View allAll Photos Tagged errors,

SRV's A2 986 leads the out of shot K183 in push pull mode on 8541 shuttle from Flinders Street to Glen Huntly, seen cruising over the Yarra River at Cremorne

Danbo juega al Scrabble para personalizar la página de error de mi nuevo blog www.photoinstants.com

 

+info www.photoinstants.com/error-404/

Camera:Canon AE1

Lens:Canon FD 50mm 1.8

ISO: 200

.... der Rest einer ehemals grossartigen Sim...

I did not look around me for things that seemed out of place. I tried to create an "error" myself by taking unsharp and underexposed images.

A crash assignment means you go to school, get a subject, shoot for max 2 hours, come back to school and show your image(s).

An old photograph taken at Craven Park of *London Transport (LT) tram No. 2405 showing '62 - Stonebridge' destination blinds. As it is showing its LT number the photo must have been taken between Jul 1933 and the car being scrapped in Aug 1936.

 

Craven Park is in the Stonebridge area of London, see this old Ordnance Survey map link:-

maps.nls.uk/geo/explore/#zoom=17&lat=51.54169&lon...

 

The photo reverse is stamped with the photographer (and/or negative owner) name of D. W. K. Jones.

 

No. 2405 was class U2 ex London United Tramways (LUT) tram No. 288 built in 1902 by Milne as a class W open top double decker seating 27/38 running on Brill 22E maximum traction bogies. In 1911 it received a short top cover, and in 1927/8 received another top cover, was reconditioned, the stairs were replaced, and the lower deck was rebuilt to the class T tram design (then being designated class U2). It was withdrawn from service and in Aug 1936 broken up at Hendon Depot, the parts of the London tramways system that had not already been withdrawn or transferred to trolleybus/bus operation closing in Jul 1952.

  

* The London Passenger Transport Board (LPTB) absorbed the local London tramway companies (such as the LUT) in 1933 and in turn was replaced in 1948 by the London Transport Executive (LTE), from 1933 both used the operating name of London Transport (LT).

  

📷 Any photograph I post on Flickr is an original in my possession, nothing is ever copied/downloaded from another location. 📷

 

-------------------------------------------------

 

If there are any errors in the above description please let me know. Thanks.

 

Any photograph, ephemera, etc I post on Flickr is in my possession, nothing is copied from another location. The original photographer may have taken copies from their original negative and passed them out (sold them?) so there may be other copies out there of your (and my) 'original' transport photo, although occasionally there may be 'holiday snaps' type photos where there are not any other photos exactly the same in existence.

 

If you wish to use this image (bearing in mind it may not be my copyright) or obtain a full size version (most of my uploads are small size) please contact me.

Es menos malo agitarse en la duda que descansar en el error.

El último (por ahora) de la serie error de grabación =P.. Eran 3 DVDs malos.. asi que corresponde. ^_^

 

The last of the series "Burning Error" . They were 3 DVD that failed, so here's the third^^

 

you can always use your films

 

Facebook

  

I headed over to the beach after work on Tuesday because the sky was looking interesting. I pulled out my camera just before this moment and I got an message on my Canon screen that said "Error 20." I couldn't get it to take a picture and I was so frustrated. This is an unedited photo with my iPhone. $470 later my camera will be ready for pick up on Monday.

to s. --------- another envelope painting

 

si hubiese querido un ala tangente al sol, jamás lo hubiese conseguido...

soap bubble - try and error

Mount Barker.

At the time of European settlements Mount Barker had around 300 Aboriginal people from the Peramargk tribe living in the township area but by 1884 they were reported as being extinct. They had suffered from their loss of land, their food supplies and their cultural spiritual base as well as from European diseases. Some moved away to live on missions. The first European to sight Mount Barker was Captain Charles Sturt on his epic voyage down the Murray in February 1830. He mistook Mt Barker for Mt Lofty sighted and named in 1802 by Captain Matthew Flinders. This mistake was corrected by the explorations of Captain Collet Barker in April 1831 when he officially recorded the error in his journals. Captain Sturt changed to name of the mountain to Barker after Barker’s unfortunate death and disappearance near Encounter Bay. By 1838 herds of livestock began to arrive at Mt Barker from NSW on their way to Adelaide. Mt Barker was an ideal place for stock to recover their condition after their long walk from Sydney as there was ample grass and water there. By the end of 1838 settlers were attempting squat on the land with no legal claim to it but this was averted by the Special Surveys Act of 1838 which allowed the wealthy to pay £4,000 for a survey of 4,000 acres in a site of their choosing. Consequently the first Special Survey in SA was the Mt Barker survey of January 1839 for Dutton, Finniss and MacFarlane. These three envisaged an absentee landlord system like in England with tenant farmers on the land growing wheat. That system continued in parts of Mt Barker until around 1880. From the start wheat was a viable crop with tenant, and freehold farmers who had purchased some of the government sections, sold in 80 acre lots. By early 1840 Mt Barker township was laid out by the owners of the Special Survey and some of their 4,000 acres was also put up for sale. By 1845 Mt Barker had a Courthouse, police station, a steam flourmill run by John Dunn, an inn and some houses. By 1851 it had a second hotel, a Presbyterian and a Wesleyan church from 1850. Other churches followed in later years including the current Dunn Memorial Methodist Church in 1883, the Catholic Church from 1911( there had been an earlier one from 1850 on the other side of the railway line), and the Anglican Church from 1856 with its rectory from 1901. Robert Barr Smith of Auchendarroch had contributed to the cost of the rectory in 1901. Other significant structures in the growing town were the second Courthouse built in 1865, the original Post Office built in 1860, Daw’s Butcher Shop erected in 1884 and the early National Bank built in 1866.

