View allAll Photos Tagged fixture

The placement of the ladder intrigues me. Perhaps someone was changing the fluorescent lights when they were called away.

 

The former John F. Kennedy Center.

 

North Flint, Michigan.

Saturday, February 19, 2011.

The fork fixture is set at the length and rake and now I mark the legs to get cut.

 

www.engincycles.com

Its still wat longer than I really need, but i have a hard time actually cutting it off.

Shots of my parents' dining room light fixture. Just having fun with my camera.

 

It is also a really nice looking light.

Electrical fixture in floor of Anthropologie store, Tampa Florida

Cool thin piping fixture on the side of a building, I like the things jutting out from it best.

LED down light fixtures are adjustable. This is our larger, 7 LED model. www.theledlight.com/led-fixtures.html

1930 Lighting, Lamps, Fixtures, Sconces

Lighting at Field Museum - Chicago

Almost sold during the estate sale! We were lucky these fixtures remained at the property.

 

Lamp EJS Model 1204, 1959

Close-up of a new light fixture.

Muji Fixturable Furniture

"Wall Hook"

 

Cannon EOS KISS X5 & TAMRON SP AF17-50mm F/2.8 XR Di II VC B005

As found in the Asian Art Museum, San Francisco.

My wife has an Epiphone El Capitan acoustic bass. I got it for her 50th birthday. Then I had this idea that I would make a new truss rod cover for it out of raw aluminum plate. This is a deceptively time consuming process to make a polished, finished piece out of a raw piece of aluminum.

In to the hospital today for a 6 month checkup, lying on the gurney waiting for the doctor, and looking at the ceiling light. This image is colour corrected, although still not neutral; the original digital capture was very green.

 

grandpaparazzi.wordpress.com/

focuscanada.wordpress.com/

My eyes never get tired of looking at this one, because there's so much variety on it. I see a bunch of saucer attachments, canister meters, pipes, rust, and even two prongs where a gas meter probably used to hang. I like this one, it was on the side of a building in London, Ohio.

Austin's former Palmer Auditorium's Light Fixtures. This photo taken before demolition of Palmer to make way for the new Long Center for the Performing Arts, 2005. As much of the old building was reused in the new Long Center, this light fixture is featured in one of the stair cases.

 

Photo Copyright 2006, Steve Hopson, www.stevehopson.com

Jonathan Jaynes & family recently purchased and moved into a beautiful brick 1914 Craftsman in Denver.

 

The house has its original floors, windows, light fixtures, tile, woodwork and other details; check out this wonderfully funky colored glass light fixture, and the matching colors in the fireplace tile, in our interiors photo album.

“No odor, no smoke, no dirt, no trouble. To make room for constantly increasing stock we are offering special inducements and unheard-of bargains in electroliers, brackets, shades, globes, electrical fixtures, etc. Hawaiian Electric Co., Ltd.”

 

HECo Fixtures

The Honolulu republican, Dec. 27, 1900, Page6

chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85047165/1900-12-27/ed-...

 

Hawaii Digital Newspaper Project

hdnpblog.wordpress.com/

Took a photo of this while I was on assignment just because I liked the light coming into the room so much.

Hosts Wales U20s' Six Nations:-

February 2nd. v Scotland

March 9th. v Italy

March 16th. v France

 

Also hosts National WOMEN's Squad:-

February 2nd. v Scotland

and 6 Nations:-

March 11th. v Italy

March 16th. v France

 

TICKET DETAILS WILL BE ANNOUNCED IN THE NEAR FUTURE

 

1930 Lighting, Lamps, Fixtures, Sconces

Miling machine fixture comprising an angle plate, a 4-inch rotary table, and a 3-jaw chuck used to mill a square chamfer on the end of a piece of brass rod stock

 

Martin Bailey Photography November 2011 assignment entry -- awarded 3rd place.

 

Lots of detail here -- better large on black.

