View allAll Photos Tagged fmsphotoaday

El Chapultepec Denver's famed jazz club, PAD#287

A stack of rings #fms_circle #fmsphotoaday

one of my favorite Mom gifts.... who wouldn't love those big ole flat feet!

I wonder how many more times I'd sit on this bench watching and waiting for my son/s to finish his/their football class. Javi is the only one enrolled right now, but of course Caleb would follow suit. #fmsphotoaday #fms_chair

(35/365)

 

Seeds.

 

Not so happy with this one tonight.

at the top of Lake avenue at the base of the San Gabriel Mountains looking out across the city to waaaaaay south… to the right when it's clear, from here you can see catalina further west.

2/12 - out and about: and yes we are pulled over #handsfree #donttextanddrive

  

my goddaughters on our way home from school to make red velvet cupcakes.

My colorful gelli prints :-)

what an assortment Rick Warren, The book of Mormon & Malificent…. sounds about right for me LOL

The underground public toilet near the corner of Elizabeth and Victoria Streets, built in 1907, is one of a group of such facilities built in Melbourne in the early twentieth century in response to increasing demand for public toilet facilities in the city that were both sanitary and discreet. Until 1902 there were no public toilets for women and few for men. The first public toilet, a urinal for men only, had been built in 1859, following the opening of the Yan Yean water supply in 1858. But these street level toilets were regarded as indecently public, and without an underground sewerage system the waste discharged into the gutters. Underground toilets, which removed toilets from public view and so satisfied contemporary perceptions of decency, had already been built in Scotland, England and Sydney. Such facilities were made possible in Melbourne by the establishment in December 1890 of the Melbourne & Metropolitan Board of Works, responsible for building and maintaining an underground sewerage system. The first underground public toilet in Melbourne, which was the first public toilet for women in the city, was opened in Russell Street in 1902, followed by another one for men in Queen Street in 1905. Public toilets for women were built only following concerted campaigns by feminist groups. The conveniences near the corner of Elizabeth and Victoria Streets included both men's and women's facilities, and was the second built in Melbourne for women and the third for men. It has been in continuous use since then.

 

The underground public toilet in Elizabeth Street near Victoria Street is opposite the Queen Victoria market. There is a stairway for each of the male and female toilets, at the top of which are wrought iron railings and gates, bluestone kerbing and cast iron sign posts, similar to the other underground toilets of the period.

-- Heritage Victoria

...when the little light stops flashing!

May 29: On the table #fmsphotoaday #fms_onthetable

saw the prompt, all this "orange" was right in arms reach at the time....

Looks dangerous! Who would press that Deliveries button??

Saturday football is back #fms_blackandwhite #fmsphotoaday

Waiting for my favorite form of transportation #fms_arrow #fmsphotoaday

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