 

In the 1850s Mt Barker established its own district council, 1853, and the Courier newspaper in 1880, a brewery, two local iron works and foundries for agricultural equipment and wrought iron lace work, and a tannery which processed skins from as far away as Broken Hill. Then after 1889 when Amos Howard discovered subterranean clover at Blakiston and a way of extracting the seeds the local agriculture shifted from wheat growing to pasture improvement for dairy cattle. Mt Barker began producing butter. Into the twentieth century the town also had smallgoods works, and a small industry round the subterranean clover seeds and machines to extract the seeds. One local “industrialists” became the social and political leader of Mt Barker and that was John Dunn the flourmill. He had his mansion the Laurels built around 1860on a rise overlooking the town. The mansion even had its own chapel plus extensive gardens and servants’ quarters. Today it is used for a retirement village. At the other end of town Robert Barr Smith of Torrens Park house bought the old Oakfield Hotel site in 1878 and created his summer retreat there which he gave a good Scottish name to - Auchendarroch. The new house cost £10,200 and was designed by architect John Grainger. Joanna Barr Smith another fortune decorating the house especially with William Morris fabrics and wallpapers. In 1922 the Trustees of the Memorial Hospital in North Adelaide purchased the house as a convalescent hospital. During World War Two the Red Cross used it for the same purpose. More recently it has been converted into a cinema complex and function centre by Wallis Cinemas. It is still a grand house in the French Empire style with many classical features and Victorian architectural exuberance.

 

Otro experimento con los DVD fallidos

 

Error on burning? So lets use the DVD for something else =P

El tiempo del error es un segundo.

 

Todos nos equivocamos,

pero no todos están dispuestos a perdonar nuestros errores.

konica IIIA

hexanon 50 1.8

plus x exp.?

xtol 1:1 8m

honolulu hawaii

Het verbod van de Zwarte Hand geldt echter niet voor flickr.com

 

Danger! Forbidden to enter the site.

The ban by the Black Hand doesn't apply to flickr.com, however

 

Brussel/Bruxelles, Anderlecht

LV24 EXR 63678 with a registration that might have an error, being covered up with a 4

SLurl

View On Black

 

Je sais...c'est du déjà vu...mais j'm'éclate comme une p'tite folle avec mon nouveau jouet!!!!

;-p))))))

 

I know ... that's already seen ... but I have lot of fun like a little crazy with my new toy!!

 

copyright: © FSUBF. All rights reserved. Please do not use this image, or any images from my photostream, without my permission.

www.fluidr.com/photos/hsub

Périgueux et son fameux circuit Médiéval Renaissance, dans des ruelles exclusivement piétonnes !!! Amis touristes, bonne visite au milieu des voitures... (pour votre sécurité et celle de vos enfants, allez plutôt à Sarlat... de jolies et véritables ruelles piétonnes).

 

Périgueux and its famous Medieval Renaissance circuit, through exclusively pedestrian alleyways! Dear tourists, enjoy your visit amidst cars... (for your safety and that of your children, it's better to go to Sarlat instead... with lovely and genuine pedestrian streets).

  

flic.kr/s/aHBqjA1194

 

le.grand.saccage@gmail.com

  

Trial and error...trying to figure out how to take a shot of some of the ornaments on the tree...and get a clear shot of them. Also, working on trying to get a decent shot of the tree! Ahhhh the joy of photography!! LOL!

 

All rights reserved

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

An error message on a third-party iPhone app which is *supposed* to let you take phone camera shots and send them straight to Flickr.

You know that old saying that you cannot rush art; well same applies to action shots. When doing water drop shots you better get everything in order before you start. I read some how to's and watch plenty of videos; thinking okay I have the idea.. let's go. The first time I guess is always trial and error. First do NOT use a pie pan like I did; not only is it too small, I didn't have the drop centered and water to the brim, Instead go for a glass dish.Second, use a macro or long lense. I used my standard 3.5-50mm but it did not get close enough ( I knew better). I did get some okay shots but they are flat and not detailed or zoomable. I do like the ripples however again, not detailed enough. I am going to try this again tomorrow (bangs head).

1 2 ••• 4 5 7 9 10 ••• 79 80