View allAll Photos Tagged facemasks
Bishopsgate City of London Dirty Dicks English Pub Lady in Blue Mini Dress Blue Denim Jacket and COVID-19 Coronavirus Facemask on her Phone
Discover why I am doing face masks and t-shirts, read my new interview: www.rageon.com/blogs/news/interview-with-ben-heine
#masks #facemasks #benheineart #trump #rageon #protection #covid19 #pandemic #virus #benheine #creative @rageon #masques #reusable #icantbreathe #lion
It looks like, maybe, they are supposed to be rusty-belted bumblebees..., although it would be the T2-T3 segments that would be orange, not T4-T5.
I know, I know, it's just a cloth pattern, and I'm over-thinking it.
I'm a scientist. It's one of the occupational hazards,
Woman on the market selling panty´s, socks and facemasks. Covid has been adapted into peoples daily lives.
Facemask fitted ScotRail Inter7City 43145 passes Ladybank leading 1A77 16:05 Edinburgh Waverley to Dundee
For years you would receive a fine for walking the Belgian streets while wearing a mask (partially) obscuring your face.. and now facemasks have become an obligation on all public transport.
N744CK wearing the recently painted Face Mask waiting to be loaded with DHL freight for departure to Los Angles (LAX/KLAX) as CONNIE 330 DELTA (CKS330D/K4330D) as a hail storm passes over to the east.
#HK #HongKong
#FaceMasks #WuHan #WuHanCoronVirus
#FaceMaskShortage
Bell Chan | BGfotologue
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Police and public transport operators are coming together to remind passengers of the importance of wearing face coverings while using the region’s buses, trains and trams after a recent fall in compliance.
Failure to do so, unless exempt, could see passengers prevented from travelling or even fined up to £100.
It has been mandatory to wear a covering on public transport since 15 June and regional compliance with the Department for Transport (DfT) direction was initially positive. Figures show that, during the first week, on average, 80-90% of bus, tram and rail passengers wore a face covering while travelling.
However, during the week beginning 6 July, this fell to an average of around 70% on bus with some operators reporting compliance ranges of between 50-90%. On Metrolink, compliance during the morning peak was around 80% and dropped to 60% during the evening peak.
The number of people observed wearing face coverings while using our region’s trains continues to remain high, at between 85 and 90%.
To remind passengers of their responsibility to keep themselves and others safe and increase compliance, the TravelSafe Partnership will be holding a week of action, starting this Thursday (16 July).
This will include high visibility patrols by police and transport staff as well as increased education and engagement with passengers.
Police and transport staff will be speaking to people not wearing face coverings, encouraging them to wear one and checking whether they have an exemption. If not, police and transport staff will enforce the rules and passengers may be prevented from boarding or asked to leave public transport until they have provided themselves with a face covering.
Staff will also be on hand at key city centre transport locations to hand out face coverings to those requiring them.
You should call 101, the national non-emergency number, to report crime and other concerns that do not require an emergency response.
Always call 999 in an emergency, such as when a crime is in progress, violence is being used or threatened or where there is danger to life.
You can also call anonymously with information about crime to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111. Crimestoppers is an independent charity who will not want your name, just your information. Your call will not be traced or recorded and you do not have to go to court or give a statement.
You can access many of our services online at www.gmp.police.uk
The poor man's #facemask ..
Just smells of his sweat mixed with his tears
His dread of living the pandemic it's fears
The lockdown destroyed him completely
A migrant that is what he is called here
Politicians never realised he existed
The COVID to their conscience
Bought him near ...
Considered an important vote bank
Only during elections his vote is precious dear
#beggarpoet
Facemask fitted ScotRail Inter7City 43129 approaches Ladybank heading 1B32 13:12 Aberdeen to Edinburgh Waverley
Not my smalls hanging up to dry, but my face masks! I slip them on a clothes hanger and pop it over the shower rail in our bathroom. Solves the problem of how to dry them quickly. Ingenious, eh?
Kondaa 23/05/2021 10h41
The last few camelback hops before re-entering the station of Kondaa. Facemasks are required during the ride due to covid-19. Not an easy thing because Kondaa can take them off at a speed of 113 km/h.
Kondaa
Kondaa is a steel roller coaster at Walibi Belgium in Wavre, Belgium. First unveiled at the IAAPA 2018 Expo, the coaster marks the end of a three-year park investment plan and upon opening became the tallest and fastest coaster in the Benelux region, as well as the park's ninth coaster. Kondaa features a top speed of 113.0 km/h, a notable 15 airtime moments, and the world's first non-inverting cobra roll element.
