View allAll Photos Tagged Three)
Three is for meeeeeeee!
I hate taking photos of myself. Usually because I have a lopsided smile/sticky out chin/double chin*
So anyway, this is indeed me (camera in way of said chin, of course) - a very quick shot due to cling-on-non-napping-small-child!
January 6 - We celebrate the Three Kings Day or the feast of the Epiphany. It is the Christian celebration of the revelation of the birth of Jesus to the wider world. This is embodied most in the story of three wise men visiting a newborn Jesus with gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh as told in the Gospel of Matthew 2:1-12.
Dirty Three live at Queen Festival Hall. Really fun ancedotes through the show including the one about being stuck in your own room in Butlins. Good times
On the train's namesake trestle, which crosses over the Holston River within sight of its confluence with the French Broad to form the Tennessee, the Three Rivers Rambler brings a Santa train into Marbledale just before sunset.
This is the closest thing I have to Christmas decorations. I'm not against the holiday: my husband and I just don't decorate. Saves on cleaning up later. :)
When we lived in Connecticut, we had the loveliest neighbors. Dieter and Linda grew up in Germany during WWII--in what became East Germany. Somehow, they managed to be in West Germany at the right time. Dieter trained as a baker, Linda as a seamstress. Eventually, they ended up in Connecticut and owned a very successful bakery. They had long retired by the time we moved in next door. When we moved to California, they gave us this lovely little set of angels, which came from Germany.
Dieter and Linda are some of the best people you could get to know. And not just for the baked goods.
Happy Holidays to all my Flickr friends! Because of the upcoming holidays, I will be off and on Flickr--probably more off. So take care, and I will catch up in the New Year!
Three Lalylala dolls from the patterns by Lydia Tresselt. Lupine is the latest. She worked up a bit larger than the other two, probably due to the bobble stitches to make her fleecy body. I used Knit Picks Palette in bark for her skin, and Knit Picks Stroll in mocha tonal for the body.
The Three Sisters are three volcanic peaks of the Cascade Volcanic Arc and the Cascade Range in Oregon, each exceeding 10,000 feet (3,000 m) in elevation. They are the third, fourth, and fifth highest peaks in the state of Oregon and are located in the Three Sisters Wilderness, about 15 miles (24 km) southwest from the nearest town of Sisters.
South and Middle Sister do not require any rock climbing skills to ascend. South Sister in particular is a well known "first mountain" for many people. Although it does not require any technical skills or much in the way of mountaineering knowledge, many environmental dangers remain the same, and rescue operations are common during the climbing season. Jon Krakauer. writer of Into Thin Air, has frequently noted South Sister as his inspiration for getting into mountaineering. In his admissions essay to Amherst College, he mentioned that his interest in alpinism "really grew by the time [he] was eight and climbed the South Sister in Oregon".
Three army gal pals have their photo taken at the Tonga Room of the Fairmont Hotel, San Francisco, California. The photo is stamped with the date June 14, 1951. Two of these members of the Women's Army Corps wear identifiable shoulder patches. The WAC in the center wears a post-war First Army patch. The one on the right wears a Sixth Army patch.
The occasion must have been a farewell party for the woman in the middle. There is no clue to the identity of the WAC in the center, but the two on either end have scribbled short notes of affection, along with their names, on the margins of the photo's frame.
On the left:
"Pfc. Rose M. Gauthard (Rosa Lee)
May this night be a memorable one to you."
And on the right:
"Hope we never part but if we do I'll think of you.
Pvt. Betty Fields"
Three superb looking Bristols in Penzance bus station. Western National NBC liveried Bristol LH FDV 790V, First Western National liveried Bristol VR AFJ 749T and Yorkshire Traction NBC liveried Bristol VR MWG 941X.
Dade County, Florida
© 2012 Kevin Barry, All Rights Reserved.
This photo may not be used in any form without written permission from the photographer.
To see more of my work, go to www.kevinbarryphotos.com
The three flags flying over Canyon de Chelly are those of the Navajo Nation, the State of Arizona, and the United States of America.
20081021_0073a1_800x600
© gianfranco liccardo - Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission.
My photos are © all rights reserved. Please e-mail me if you would like to use these photos.
Walk across the garden
In the footsteps of my shadow
See the lights out
No one's home
In amongst the statues
Stare at nothing in
The garden moves
Can you help me?
Close my eyes
And hold so tightly
Scared of what the morning brings
Waiting for tomorrow
Never comes
Deep inside
The empty feeling
All the night time leaves me
Three imaginary boys
(The Cure - Three imaginary boys)
Three Shire Heads (also known as Three Shires Head) is the point on Axe Edge Moor where Cheshire, Derbyshire and Staffordshire meet, at UK grid reference SK009685, or 53.213°N 1.987°W.
It is on the River Dane, which marks the Cheshire border in this area. On the east of the river, the border between Staffordshire and Derbyshire runs north-east for about a mile to Cheeks Hill, on the higher regions of Axe Edge Moor. From Cheeks Hill the border runs south then east to the head of the River Dove.
The main landmark is a packhorse bridge. The bridge is Grade II-listed, and was probably constructed in the late 18th century
Three Aveling & Porter staem rollers at Mascots 100th birthday steam party in the village of Norton - in Hales.
From Left to right are "Ophelia", No. 8794, a 6ton roller owned by the Allison family, "Lady Hesketh", No. 9264, an 8 ton convertible owned by the Milns family and finally "Joan", No. 10460, another 6ton roller owned by the Woodcock family.