View allAll Photos Tagged globe
Globe Van Hool EX16M YJ19BBX in Diamond Traveller livery preparing to leave Barnsley Interchange on October 28th 2022.
Volvo Prestige 9700. New to Globe Jarvis. Taken in Newport bus station. Thank you to David Sykes and Barrie Gilbert for Info.
I thought the snow was a good opportunity to use my crystal ball again. I've always liked the little globes that you shake to get the snow swirling.
100 Words #30 Dualities
It was back up to Sheffield yesterday (14/02/2025) for the final Young Voices event hosted at the Utilita Arena. A healthy 94 coaches attended on this particular day with a good variety of operators and coach types on display.
The Young Voices concerts tour are held every January and February and visit Sheffield (8 days), Birmingham (11 days), London O2 (8 days), Manchester (4 days) and London Wembley (2 days).
Sorry for the bad quality, but I just had to take a shot of her custom eyelids with the globe at our local stamp and coin collection store window :)
This is definitely one of our favorites! The crown of this ash grows in an almost perfect circular shape, with no pruning necessary.
Watching a performance in the Globe Theatre. This was the most impressive experience in London for me. The Globe Theatre was a theatre in London associated with William Shakespeare. It was built in 1599 by Shakespeare's playing company, the Lord Chamberlain's Men, and was destroyed by fire on 29 June 1613.A second Globe Theatre was rebuilt on the same site by June 1614 and closed in 1642.
A modern reconstruction of the Globe, named "Shakespeare's Globe", opened in 1997. It is approximately 230 metres (750 ft) from the site of the original theatre.
“Too bad you can't buy a voodoo globe so that you could make the earth spin real fast and freak everybody out.” -- Jack Handy
Long exposure + spin -- liked this effect
For Photo Friday - 'The Great Outdoors'
For Photo Friday - 'My World'
Globe Holidays of Barnsley Plaxton Panther Volvo B12B KX07HDF seen in Blackpool Coach Park
Seen 11/8/20
Another view of the Globe
This globe stands almost two feet tall and the globe is about 15 inches around.
The globe also spins!
www.bricklink.com/store.asp?p=MorseDaMoose MY BRICKLINK STORE
This globe has been rendered using both the Planetary Visions Satellite Imagemap, and worldwide bathymetry data.
The Satellite Imagemap is a highly realistic texture map of the Earth's entire surface. Derived from thousands of Earth-observation satellite images, the Satellite Imagemap represents an accurate and detailed portrait of our world at the beginning of the twenty-first century. The worldwide bathymetry data represents one of the most detailed models of the global seafloor yet assembled - a unique combination of the latest satellite-derived gravity measurements with digital bathymetric charts based on more than a hundred years of ship-borne hydrographic surveys.
Higher resolutions are available on request.
The Great Globe of 1891 at Durlston near Swanage. Forty tons of Portland stone surrounded by facts and figures relating to the natural world and uplifting quotations from literary masters.
Light painting with two torches, one tungsten and one LED
This is my attempt at an image i saw on Strobist.com a while back. The globe isnt plugged in to anything.
Here is the MC holding up the Globe Wassail for Twelfth Night, for the crowd to recite! Standing in front of the Globe Theatre, London Bankside.
ABCs & 123s: 12 (twelfth night)
Resurrecting the BBC Wales globe for Life on Mars. How come the original didn't need time to render?
I went on playing with the Sepp's star and came to this star globe.
It's made of 30 paper strips, 2:5
For coloring I used special pens I bought at the local discount shop. They are called "Blo Pens" - no, I didn't forget the "w". These are ordinary felt pens, which you can put in a kind of blow pipe, to gain an effect close to airbrush.
Globe, 744 S. Broadway, Los Angeles, CA 90014 United States.
This theater has had four names: The Morosco, The President (in the 1930's), The Newsreel (in the 1940's) and The Globe. It was opened in 1913 by producer Oliver Morosco. Architects of the Garland Building were Morgan, Walls & Morgan; A.F. Rosenheim designed the theatre. Morosco conceived his theatre not as a vaudeville house or nickelodeon, but as an elegant dramatic play house, which, among other special touches, included special rows of seats that accomodated portly patrons who weighed more than 200 pounds. Morosco also filled the orchestra pit with foliage rather than rather than having patrons yell over loud intermission music, which Morosco deemed an intrusion. The Morosco initially changed bills every week. Performers here included Eddie Cantor, Edward Everett Horton and Leo Carillo.
By 1928, the theatre was known as the President, operating under the banner of Henry Duffy Players, who also had the El Capitan and the Hollywood Playhouse. During the Depression, newsreels took over, lasting throughout WWII. In 1947 the theatre became the Globe. In 1958, a Mexican wax museum opened in the basement to abet the Spanish-language programming upstairs. In 1987, concrete was used to level the floor from the lobby to the stage, so that a permanent indoor swap meet could supplant what had once been the first serious playhouse in Los Angeles. The former theater currently houses a nightclub. The seating was 1300 originally. Later only 782 were used. The second balcony had been closed for decades. And now the seats have been removed for club use.
Sources: cinema treasures and downtown los angeles theatres.
This image has been processed in Lightroom 3 (R). It has been deliberately underexposed a little (refer to exif data) in order to preserved the highlights.
Camera:Canon EOS 450D
Exposure:0.004 sec (1/250)
Aperture:f/5.6
Focal Length:175 mm
ISO Speed:100
Exposure Bias:-2/3 EV
The old Silver Globe Manufacturing Company on State Route 550 outside of Marietta Ohio made decorative glass globes for yard ornaments. You can see a few of them attached to the roof of the building and in the right hand picture which was in the yard beside the old building. Sadly this business has been closed for a number of years. At one time it seemed as though every house in the area had at least one decorative globe in the yard that was made here.