Walibi officials shortlisted three major European suppliers for the project, eventually contracting Intamin to build the coaster.
In August 2019, land clearing began on the site, indicating that construction was due to start shortly. An existing building behind the park was also razed in early 2020. Following the construction of the station, the coaster went vertical in July 2020, with track being installed at a rapid pace. The signature non-inverted cobra roll and the ride's tallest lift hill were topped off and completed in early August, with the ride layout being completed the following month. Thematic work would begin to take shape around the area, and in late November the ride's then-unannounced name was divulged from the newly constructed entrance sign; Kondaa. This was later confirmed by Walibi themselves.
On December 17, 2020, Kondaa passed its first full-circuit test run, and Walibi soon began releasing teasers on their YouTube channel Kondaa's first onride POV was released on May 5, 2021, and following an easing of COVID-19 restrictions, the park made plans to debut the ride on May 8, 2021. Kondaa premiered on the planned date to great public anticipation.
FACTS & FIGURES
Park Section: Exotic World
Opened: 08/05/2021
Costs: 25.000.000 €
Manufacturer: Intamin
Type: Steel Mega Coaster
Heigth: 50 meters
Length: 1200 meters
Speed: 113 km/h
Inversions: 0
Duration: 1m30
Capacity: 1080 riders/hour
Trains: 2 trains with 6 cars. Riders are arranged 2 across in 2 rows for a total of 24 riders per train.
I was just about to take a photograph when a slightly manic man came up to me and began talking at supersonic speed. I lost the shot, but he was friendly and we ended up chatting - or rather, he talked and I listened. During our, somewhat one sided, conversation I managed to get a clear shot of another scene and took this photo. This was when Covid restrictions had been relaxed but you still had to wear a mask in shops. The man had been gesticulating with his hand and managed to get his facemask in the frame.
Family with kids in face mask in home before goto school. Mother and child wear facemask during coronavirus and flu outbreak. Virus and illness protection
Science rocks!
Good to see Feynman on there.And even better -- Rosalind Franklin getting credit for her work in elucidating the structure of DNA (rather than the cliched and over-credited W&C).
This unusual salt-glazed stoneware jug is an elaborate version of the mass-produced Bartmann bottle, so-called because of its applied bearded facemask. Here, though, the whole vessel is moulded in great detail to convey a three-quarter length figure of a man dressed in costume fashionable in the mid-sixteenth century. The pewter lid, openable by flicking the thumbpiece attached to the handle, doubles as the man's hat. Such a jug would have been used to hold beer or wine at the table upon which might also be found other vessels such as those the man is depicted as holding - a rather more conventional Cologne stoneware jug and a facetted green glass drinking flute.
Despite a long earthenware potting tradition from the time of the Roman occupation, the Cologne stoneware industry began rather later than that of other Rhineland towns. By about 1500, however, Cologne was producing small mugs and jugs with applied moulded botanical decoration. Although there were several thriving stoneware workshops in Cologne in the first half of the century, the city authorities were concerned about the fumes and fire risk. Prohibitions and tax increases forced many potters to leave the city to set up instead in nearby Frechen.
The jug was formerly in the Weckherlin Collection, objects from which formed the core of the South Kensington (now V&A) Museum's German stoneware collection on their acquisition in 1868. The Weckherlin Collection was acquired by a fellow Belgian, the art dealer, publisher and patron of the Pre-Raphaelite painters, Jean Joseph Ernest Theodore Gambart who came to London in 1840 and took British citizenship in 1846. He displayed the collection in his London house "Rosenstead", Avenue Road, near Regent's Park, until a gas explosion caused him to reconsider the long-term security of his remaining pots - he sold 62 objects to the Museum for £800. This jug was then worth £8-10s.
Cologne, Germany, 1525-50 CE. Salt-glazed stoneware with moulded details, and pewter lid.
V&A Museum, South Kensington, London (780-1868)
I opened a new pack of face masks today, the certificate of quality is in Chinese & English
The Our Daily Challenge group has chosen Everyday object as today's topic.
Only two years ago face masks were unusual – now they are commonplace.
Stuck for an idea for your daily 365 photo? Join the Our Daily Challenge group for inspiration.