View allAll Photos Tagged inspector

This photo was taken last year in Kenya-Massaimara.

inspecting the fruit at #rodneystrong and #pezziking vineyards in #healdsburg / #sonoma , CA

Inspector Gadget is an animated TV show from 1983, and here it is in LEGO! This photo shows the evil Dr. Claws flying ship and Inspector Gadgets van.

Female ostrich inspecting farm implements.

 

Gethlane

Limpopo Province

South Africa

Trafalgar Square

 

Thanks for all the views - Please check my other albums and photos out

 

It's like a scene from the classic 1970s series of UK comedy films, 'On The Buses'. The bus inspector waiting to see in the next bus although this time in Doncaster on a rainy open day at the towns bus depot in early June 2022.

Inspector Gadget is an animated TV show from 1983, and here he is in LEGO!

My friend Jens is a very good draftsman who have lots of awesome computer arts from his drawings. He was in need of a portfolio for his drawings, so that's what I've been working with recently.

 

Of course, we had to get a cool shot of him on the site so I got an idea, he came over and we took a couple of shots. This is what I wanted to accomplish and this was actually the third time I "squeezed" the trigger, no edits.

 

Check out his site at www.jensohgren.se

 

Strobist: Camera right, 430EX II at 105mm and 1/4 behind subject. On wall, SB-26 though DIY snoot and turquoise gel, full power I think.

 

Explored on 2008-12-08

Checking up on our camp, making sure we don't leave any edibles out. Very good at his (or her) job.

Little friend was hanging out with us while we waited on a snowy but beautiful April morning.

2021 Weekly Alphabet Challenge, Week 35, I for Inspector

 

There are plenty of inspectors to be found in our house and every so often we do like to play inspectors our selves :-)

another blue tit shot ,all the birds seemed to like poking around in this foliage .

Uploaded for alphabet challenge 2021, I for Inspector. Checking the surroundings for interlopers.

Toy store hijinx.

This is x-processed slide film, not a photoshop effect.

I do not have the chops to do this in Photoshop!

I'll be posting more from this roll.

The Wallace and Gromit of the 1980's.

Po watches Auntie Brenda squeegee the condensation from the windows. It's a losing battle this time of year - 8/18/13

Gus is an inspector for the newly poured concrete that I embedded with leaves for a design! The concrete had been dry for several days, but I will just allow the leaves to brown and come up naturally. Gus assures me they are great!! :)

 

Happy Caturday! - "most important jobs"

 

These aren't the greatest photos, I know, but "the People," (our cats) have been cooped up in the house for almost 2 weeks because we were having the old wooden walkways removed and concrete poured. The southern humidity is SO bad with wood, as are termites, etc., and concrete was a much cheaper and longer lasting solution. "The People" were finally able to get back out into the cat safe yard! It was as if it was a new thing! They have all been GREAT while they were in for this time, but we are all SO grateful they can have more space and freedom now!

Slim, Sassy, Slinky Siamese

Upon completion of her fennel pollen inspection on the adjacent flower, she patiently walked to the top of this stalk to deploy her wings and carry on with her day.

Do cats notice changes in their surroundings?

 

Dot the Cat certainly does.

 

This morning, I had to take down the mirror over the bathroom sink to tape over gaps that were letting dust into the room.

 

Dot, who sometimes hangs out on the sink surround when I shave or brush my teeth, was immediately drawn to that grey door she'd never seen before.

 

She inspected this new sight as thoroughly as if she were going to be tested on it.

 

That ability might have interesting law-enforcement and intelligence applications were it not for felines' general unwillingness to take orders.

I made this quilt for the Project Modern: Organic challenge.

 

My inspiration was the human body, and I wrote more on my blog about it here: kmacquilts.blogspot.com/2011/07/inspector-body.html

We are continuing to sort through the lights. Sole has his opinion on everything. He wants this string to go around the post of his cat tree. Me? I like the way it shows up the wavy wall.

