View allAll Photos Tagged change."
Bus No.: 3159
Body: Nissan Diesel Philippines Corporation
Model: NDPC Euro
Chassis: Nissan Diesel RB46S
Engine: Nissan Diesel PE6T
Route: Avenida-Tarlac
Location: Dimasalang Road, Sampaloc, Manila
*ilang beses ko to nakita last week, nung sabado ko lang nakita changed door na rin pala ito.
The driver Class 55 55003 Meld has got down from the loco and is standing on the platform looking for his replacement who was nowere in sight. Meld is working a London Kings Cross to Edinburgh Waverley. 13/ 8/ 77. I photographed 7 Deltics at York that day: 55001/3/4/6/13/14/22.
image Kevin Connolly - All rights reserved so please do no use this without my explicit permission
"OMNIPRESENT SWASTIKA SIGNS ENCIRCLE HITLER PLATZ IN CHARLOTTENBURG
Foreign flags are displayed in honor of visiting Olympic contenders; flanking the Stars and Stripes are the colors of Uruguay, and Germany. This platz, or square - with near-by Broadcasting House, fair grounds, and athletic fields - is becoming a new bright-light center in west Berlin."
Finlay Photograph by Wilhelm Tobien
(This historic photograph is from a National Geographic article in the February 1937 issue titled "Changing Berlin". It offers a fascinating look at Berlin, Germany, a few years before the start of World War II.)
Change is never easy....but I am welcoming major change this month. Many of you know that I've been in the Antique business for about 18 years. I'm leaving Pink Salvage at the end of this month and going back to my old stomping grounds, Vintage Rabbit....where I was for many many years. Lots of physical challenges ahead this month, but who said change was easy? Here's to a great week ahead and lovely July for everyone~
The Best Time For New Beginnings Is Now.....
My dear old friend Euan has left Glasgow for a job in Aberdeen in subsea engineering, and I thought on his last day here we would recreate an old photograph from school. That leaves, of my original core group of friends, only me and Jeff in Glasgow. Euan will be back often, though, and it will give me a reason to go to Aberdeen.
Seasons of change.
As autumn descends so to does the season of change as the trees lose their summer foliage and replace it with the autumn leaves.
Camden, New South Wales, Australia.
We appear to go from one day of sunshine to a day of rain and then back to sunshine!! Today, we have rain and it is getting cooler each day!!
Stay Safe Everyone!
Thanks to everyone who views this photo, adds a note, leaves a comment and of course BIG thanks to anyone who chooses to favourite my photo .... Thanks to you all!
Change that is all he is asking for
Change that is the least you can give
Our Daily Challenge: Change
One thing I like very much in Sichuan is the "Changing Mask ance" I love the lively song they play when they changing mask... so fast and at a blink of an eye, they change the mask on their face. All mask are colorful just like these souveneir masks. One of fame of Sichuan and I also like Sichuan food.
Shot was taken at the souveneir corner at the temple that worships Li Ping, the great wiseman who at old time built the dam to divert water to Sichuan by dividing water using structure like fish mouth and digged another river by cutting the rocky mountain using fire to heat and water to cold to accelerate the decaying of rock. All are done by the help of people in the city he was a governor.
This dam lasts and is used till present and the place is one of UNESCO World Heritage.. The place and the mountain is the location of history in the Three Kingdom era too, if I dont remember it wrong.
I really like this place and would like to stay longer, for its lovely and poetic city. I am sad to know this place, the nearest place to earthquake center was severely damaged and schools collpased taking away many children's lives.
The world is wide and the places I once stepped are all special for me.. that once in life I was there and those memories remain lifetime...
Li Ping Temple
Dujiangyuan
Sichuan, China
You want a tele perspective from your smartphone? Piece of cake ... just shoot from a farer distance and crop the shot later-on. Volia -- tele perspective.
Of course, the price is that severe loss in resolution, but often, especially for the web, the resolution will still be high enough.
Also have a look at the size changes. In the middle "tele" shot, the size of the background elements gets much larger.
--
Tilo ~gallo~ Gockel
My entry for Theme 1 "Change", and one of the showcased pics on the wall..
430EXII blue-gelled with omnibounce in the background at 1/8th power, 580EXII below the cam thru umbrella at 1/16th power, light painted during the long exposure.
Credits to Ian for his 400D and Muyao for his 70-200.
14/52
Explored #39
The Adélie Penguin is a species of penguin common along the entire Antarctic coast, which is their only residence. They are among the most southerly distributed of all seabirds, as are the Emperor Penguin, the South Polar Skua, the Wilson's Storm Petrel, the Snow Petrel, and the Antarctic Petrel. In 1840, French explorer Jules Dumont d'Urville named them for his wife, Adélie. There are estimated to be a total of 2.4-3.2 million breeding pairs of Adélie penguins; they are distributed around the coastline of the Antarctic continent.