Matthew Hibbard

Hibbard Custom Cabinets

Design.Build.Consult

www.HibbardCustom.com

602-315-0525

hibbardcustom@yahoo.com

Brother took this photo. Surprisingly artsy and quite nice composition too for a kid:) Beautiful warm afternoon sun was streaming in through the windows

This is a photograph from the 31st annual Bohermeen AC Patrick Bell and Nicky Phillips Memorial 5KM Road Race, Jog, Walk, and Fun Run which was held at Bohermeen AC, Ardbracan, Navan, Co. Meath, Ireland at 14:00 on Sunday 29th May 2016. The race was held in very warm summer sunshine without any noticeable wind. This year seen a change in the recent traditional fixture on the first or second Saturday in June. The race commemorates Patrick Bell, the late Bohermeen clubman who died tragically in the summer of 1985 following a traffic accident, whilst returning home from Cork having competed in the National track championships. Nicky Phillips is a former athlete and president of Bohermeen AC and is also remembered today. The wonderful atmosphere, the great racing and participation, the work by the club, Meath Athletics, the local community, and the beautiful summer's day, yet again, a fitting tribute to Patrick's memory and his contribution to Athletics in Ireland. The race also commemorates clubman Nicky Philips. Congratulations to everyone involved. Everything that is good about grassroots athletics and running in Ireland was on show in Bohermeen today. The race started 400m from the Bohermeen AC track and heads towards Navan. The course then makes 3 right hand turns around some beautiful rural country roads and turns back to Bohermeen AC and then back for the final kilometer which is straight to the track and the finish on about 60 meters of athletics track. Participants, friends and families were able to enjoy a BBQ outside on the infield of the athletics track at the club house. While the weather might have been a little warm for distance running it certainly provided a beautiful atmosphere for Bohermeen's Summer 5KM. Over 260 runners, walkers and joggers took part in today's event.

Timing and event management was provided by MyRunResults http://www.myrunresults.com/. Our full set of photographs is available here on Flickr [https://www.flickr.com/photos/peterm7/albums/72157668241830230]

 

USING OUR PHOTOGRAPHS - A QUICK GUIDE AND ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS

Can I use these photographs directly from Flickr on my social media account(s)?

 

Yes - of course you can! Flickr provides several ways to share this and other photographs in this Flickr set. You can share directly to: email, Facebook, Pinterest, Twitter, Tumblr, LiveJournal, and Wordpress and Blogger blog sites. Your mobile, tablet, or desktop device will also offer you several different options for sharing this photo page on your social media outlets.

 

BUT..... Wait there a minute....

We take these photographs as a hobby and as a contribution to the running community in Ireland. We do not charge for our photographs. Our only "cost" is that we request that if you are using these images: (1) on social media sites such as Facebook, Tumblr, Pinterest, Twitter,LinkedIn, Google+, VK.com, Vine, Meetup, Tagged, Ask.fm,etc or (2) other websites, blogs, web multimedia, commercial/promotional material that you must provide a link back to our Flickr page to attribute us or acknowledge us as the original photographers.

 

This also extends to the use of these images for Facebook profile pictures. In these cases please make a separate wall or blog post with a link to our Flickr page. If you do not know how this should be done for Facebook or other social media please email us and we will be happy to help suggest how to link to us.

 

I want to download these pictures to my computer or device?

 

You can download this photographic image here directly to your computer or device. This version is the low resolution web-quality image. How to download will vary slight from device to device and from browser to browser. Have a look for a down-arrow symbol or the link to 'View/Download' all sizes. When you click on either of these you will be presented with the option to download the image. Remember just doing a right-click and "save target as" will not work on Flickr.

 

I want get full resolution, print-quality, copies of these photographs?

 

If you just need these photographs for online usage then they can be used directly once you respect their Creative Commons license and provide a link back to our Flickr set if you use them. For offline usage and printing all of the photographs posted here on this Flickr set are available free, at no cost, at full image resolution.

 

Please email petermooney78 AT gmail DOT com with the links to the photographs you would like to obtain a full resolution copy of. We also ask race organisers, media, etc to ask for permission before use of our images for flyers, posters, etc. We reserve the right to refuse a request.

 

In summary please remember when requesting photographs from us - If you are using the photographs online all we ask is for you to provide a link back to our Flickr set or Flickr pages. You will find the link above clearly outlined in the description text which accompanies this photograph. Taking these photographs and preparing them for online posting takes a significant effort and time. We are not posting photographs to Flickr for commercial reasons. If you really like what we do please spread the link around your social media, send us an email, leave a comment beside the photographs, send us a Flickr email, etc. If you are using the photographs in newspapers or magazines we ask that you mention where the original photograph came from.

 

I would like to contribute something for your photograph(s)?

Many people offer payment for our photographs. As stated above we do not charge for these photographs. We take these photographs as our contribution to the running community in Ireland. If you feel that the photograph(s) you request are good enough that you would consider paying for their purchase from other photographic providers or in other circumstances we would suggest that you can provide a donation to any of the great charities in Ireland who do work for Cancer Care or Cancer Research in Ireland.

