View allAll Photos Tagged handling
A restless night in the tent turned far too hot to handle.
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This week for the "Introspect" series, I found myself feeling nostalgic. I had originally planned a photo with my porcelain carousel horse in a much bigger way, but felt it served much better as a detail. :)
Hope everyone is having a wonderful weekend!
Look out for detail shots on my Facebook
Just something from me after a few days flickr break. I was going to take some new photos today since it's a bank holiday here in New South Wales but unfortunately I've been sick since Saturday so there's no going out of the house :) I'll be slowly catching up on your streams! Enjoy the week ahead.
Lacquered metal handles on the timber doors of the St Michael and All Angels' Church, East Coker, Somerset. It's easy to see which door gets opened!
Sadly the door was locked and we were unable to visit inside.
The church is noted as the resting place of the poet T. S. Eliot whose ashes were interred in 1965.
whoa guys look i'm actually posting something.
whoooooaaAaAaaAaAa
it's funny though because I have been taking pictures, I promise, just for whatever reason it takes me 500 years to actually post them somewhere.
for the love of trees...
Hello flickr-land friends...
Still kind of busy...
I will catch soon... :-)
strode out into beautiful limestone country today, but the light was flat, flat, flat. Best take a picture of a gate handle adorned with some chicken wire then....
how we handle personal issues reflects the kind of person we want to be...we all want to be good, but our shortcomings get in the way don't they?
.... on the kitchen sink with some plates waiting to be washed.
Day 5 of Pentax Forum's Daily in June 2017 Challenge.
117 pictures in 2017: #063/117 Handles
15.01.2017 015/365
MIC - Museo Internazionale delle Ceramiche
Bottiglia antropomorfa
Perù, cultura Gallinazo, secc. VIII-II a.C.
Terracotta dipinta
dono famiglia Erani Pasi, 2015
Hit 'L' to view on large.
Battersea Power Station is a decommissioned coal-fired power station located on the south bank of the River Thames, in Battersea, an inner-city district of South West London. It comprises two individual power stations, built in two stages in the form of a single building. Battersea A Power Station was built in the 1930s, with Battersea B Power Station to its east in the 1950s. The two stations were built to an identical design, providing the well known four-chimney layout.
The station ceased generating electricity in 1983, but over the past 50 years it has become one of the best known landmarks in London and is Grade II* listed. The station's celebrity owes much to numerous cultural appearances, which include a shot in The Beatles' 1965 movie Help!, appearing in the video for the 1982 hit single "Another Thing Comin´" by heavy metal band Judas Priest and being used in the cover art of Pink Floyd's 1977 album Animals, as well as a cameo appearance in Take That's music video "The Flood."
In addition, a photograph of the plant's control room was used as cover art on Hawkwind's 1977 album Quark, Strangeness and Charm.
The station is the largest brick building in Europe and is notable for its original, lavish Art Deco interior fittings and decor. However, the building's condition has been described as "very bad" by English Heritage and is included in its Buildings at Risk Register. In 2004, while the redevelopment project was stalled, and the building remained derelict, the site was listed on the 2004 World Monuments Watch by the World Monuments Fund. The combination of an existing debt burden of some £750 million, the need to make a £200 million contribution to a proposed extension to the London Underground, requirements to fund conservation of the derelict power station shell and the presence of a waste transfer station and cement plant on the river frontage make a commercial development of the site a significant challenge. In December 2011, the latest plans to develop the site collapsed with the debt called in by the creditors. In February 2012, the site was placed on sale on the open property market
through commercial estate agent Knight Frank. It has received interest from a variety of overseas consortia, most seeking to demolish or part-demolish the structure.
Built in the early 1930s, this iconic structure, with its four distinctive chimneys, was created to meet the energy demands of the new age. Sir Giles Gilbert Scott – the man who also designed what is now Tate Modern and brought the red telephone box to London – was hired by the London Power Company to create this first of a new generation of ‘superstations’, with the building beginning to produce power for the capital in 1933.
With dimensions of 160 m x 170 m, the roof of the boiler house 50 m tall, and its four 103 m tall, tapering chimneys, it is a truly massive structure. The building in fact comprised two stations – Battersea ‘A’ and Battersea ‘B’, which were conjoined when the identical B section was completed in the 1950s, and it was the world’s most thermally efficient building when it opened.
But Battersea Power Station was – and is – so much more besides. Gilbert Scott lifted it from the prosaic into the sublime by incorporating lavish touches such as the building’s majestic bronze doors and impressive wrought-iron staircase leading to the art deco control room. Here, amongst the controls which are still in situ today, those in charge of London’s electricity supply could enjoy the marble-lined walls and polished parquet flooring. Down in the turbine hall below, meanwhile, the station’s giant walls of polished marble would later prompt observers to liken the building to a Greek temple devoted to energy.
Over the course of its life, Battersea Power Station has been instilled in the public consciousness, not least when Pink Floyd famously adopted it for its Animals album cover and launch in 1977. As a result of its popularity, a great deal of energy has been expended in protecting this landmark.
Following the decommissioning of the ‘A’ station in 1975, the whole structure was listed at Grade II in 1980 before, in 1983, the B station was also closed. Since that time, and following the listing being upgraded to a Grade II* status in 2007, Battersea Power Station has become almost as famous for plans heralding its future as for its past. Until now, that is.
The transformation of Battersea Power Station – this familiar and much-loved silhouette on the London skyline – is set to arrive, along with the regeneration and revitalisation of this forgotten corner of central London. History is about to be made once more.
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Spiders need to be handled with care because they bite. If a spider shows up in the shower, my wife needs to be handled with care! HMM
These whimsical handles open the doors to the Albany, Oregon Carousel, an ongoing project that began back in 2002 with the carving of wooden animals for the ride.
117 Pictures in 2017 #63 handles
Gatwick Handling Ltd based at London Gatwick airport ran a large fleet of elderly Leyland Nationals all of which carried 17 seated passengers in dual doored bodies. GH 415 seen to Brighton Borough Transport's Lewes Road, Brighton garage was new as Crosville SNL822 (WFM 822L). At the time BBT undertook maintenance on the Gatwick based fleet.