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A view inside one of the most recent additions to the building stock at Beamish Museum, this recreated chemist's shop in the town area of the museum. The shop contains a splendid collection of pills and potions of the late Victorian/Edwardian period and is even lit by a gas lighting system as would have been used at the time.
Copyright © 2017 Terry Pinnegar Photography. All Rights Reserved. THIS IMAGE IS NOT TO BE USED WITHOUT MY EXPRESS PERMISSION!
Two Yongnuo YN-560 II radio- triggered. Main light - shoot thru umbrella camera top-left. Rim light - bare flash camera top right behind model.
Spoonflower fabric with elements in both black and white.
White: www.spoonflower.com/fabric/531306
Black: www.spoonflower.com/fabric/531350
The whole collection: www.spoonflower.com/collections/6235
This poster is from the Swan Collection of Tyne & Wear Museums, held at the Discovery Museum in Newcastle upon Tyne.
Sir Joseph Wilson Swan was a British Physicist, Chemist and Inventor. Swan lived at Underhill, on Kells Lane North in Low Fell, Gateshead. It was here that he conducted most of his experiments in the large conservatory.
His investigations in electro-chemistry led to the construction of a motor electric meter, an electric fire-damp detector, a miners' electric safety lamp. Most importantly, Swan was also a pioneer in photographic procedures such as carbon printing.
It was Swan's demonstration of the light bulb at a lecture in Newcastle upon Tyne on 18 December 1878, before its later development by the American Thomas Edison that he is most famous for. Swan and Edison later collaborated in their work with the incandescent light bulb in 1883, when they founded the Edison & Swan United Electric Light Company, otherwise known as 'Ediswan.'
Many items held at Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums relating to Joseph Swan offer an amazing insight in to his work as an inventor and his place in the History of Scientific progression. This set offers a small selection from these collections.
This set has been produced in support of the British Science Festival 2013, held in Newcastle upon Tyne. You can find more information on the Festival here
(Copyright) We're happy for you to share these digital images within the spirit of The Commons. Please cite 'Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums' when reusing. Certain restrictions on high quality reproductions and commercial use of the original physical version apply though; if you're unsure please email archives@twmuseums.org.uk
Chemist Glenn Seaborg stands next to a periodic table. He is pointing at the synthetic element seaborgium, which is named after him. Dr. Seaborg, a former Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1951. ©1996 - 2014 American Academy of Achievement. All Rights Reserved
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Chemist Warehouse on Millers Road in Altona North near Blackshaws Road. Note the change in signage out the front was 'done on the cheap' with the old Blockbuster Video sign clearly evident.
Chemistry Moment/United Nations in Asunción. Women chemists from Paraguay joined colleagues around the world joined in a video conference to celebrate a "Chemistry moment" and open the calendar of events for the International Year of Chemistry. (Photo Credit: UNIC Asunción, 18 January 2011).
Chemist Brain Bachmann discovers research is more fun underground.
Every few months, chemist Brian Bachmann sheds his white lab coat, collects his flashlight, helmet, surgical gloves and knotted rope, puts on old clothes and hiking boots and heads to a nearby cave.
Bachmann, an assistant professor of chemistry at Vanderbilt, has combined his industrial experience in natural products drug discovery with his undergraduate hobby of caving to set up the first systematic program to search for novel drugs produced by cave-dwelling microorganisms.
Read more: www.mc.vanderbilt.edu/vanderbiltmedicine/index.html?artic...
Cheap, but ugly inside.
Supposedly this was the pharmacy business that moved here half a kilometre from Erskineville, although I don't recognise any of the people.
Maker: Henri Le Secq (1818-1882)
Born: France
Active: France
Medium: photolithograph
Size: 9 5/16" x 13 1/4"
Location: France
Object No. 2017.942
Shelf: C-64
Publication: Premier Cahier de Lithophotographie, Goupil & Cie and Gide & Baudry, 1853, pl 3
Henri Le Secq, Photographie de 1850 a 1860, Musee des Arts Decoratifs/Flammarion, Paris, 1986, Cat No. 43
La Photographie. Collection Marie-Therese et Andre Jammes, Sotheby’s, October 27, 1999, lot 64
Provenance: Bassenge, 19th-21st Century Photography December, 6, 2017, lot 4082
Rank: 900
Other Collections:
Notes: Le Secq made the original paper negative of this image on his Mission Heliographique trip in 1851. This photolithograph is from the first portfolio "Premier Cahier de Lithophotographie" of six photolithographs edited by Goupil & Cie and Gide & Baudry in 1853, printed by Lemercier in Paris after the photography process on stone of Lemercier, Lerebours, Barreswil and Davane. Printed in the margin below the print at the bottom left "Negative by Lesecq" bottom center "Photographed on stone by Messrs. Lemercier, Lerebours, Barreswil and Davanne" lower right "Imp. Lemercier, 57 r. De Seine, Paris. " Printed in the margin at the bottom left "Paris - Goupil and Co." in the center "Paris, Lerebours Secretan, EDrs," lower right "Paris - Gide & Baudry." Signature in the negative H. Le Secq, 1852
Beginning in the early 1850s, the famous lithography specialist printer of Paris, Joseph Lemercier (1803-1887) became interested in photo-reproduction. Then associated with the optician Noël Paymal Lerebours (1807-1873), chemists Charles-Louis Barreswil (1817-1870) and Louis-Alphonse Davanne (1824-1912), he developed a new method of photographic transfers on stone from technique based on bitumen of Judea previously used by Niepce de Saint-Victor and obtained patents for it in 1852. Goupil & Cie then seeking a method of reproduction of photography, togther withh Gide & Baudry, publishes the first book of photolithographs made from a series of negatives by Le Secq. This print was one of the three that Lemercier first showed to the editors of La Lumiere in February, 1853 and part of the first lithophotographic portfolio presented to the French Academy of Sciences on May 2, 1852.
