the Golden Scalycap (Pholiota aurivella). Alternatively, it could be Sawgill (Neolentinus lepideus), also commonly known as the "Train Wrecker". These species are difficult to distinguish visually. If I'm wrong please let me know. Thanks,
A beast of a camera, great for a student, a full mechanical match-needle SLR with a line up of lenses that can stand up to anything.
You can read the full review online
www.alexluyckx.com/blog/index.php/2018/01/30/ccr-review-8...
Minolta SR-T 101 - Minolta Rokkor-X PF 1:1.7 f=50mm - Kodak Plus-X @ ASA-125
Kodak D-76 (1+1) 7:00 @ 20C
Scanner: Epson V700
Editor: Adobe Photoshop CC (2018)
Until 1663 St Stephen's Green was a marshy common on the edge of Dublin, used for grazing. In that year Dublin Corporation, seeing an opportunity to raise much needed revenue, decided to enclose the centre of the common and to sell land around the perimeter for building. The park was enclosed with a wall in 1664. The houses built around the Green were rapidly replaced by new buildings in the Georgian style and by the end of the eighteenth century the Green was a place of resort for the better-off of the city. Much of the present-day landscape of the square comprises modern buildings, some in a replica Georgian style, and relatively little survives from the 18th and 19th centuries.
In 1814 control of St Stephen's Green passed to Commissioners for the local householders, who redesigned its layout and replaced the walls with railings.
After the death of Prince Albert, Queen Victoria suggested that St Stephen's Green be renamed Albert Green and have a statue of Albert at its centre, a suggestion rejected with indignation by the Dublin Corporation and the people of the city, to the Queen's chagrin.
Access to the Green was restricted to local residents, until 1877, when Parliament passed an Act to reopen St Stephen's Green to the public, at the initiative of Sir A.E. Guinness, a member of the Guinness brewing family who lived at St Anne's Park, Raheny and at Ashford Castle. He later paid for the laying out of the Green in approximately its current form, which took place in 1880, and gave it to the Corporation, as representatives of the people. By way of thanks the city commissioned a statue of him, which faces the College of Surgeons. His brother Edward lived at Iveagh House, which his descendants gave in 1939 to the Department of External Affairs (now the Department of Foreign Affairs).