View allAll Photos Tagged crossing
Level crossing at Northgate, Cottingham, East Yorkshire.
A little bit of red amongst the grey.
I took the photo because of the light reflecting off the rails, but I really like the red catching the eye.
The crossing from Fogo to Brava and back to Fogo (Cape Verde Islands), was on a small cargo ship. We think it was initially built as a tug - it was totally without stabiliser and not really suitable for such an open water crossing.
The crossing was one of the roughest I have ever experienced, and certainly one of the wettest.
At the harbourside
King Neptune visits HMS Ocean in the South China Sea. over 90 percent of the ships company and embarked forces have never crossed the line before, this please King Neptune. Images by LA (PHOT) Bernie Henesy HMS Ocean.
Yet another photo of Shibuya Crossing. All the tall buildings, the signs and billboards and lights... and the scramble-shiki crossing, where everyone crosses in every direction at once, as all traffic stops.
Group of trekkers crossing a stream using stepping stone, en route between Birethanti and Tikhedhunga, en route to the popular Annapurna trekking destinations of Ghorepani and Poon Hill, Nepal
The arched timber flooring a traditional feature was flattened out by the French so they could drive theirs cars across , this was rectified in 1986 with a restoration to its original form .
I remember in 2001 taking a photo of an old woman with shoulder pole and cone hat and she jestering to be paid for her part and when paying her a small dong sum she then promptly abused me for not paying her enough .This time I didnt have to pay these two girls for this image .
Japanese Covered Bridge .
Hoi An .
You can see the rest of this selection as it is processed here: Rialto to Shi Shi Beach.
*If you have further interest in these photos (prints, licensing, etc), please contact me at tharhawk @ yahoo.com.
© Jason Hummel Photography 2010
Crossing guard Mabel Guzman helps pedestrians cross the street at 19th and Holloway, Nov. 8, 2011. Photo by Erik Verduzco.
Stop line on east side.
Comments welcome.
For more, visit Coxy’s N Scale and Railroad Blog. Modern western US railroading and attempts to model it in N scale including handlaying track, and other fun stuff!
Confederate Cavalry at Jerusalem Mill Village in Kingsville, MD, on the anniversery of Harry Gilmor's Raid
After a four month hiatus I went back into the darkroom last night and made some prints.
Took the above on a Nikon F3 HP and printed on Ilford MG IV FB Matt finish paper on my Devere 504 enlarger (details in the tags).
Nathalie Standingcloud in rehearsal for Crossing Mnisose at The Armory.
Photo by Kate Szrom/Courtesy of Portland Center Stage at The Armory
Crossing Mnisose
By Mary Kathryn Nagle
Directed by Molly Smith
April 13 — May 5, 2019
On the U.S. Bank Main Stage
Crossing Mnisose (“minne-show-she”) tells the story of one of America's first feminists, Sacajawea, and draws a line from a completely original view of Lewis and Clark to the present day, as descendants of the Dakota and Lakota Nations continue their fight for the Mnisose (or what Europeans named the “Missouri River”) and the lands that contain the burials of their ancestors. From celebrated playwright, activist, and attorney Mary Kathryn Nagle (Cherokee Nation), whose Manahatta captivated audiences at Oregon Shakespeare Festival.
Commissioned by Portland Center Stage at The Armory | World Premiere
Nathalie Standingcloud in rehearsal for Crossing Mnisose at The Armory.
Photo by Kate Szrom/Courtesy of Portland Center Stage at The Armory
Crossing Mnisose
By Mary Kathryn Nagle
Directed by Molly Smith
April 13 — May 5, 2019
On the U.S. Bank Main Stage
Crossing Mnisose (“minne-show-she”) tells the story of one of America's first feminists, Sacajawea, and draws a line from a completely original view of Lewis and Clark to the present day, as descendants of the Dakota and Lakota Nations continue their fight for the Mnisose (or what Europeans named the “Missouri River”) and the lands that contain the burials of their ancestors. From celebrated playwright, activist, and attorney Mary Kathryn Nagle (Cherokee Nation), whose Manahatta captivated audiences at Oregon Shakespeare Festival.
Commissioned by Portland Center Stage at The Armory | World Premiere