 

Let's get a bit technical: We use Creative Commons Licensing for these photographs

We use the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License for all our photographs here in this photograph set. What does this mean in reality?

The explaination is very simple.

Attribution- anyone using our photographs gives us an appropriate credit for it. This ensures that people aren't taking our photographs and passing them off as their own. This usually just mean putting a link to our photographs somewhere on your website, blog, or Facebook where other people can see it.

ShareAlike – anyone can use these photographs, and make changes if they like, or incorporate them into a bigger project, but they must make those changes available back to the community under the same terms.

 

Above all what Creative Commons aims to do is to encourage creative sharing. See some examples of Creative Commons photographs on Flickr: www.flickr.com/creativecommons/

 

I ran in the race - but my photograph doesn't appear here in your Flickr set! What gives?

 

As mentioned above we take these photographs as a hobby and as a voluntary contribution to the running community in Ireland. Very often we have actually ran in the same race and then switched to photographer mode after we finished the race. Consequently, we feel that we have no obligations to capture a photograph of every participant in the race. However, we do try our very best to capture as many participants as possible. But this is sometimes not possible for a variety of reasons:

 

     ►You were hidden behind another participant as you passed our camera

     ►Weather or lighting conditions meant that we had some photographs with blurry content which we did not upload to our Flickr set

     ►There were too many people - some races attract thousands of participants and as amateur photographs we cannot hope to capture photographs of everyone

     ►We simply missed you - sorry about that - we did our best!

  

You can email us petermooney78 AT gmail DOT com to enquire if we have a photograph of you which didn't make the final Flickr selection for the race. But we cannot promise that there will be photograph there. As alternatives we advise you to contact the race organisers to enquire if there were (1) other photographs taking photographs at the race event or if (2) there were professional commercial sports photographers taking photographs which might have some photographs of you available for purchase. You might find some links for further information above.

 

Don't like your photograph here?

That's OK! We understand!

 

If, for any reason, you are not happy or comfortable with your picture appearing here in this photoset on Flickr then please email us at petermooney78 AT gmail DOT com and we will remove it as soon as possible. We give careful consideration to each photograph before uploading.

 

I want to tell people about these great photographs!

Great! Thank you! The best link to spread the word around is probably http://www.flickr.com/peterm7/sets

 

i effin' hate this kitchen. i love this fixture!

Winning form returns against CIYMS

by Roger Corbett

In this important fixture, it was Bangor who took the victory against CIYMS by 22-5 resulting in the two sides swapping places in the league.

Bangor got the game underway, kicking off into a stiff breeze. Within 3 minutes, Bangor conceded the first penalty of the game, which CIYMS elected to kick for goal, but failed to convert. The Bangor back line looked sharp, with Davy Charles coming in from full back to break the CIYMS line and set up a promising attack. James Henly came close but the CIYMS defence was sound.

 

The Bangor pack had seen a number of changes as the result of ongoing injury problems, but it performed well in both scrum and lineout set pieces. In fact it was from a lineout after just 9 minutes that the ball was cleanly won and passed quickly to Jason Morgan at out half, who produced another great line to wrong foot the CIYMS defence and ghost in to score under the posts. The conversion was successfully taken by Neil Cuthbertson, putting Bangor into the lead by 7-0.

 

This gave Bangor the boost they needed, and they continued to dominate play. After a further 6 minutes, from a scrum just inside the CIYMS half, scrum half Craig Harper passed to Morgan who then off-loaded to Mike Aspley in the centre. Although tackled, he managed to get the ball to Phil Whyte who had followed up from propping in the scrum. Drawing the defending tacklers, he then passed to flanker James Henly who burst through to run in unopposed for Bangor’s second try under the posts. Again, the simple kick was converted by Cuthbertson, doubling the lead to 14-0.

 

CIYMS responded well, using the wind advantage wisely to bring play repeatedly back into Bangor’s territory, but mistakes at crucial periods of play denied them any meaningful scoring opportunities. Bangor, on the other hand, stuck to their plan and continued to apply pressure. This soon forced CIYMS to concede a kickable penalty, which Cuthbertson converted to increase the lead to 17-0 after 23 minutes of play.