For any form of publication, please include the link to this page:
This photo has been graciously provided to be used in the GRID-Arendal resources library by: Peter Prokosch
I'd planned to see this working at Stenson Jn itself, however due to the 3J89 RHTT running early and this being late, they'd both cross at roughly the same time, but I wanted to see them in different places. Thus, I headed to the bridge east of the junction to see Freightliner's 70010 lead the 4O90/0527 Leeds F.L.T. to Southampton M.C.T. intermodal service.
THE City of Wakefield, a metropolitan district of West Yorkshire, England. Located by the River Calder on the eastern edge of the Pennines, the urban area is 2,062 hectares (5,100 acres) and had a population of 76,886 in 2001.[1]
Wakefield was dubbed the "Merrie City" in the Middle Ages[2] and in 1538 John Leland described it as, "a very quick market town and meately large; well served of fish and flesh both from sea and by rivers ... so that all vitaile is very good and chepe there. A right honest man shall fare well for 2d. a meal. ... There be plenti of se coal in the quarters about Wakefield".[3]
The site of a battle during the Wars of the Roses and a Royalist stronghold during the Civil War, Wakefield developed in spite of setbacks to become an important market town and centre for wool exploiting its position on the navigable River Calder to become an inland port.
At the start of 19th century Wakefield was already a wealthy market town and inland port trading in wool and corn.[25] The Aire and Calder and Calder and Hebble Navigations and the Barnsley Canal were instrumental in the development of Wakefield as an important market for corn from Norfolk, Cambridgeshire and Lincolnshire supplying the growing population in the West Riding.
When cloth dealing declined wool spinning mills using steam power were built by the river. There was a glass works in Calder Vale Road, several breweries including Melbourne's and Beverley's Eagle Brewery, engineering works with strong links to the mining industry, soapworks and brickyards in Eastmoor giving the town a diverse economy.[29][30] On the outskirts of the town coal had been dug since the 15th century and 300 adult males were employed in the town's coal pits in 1831.[3] During the 19th century more mines were sunk so that there were 46 in Wakefield and the surrounding area by 1869.[30][31] The National Coal Board eventually became Wakefield's largest employer with Manor Colliery on Cross Lane and Park Hill colliery at Eastmoor surviving until 1982.[32]
Developments by the river and canal, the "Wakefield Waterfront", include the refurbishment of the Grade II listed Navigation Warehouse as well as office, retail, restaurant and cafe units. The development also includes the "Hepworth Gallery", named in honour of local artist and sculptor, Barbara Hepworth. Flats and offices are also being built at Chantry Waters, on an island between the river and canal.[68]
TALES BY THE RIVERBANK/Times are a changing Systems in Flux
M.HEPTINSTALL
Free from the presence of security I wandered amongst the old iron gates and crumbling roofs near the river, disturbing the old pigeons as my mind wandered to the industries and lives of the past. The memories of these industries seem enshrined in the crumbling banks of the water. Times are a changing systems in flux.
The old mills stand daunting, not forgotten, but living on borrowed time as the plethora of flats intrude, pushing ever closer in this urban landscape. The contrast of the architecture is emphasised further by the jagged geometry of the Hepworth gallery standing proud as a beacon in the sea of change.
“‘The Only Constant in Life Is Change.’ - Heraclitus - Change is all around us, but especially in Nature. We watch as Nature changes the landscape, subtly but predictably, as a clock advances the hour. Look around. Find a subtle change in your environment that marks time.”
Milkweed is beautiful in all seasons. In spring, it blooms, spreading its intoxicating scent and the happy sound of bees collecting nectar. However, I find that when the seed pods burst open in autumn, they are at their most spectacular. The soft, silken seeds get blown away by the breeze to start the cycle anew somewhere else.
Week 10/52: Changes.
Another March is here, which means as much as I have tried to stop it, Stink's birthday is right around the corner. My little, tiny baby is not really a baby anymore.
The arriving crew of VC81 make their way to the crew room to perform their sign off duties while the departing crew get comfortable in their 'office' for their leg of the journey. The new crew will work the train to Mackay before being relieved there by Townsville based crew.
My wife's little purple purse accompanied by a splatter of purple on her scarf ... and some loose change!!
Our Daily Challenge ~ Purple ....
Thanks to everyone who views this photo, adds a note, leaves a comment and of course BIG thanks to anyone who chooses to favourite my photo .... thanks to you all.
"Dizem que o tempo muda tudo, mas não é verdade. Fazer coisas é que muda algo, não fazer nada deixa as coisas do jeito que estão." - Dr. House
[...] Change does not roll in on the wheels of inevitability, but comes through continuous struggle. And so we must straighten our backs and work for our freedom. A man can't ride you unless your back is bent [...]
-- Quote by Martin Luther King, Jr. (American Baptist Minister and Civil-Rights Leader. 1929-1968)
Nikon D70, Tokina 12-24 f/4, 12mm - f/18 - 0.8s - HDR 3xp +2/-2EV
Calcata, Italy (January, 2010)