View allAll Photos Tagged WarningSign

MPH, that is. I'm pretty sure if you counted from either end of VA-18 between Paint Bank, VA and Covington, VA you'd have reached Curve No.40 way before this point no matter which direction you were going.

 

I did a Levels correction on this as the exposure wasn't quite right. The Z50 seemed to want to over expose a bit while using the adapted lens. I operated it on Manual, selecting either f8 or f5.6, and watching how the the scene looked in the viewfinder or screen before making a shutter speed adjustment.

 

The same view with the Z DX 16-50mm 1:3.5-6.3 VR looked a whole lot better straight out of camera at the 35mm setting (to get the same field of view as the adapted lens).

How many of you have felt alone at any point in time? Have many of you have found that your horizon is faint? Anyone's life is sometimes like this picture.

I quite often like to contemplate some moments in my photography, to think about what is going.

When I visualized “Alone”, I knew straight away what I wanted as a picture. It was obvious. I had plenty of time to get the shot, my decision was to take time and appreciate it. I could clearly see the fainted horizon, the bare line that makes you wonder where you going. The sign, your only secure place. The sign that helps guiding you against the danger of the sea. The sign that tells you how deep the water is. The piece of land, where you are at the moment, cornered, afraid to cross the ocean.

 

This shot was taken with the new Hitech ProStop 10 IR version which I did a comparison here: www.byviniphotography.com/index.php/2013/01/hitech-prosto....

I processed this picture in Silver Effex mainly and some dodge and burn in CS6 and then finishing adding just a tiny border around.

 

Nikon D7000 & Nikkor 16-35 F4

Post Production with Lightroom 4.3, Nik Software and CS6

©2013, byVini photography

 

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A rather alarming sign we encountered yesterday on our walk round Mersea Island! We did keep calm, but we didn't carry on! We took a detour round the breach!

Manly Beach - but as the sign says, not the most ideal spot on an otherwise beautiful beach to set yourself up for the day...

Since the pandemic began, B.C. fisheries officers say they're seeing 3 times as many people harvesting clams in Metro Vanouver waters including White Rock's Boundary Bay.

 

Harvesting shellfish like clams and mussels — called bivalve shellfish — is illegal in B.C.'s Lower Mainland.

 

Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) has banned bivalve shellfish harvesting across the bays and inlets of Metro Vancouver and up the Fraser River because of pollution and naturally occurring toxins.

 

Bivalve shellfish are filter feeders, which means any contaminants in the water can build up inside them and make them potentially deadly to human consumers.

 

If consumed, naturally occurring toxins produced by phytoplankton in the water can lead to diarrhetic, amnesic and paralytic forms of shellfish poisoning. Paralytic shellfish poisoning is potentially fatal.

 

As for the idea you can cook your way to a safe clam, that is simply not the case. While cooking will prevent you from getting bacterial illnesses, it's not going to do anything with the toxins. They are resistant to cooking. And, in fact, sometimes the toxins get more potent after cooking.

 

While illness should be a deterrent so too should be fines. People caught illegally harvesting shellfish risk tickets starting at $250, with additional fines for each shellfish up to $100,000.

 

Did you get the message?

Good to know, who bites, why, when,,!!!!

Gothenburg, Sweden.

   

Comments are welcome but no glittery banners or images of any kind! Those will be deleted!

Bocking Street, Hackney

Hoxton Overground station

Found this Bison making sure the public was warned about wildlife on the roadways. Was taken in Yellowstone National Park.

Adding to the set.

Columbia Lake, Waterloo, Ontario

Copyright

©All my photographic images are copyright. All rights are reserved. Do not use, copy or edit any of my photographs without my written permission.

If you want to use my photo for private use, please contact me:

  

Beware underpants liable to flood warning sign seen on the underpass that connects Central Park and Frank Whitmore Green in the City of Chelmsford in the County of Essex (UK).

 

This pedestrian and cycling underpass has a notorious reputation for frequent flooding.

 

My Signs album flic.kr/s/aHsjbbYKf9

 

My City of Chelmsford album flic.kr/s/aHsiNarUAu

 

Photograph taken by and copyright of my regular photostream contributor David and is posted here with very kind permission.

Warning sign at Castle Howard House in Yorkshire, England.

The picture has a slight split toning adjustment, so it is not truly black and white.

The South thought abolitionist John Brown was a madman. Colonel Robert E. Lee actually called him that. Southerners were angered even more when northerners sympathized with Brown. As the rift between North and South over slavery widened, the prospect of a civil war rose.

Another windy day, another shot of my favorite subject.

It is amazing how fast the clouds are moving and in different directions.

 

Nikon D800 & Nikkor 16-35 F4 VR

Post Production with Lightroom 5.5, Nik Software and CS6

©2014, byVini photography

 

#formatthitech #formatt-hitech

#byviniphotography #photography #longexposure

 

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Gibt es noch ein anderes Land, in dem auf einem offiziellen Schild darauf hingewiesen wird, daß das Betreten eines wilden Trampelpfads auf eigene Gefahr geschieht? (Campus der Universität Potsdam)

 

Very German: The sign warns that you "Enter at your own risk!" when you set a foot on this trail. (University campus Potsdam/Germany)

 

Очень по-немецки! Этот знак предупреждает: "Ходить [по тропинке] на собственный риск!" (Кампус университета г. Потсдам, Германия)

...or read for that matter! (I'm sure it's been said before! :o))

What vehicle does a red squirrel drive? A Ferrari draytona?

A sign at Scale Hill, Loweswater.

trinidad

february 1975

 

warning sign

 

part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf

 

© the Nick DeWolf Foundation

Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com

The National Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall

Aqaba, Goodbye Jordan, Journey home.

Yes, at the bottom of a box a set of model UK road signs of the pre-1965 design that came into use in the mid-1930s and that are now known as pre-Worboys signs as they pre-date the report of the committee chaired by Walter Worboys that condemned them to the bin of history.

 

Here we have a collection of warning as well as mandatory signs, triangles and circles abound. The only one that is a wee bit odd is the 'bus stop' one, a bit of a rogue that!

Just in case that walking in front of a moving tram being obviously a bad idea gets overlooked, here's a reminder as to where the priority lies.

 

Belgian coastal tramway (Kusttram) at Raversijde Provinciedomein.

Via Doria, Dolceacqua, Liguria, Italia

Not mine, but deserves wider distribution.

170 520 heads 1K11 10.52 Birmingham New Street to Leicester approaching the foot crossing at Water Orton. Certain crossings, such as this one, have been a real focus of late due to the high number of fatalities occuring at them; they have just a warning sign, to pedestrians, and a Whistle Board, for the train. I was quite surprised to see a Network Rail notice proclaiming 'Trains DO NOT sound their horn when approaching the crossing'. I'll let them off for not using the term 'Whistle' but surely an audable warning of a trains approach, from the train, is a cost effective method of warning persons crossing; especially if they happen to be slightly visually impared.

Emergency vehicles (fire trucks) entering highway ahead. Located just east of the Bakertown Fire Station on U.S. 12 westbound in Bertrand Township, Berrien County, Michigan.

This sign is almost impossible to read unless you happen to be out with your stepladder. And even then, I didn't notice it until it was too late.

 

We're Here: Things you can't do

 

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