 

However, just 3 minutes later, the referee showed the yellow card to captain Jamie Clegg after he was judged to have deliberately knocked on the ball while defending a CIYMS attack. From the subsequent penalty, CIYMS passed the ball wide to the left and made a push for the line. What looked like a certain try was prevented by great Bangor defending, as they managed to hold the ball up and win the turnover.

 

Within minutes of Clegg’s return from the sin bin, the circumstances that led to his penalty were repeated, this time by Jason Morgan who similarly was shown the referee’s yellow card. From this penalty, the CIYMS players didn’t make the same mistake as before, and finally managed to touch down for a try in the left hand corner. The difficult kick was missed, but CIYMS were now on the scoreboard, reducing Bangor’s lead to 17-5 as the first half drew to a close.

 

As the teams turned around and CIYMS got the second half underway, hopes were high that Bangor would build on their first half tries and use the wind to keep their opponents pinned down in their own twenty two. However, it’s fair to say that CIYMS came out the stronger and frustrated Bangor’s attacks, while moving the ball through their backs with more purpose and accuracy.

 

It was not until 30 minutes had been played that the second half deadlock was broken. From a long CIYMS clearance kick, the ball was safely taken by Harper inside his own half. Two long and quickly made passes, saw the ball move via Jason Morgan to Davy Charles whose pace was too much for the thinly spread CIYMS defence. Running wide, he rounded the final CIYMS players to score on the right hand side. Cuthbertson’s kick was just wide of the posts, but Bangor were now 3 tries to the good, and within sight of another bonus point victory.

 

However, just 2 minutes later, and with CIYMS moving back into Bangor territory, the game produced another sting for the home side. In his attempt to intercept a long CIYMS pass, he knocked the ball forward and stopped the CIYMS attack. The referee deemed this to be deliberate once again and produced a second yellow card which in turn led to a red card, and Morgan was to take no further part in the game. Stung by this set-back, and with just 8 minutes remaining, Bangor re-grouped and wisely focussed on defending their lead and denying CIYMS any further scoring chances. This they did, and as the final whistle was blown, they could celebrate a return to winning ways, and a return to their previously held 3rd position in the league.

 

This was an encouraging team performance that should give added confidence as the players now set their sights on the first round of the Towns Cup (next weekend, at home to City of Derry 2nds), followed by a challenging journey to league leaders Clogher Valley in the league afterwards.

 

Bangor side: P Whyte, A Jackson, J Leary (J Harrison), A Rushe, D Kelly, J Henly, R Latimer, J Clegg (c), C Harper, J Morgan, M Widdowson, M Aspley, C Morgan (G Caughey), N Cuthbertson, D Charles

 

Subs: J Harrison, G Caughey

 

Bangor scores: J Morgan (1T), J Henly (1T), D Charles (1T), N Cuthbertson (2C, 1P)

 

Camera:Canon EOS 40D

Exposure:0.004 sec (1/250)

Aperture:f/3.2

Focal Length:200 mm

Exposure:0.00

ISO Speed:250

Exposure Bias:0 EV

Flash:Off, Did not fire

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

lens : canon 70-200mm

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

حقوق الطبع والنسخ والنشر والحفظ في هذا الالبوم جميعها محفوظة وحصرية

ولا يمكن حفظ او نسخ او نشر او استخدام اي من الصور بدون اذن او عقد مسبق مع المصور

ان كان لديك الرغبة في استخدام او شراء اي من الصور

الخاصة بالمصور يمكنك مراسلتي عبر البريد الالكتروني المذكور اعلاه

واي تعديات تخالف ما تم ذكره مسبقاً ستعرض مرتكبها للمسائلة والملاحقة القانونية

 

Attention please !!!!

Don`t Comment With Your Last Picture .!!!

Your Comment Will Be Deleted

 

© All Photos are copyright protected

By ALI ALtammar .

Please Don't Used any Photos In My Gallery without my Permission .

  

If You Interested to Use, Or buy Any Photos

 

Contact With me By Email :

At-photography@hotmail.com

 

Lighting mast near City Hall London

Crown fluxed up and ready to braze on the fork fixture.

at the latino fest, summer 06

Axle to crown up to 540mm

View large if you can't read it here.

 

Funnier yet, it is on the nut. =]

 

Taken by Cory Funk.

Strange fixture at the area in Westville Sc, that straddles the main line of the former Charleston, Cincinnati and Chicago, later the Southern and possible NS before abandonment. The facility is across from the racetrack and was apparently quite sizable. Research to the point indicates it was both a pulpwood loadout and granite loadout. No idea what this was for.

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