View allAll Photos Tagged grind...
Grind me down, roll me up
Press me up against your lips
Let me fill, fill your lungs
Then breathe me out
California grown, rap songs
You see the best comes out the west
Let me blur, blur your lines
You won't regret it
I'll take you to the moon and back
Back seat of my Cadillac
Start out slow then play it faster
I'll fly you out to paradise
Take a hit and close your eyes
I know what you fantasize about
Boy, I'll get you
So high
Let me blow
Your mind
Tonight, mm hmm
Tonight
Tonight, mm hmm
Tonight
Hydroponic love, running while we're young
Pass that blue dream here to me
You just can't, can't get enough
She's your new addiction
Light me up, burn me through
Sit back relax and take your time
You just need, need a trip
I'll be your getaway
Shot with an AD400 in a beauty dish above/front and 2 AD200s in strip lights on either side. Comments and critiques are welcome.
Harsco Technologies grinds the rail on the Moffatt between Tolland and Rollinsville. A crew member remains at the ready in the event any of the grinding starts a fire. Which I am sure happens often enough. 4.4.07
I was featured on the cover of this local skateboard magazine called Grind back in the mid-eighties, fun stuff
The sound was incredible as this train rolled by my location. I miss all aspects of the Rio Grande. Lots of great scenery and extremely fan friendly crews.
Senenu grinding grain,limestone.
Late Dynasty XVlll,reign of Tutankhamen (ca.1336-1327 BC),
Ay (1327-1323 BC),or Horemheb (ca.1323-1295).Reportedly of Thebes.
The royal scribe Senenu appears here bent over a large grinding stone.This unusual sculpture seems to be an elaborate version of a shabti,a funerary figurine placed in a tomb to work in place of the deceased in the hereafter.The hieroglyphic text included Senunu's claim to a blessed afterlife by virtue of his proper behavior toward the king and gods.
This is an old meat grinder - the manual type you clamp to your counter. I putchased it and an art deco style juicer at an estate sale a few weeks back ($15 for the two ;).
I needed a shot to respond to a photo challenge from one of my friends - it's just this thing we do to stay interested in photography - he had shot some pretty beefy old pliers that were slightly rusted and I needed something with some connection to that (it's pretty loose - we can pick any thing that's inspired by the challenge).
May post a few shots of the same object - ran out of time.
With threatening skies overhead, NS AC44C6M 4242 ( Ex D9-44CW 9035) grinds up Christiansburg Mountain with westbound intermodal 22A
sometimes you're the wheel, and sometimes you're the metal.
P.S. sometimes, my neighbors must be like "what's he building in there?"
This is a companion image to the previous: Rio Grande 493 brings up the rear of the second Cumbres turn, Extra 488 East. The next day, a third turn will arrive at Cumbres, pick up the cars left by the first two turns, and continue east to Alamosa—photo by Joe McMillan, December 20, 1963. The lumber is from a mill at Chama.
The Loram rail grinder visited the NS Lurgan Branch in April of 2022 so I figured I'd take a day off and chase it a bit. Here's a shot of it grinding a road crossing East of control point SPRING.
busy setting up our new unit..but yes the one good thing i find there is some scope to industrial and abstract photography...so no need to go anywhere for a photowalk if i m busy...
just keep finding something out there..these pics are also gonna help me in some or other way in coming future..
more to come...hope u all like it...cheers
66760 (David Gordon Harris) is a small occupation bridge on the approach to Hatton Bank with 6M26 the 08.50 Eastleigh East Yard to Mountsorrell.
The picture is taken from near the bottom of Hatton Locks* on the Grand Union canal. These locks are deep and wide, the canal was improved from the original narrow canal and these wide deep locks allow two boats side by side to use the flight.
*Although they are known as Hatton Locks this location is 30 minutes walk from Hatton, in fact it is near to Warwick Parkway station and although the line is only climbing gently at this point it is on a tight curve.
Copyright Geoff Dowling: All rights reserved
Although they go over the mountain once in awhile, it's much harder to catch this scene now that the local is based out of Bozeman. Here though, they are in the company notch grinding up the east slope of Bozeman Pass on a beautiful Montana summer night.
UP SD70ACe #8714 and an ex-Southern Pacific AC44 are giving it everything they got to pull loaded coal train CBTWL up Logan Hill in the arid Thunder Basin Grasslands. This train was loaded at Black Thunder Mine, and is destined for Union Electric's 2,389-megawatt Labadie Power Station near Labadie, Missouri.
The pounding roar of motors and droning roll of heavy railcars creeping uphill made for a memorable experience at this classic Powder River Basin location.
I visited a neighborhood park tonight – evening walk number 17 of 100 for 100 x: The 2018 Edition. Wardlaw Park has a dog park, and a creek with a walking trail, and this!