Jean-Louis-Henri Le Secq des Tournelles was born in 1818 in Paris, of an ancient noble family from Normandy. His father was a politician. Jean-Louis-Henri was trained in sculpture and worked in several studios. He started his photographic career while still working as a painter in the studio of Paul Delaroche. He experimented with various photograph techniques together with his colleague Charles Nègre and later worked with Gustave Le Gray learning the waxed-paper negative process. Along with Hippolyte Bayard, Edouard Baldus, Gustave Le Gray and Auguste Mestral (O. Mestral), he was sent on Missions Héliographiques to document famous architectural monuments in France. He worked mainly on cathedrals in Chartres, Strasbourg, Reims and near Paris. In 1851 he became one of the founders of the first photographic organization of the world, the Société héliographique (1851–1853), which was very short lived. Le Secq gave up photography after 1856 but continued to paint and collect art. Around 1870 he started reprinting his famous works as cyanotypes and photolithographs because he was afraid of possible loss due to fading. He was also a collector of wrought iron objects and the Musée le Secq des Tournelles in Rouen is devoted to him.
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Current innovations in organic chemical reactions: Session will focus on discussing the current progress in the chemical reactions to make its effect less ethical to human and environment. So many chemicals emission causing adverse effects on human health, as well as effecting the global climate. Understanding the solution and new ideas to deal with it is the principal focus.
Conference details: bit.ly/2Mtzq0b
French biologist and chemist Louis Pasteur's work in the causes and cures for disease supported the germ theory of disease; he invented the first vaccine for rabies, and he invented the process for treating milk and wine called "pasteurization" that is named for him.
Credit: unidentified photographer, before 1895; from the Smithsonian Institution Libraries [source].
C'est ici que Leopold Bloom s'est arrêté à 11h pour acheter du savon au citron pour son bain turc, dans le roman Ulysse de James Joyce. Ce savon est toujours en vente aujourd'hui dans cette boutique qui est devenue un petit musée James Joyce.
Diseño de farmacias
Mobil M se ha encargado de la reforma de esta farmacia de Tenerife:
proyecto de arquitectura
diseño interior
identidad corporativa
mobiliario comercial
Unique ID: 9341..Caption: A pharmacy or dispensing chemist counter. Large sign. Prescriptions. A pharmacist behind the counter talking to and serving a man with learning disabilities...Restrictions: For use in the NHS photo library and Department of Health..Copyright: ©Crown
Adrienne, I love her, her cat shirt is too cute I just love it, she might not be articulated but the outfit is good quality and her hair is nice and thick, it needs a little bit of fixing up and a little trim but apart it's good hair, she also has her glasses which is good and I am glad her head is the same with inset eyes which is also good.
John Carter started the manufacturing chemist company named after him in the late 19th Century. In more modern times their factory was on Attercliffe Road, closing circa 1990. Collected and Photographed by Andrew.
FRANK COMMERFORD,
Chemist & Druggist,
Valparaiso, Indiana.
Production Date: Circa 1880s
Source Type: Trade Card
Printer, Publisher, Photographer: Unknown
Postmark: Not Applicable
Collection: Steven R. Shook
Remark: This is a 3 1/4" x 1 5/8" trade card. Frank Commerford served as City Clerk of Valparaiso from May 1868 to May 1870 under Mayor Robert F. Jones.
Copyright 2014. Some rights reserved. The associated text may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without prior written permission of Steven R. Shook.
Dispensing Chemists.
Hot Water Bottles and Trusses, Bed Pans, Accouchement Outfits and all kinds of Surgical, Nursing and Sick Room Appliances kept in Stock.
Spectacles to suit all sights.
Aerated and Mineral waters.
Teeth carefully Extracted - Children 6d. Adults 1/-
"Pure Drugs", "Film & Cameras" all advertised on this ghost sign. Photo taken May 2010. (View of both ghost signs.)
Address: 285-287 Brockley Road, Brockley, London, SE4.
Moores Hub Pharmacy located on the Langhorne-Lonsdale Street end of the Hub Arcade in the centre of Dandenong. It is one of the long-term tenets in the arcade which opened in November 1974 but saw much retail activity move into Dandenong Plaza in 1995. In earlier days it was one of the few shops that traded seven days a week prior to widespread Sunday trading in Victoria in the 1990s but with the shift in retail activity ironically reduced its hours in later years.
Trading as Moores for most of its history it was also under the Chemmart name for a period and in more recent times Pharmasave, surviving the competition of Chemist Warehouse across the road. In 2019 the business itself became part of the Chemist Warehouse chain shifting to the former Officeworks location opening a second location adjacent to the Coles supermarket which trades longer hours than the existing location.
Moores Hub pharmacy shown a short time after closure.