 

I wonder if all families squabble when it comes to decorating.

he's now three, and I'm just hoping he can delay a bit on his discovery of my gears.. ^^;;

 

Have a Great Easter Weekend Y'all! View On Black

In a delightful new tv series, the Japanese detective Inspector Koko pits her wits against a never-ending cavalcade of villains, gangsters and other assorted ruffians. Each episode sees her and her trusty apprentice, Poko, take on Tokyo's worst.

 

Inevitably each episode results in a success for Tokyo's Koko and Poko, but there are some real nail-biters along the way.

 

This still, from one of the more exciting scenes in the first episode, (Koko and Poko Go Loco in Tokyo) shows Inspector Koko making a frantic call against the clock. Perhaps due to her poor navigational skills (she has Poco for that!) her car's engine has unaccountably become flooded.

 

Can roadside assistance get there before the commercial break?

 

Currently there is no rights deal to allow "Inspector Koko" to be shown in the rest of the world.

"Wowsers!" Inspector Gadget found in a Kensington Market alley way wall.

Ilustracion para #expomonos80

 

This grasshopper reminded me of one of the books in our library titled, "Inspector Hopper". It was cool enough Sunday the bees and insects were a little slower, and easier to capture.

Assignment: "Hollywood Glamour"

Model: Siul Martinez

 

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There is a little park in Church Street which contains a plaque with details of "The Church Street Tenement Collapse" as well as an attractive street-light. I suspect the few Dubliners are aware of what happened on Church Street in September 1913.

 

Tuesday 2 September 1913. At about 8.45pm two houses, Nos 66 and 67, collapsed. The rubble fell across the width of the street as far as the door of the Father Mathew Hall on the other side.

 

Later evidence to the coroner’s inquiry stated that there had been a rumbling noise, after which No. 66 collapsed suddenly, followed soon afterwards by the fall of No. 67. All seven who died in the tragedy had lived in No. 66, a four-storey building in which 26 people had lived. One of the inhabitants, Mr Sammon, who survived the collapse, told reporters the heroic story of how his son Eugene had died: ‘Eugene took the youngest child (Josephine), aged one year and eight months, and brought her out safely. Then he went back for the other children, and got out with them alright, but it was when he was coming away with Elizabeth that they were struck by the falling masonry and killed’.

 

It appears that the chimney gave way, crashing through the house as it fell and pushing the front wall out into the street. Immediately following the collapse of the two houses, a great cloud of dust enveloped the scene, and for some time it was not possible to see the magnitude of what had just occurred. Soon units of Dublin Fire Brigade arrived at the scene and took control of the rescue work. By now the street was dark, except for some dim street lamps. Numerous lighted lanterns and candles were held aloft by a body of willing assistants. Throughout the night rescue workers pulled the bodies of the injured and dead from the rubble. The next morning the sun shone brightly, and only then could the full magnitude of the damage be appreciated.

 

Fifteen people were trapped in the rubble: six died, and at least seven were seriously injured.

 

Those killed were Hugh Sammon (17), Elizabeth Sammon (4½), Nicholas Fitzpatrick (40), Elizabeth Fagan (50), John Shiels (3), Peter Crowley (6) and Margaret Rourke (55).

  

An inquest held into the collapse revealed that the Dangerous Buildings Inspector had examined the houses at the beginning of August, and ordered that immediate renovation work be carried out. In a follow-up visit on 15 August, the Inspector passed the buildings as safe, although he admitted to the Coroner's Court that he could not see whether a new supporting beam had been fitted because it was blocked at the time. The Church Street disaster was not the first time tenements had collapsed, but the numbers killed and injured were unparalleled.

The Inspector Cluzo.

Le Pain des Fous en 1ère partie.

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Palaxa - Saint-Denis de la Réunion.

29 avril 2017

Making the rounds and checking things out.

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