View allAll Photos Tagged irishpubs

Kyiv, Ukraine.

 

SLR Camera: Minolta Dynax 404si

Lens: Minolta Maxxum AF 50mm f1.7 RS

Film: Kodak Gold 200

Filter: Hoya UV(0)

Built-in flash on, fired.

 

Film was processed and scanned by "Mark" Studio Lab. in Chernivtsi. I am happy with the results.

 

To see the pictures taken with this camera click here.

Many thanks for views, comments and favourites.

(One thing I don't care for in Flickr, is that on the Photostream, everything is "backwards". However, within the Set, it is in chronological / numerical order.)

So, I ended my stay in Limerick in an Irish Pub, Dolan's, with two friends. I don't drink, but this is a great place. The music was great, and the atmosphere was wonderful.

We know the owner of this local watering hole, an Irish Pub, and visit there quite often when we are on Maui.

Dublin 20 January 2022

Gorey, Co Wexford, Ireland

Pub St-Patrick (est. 2000), Rue Saint-Jean, Québec.

A good atmosphere inside on a Saturday night. @quebeccite

Street scene, and my favourite NYC pub, on E 7th. Street, East Village, New York City.

Early in 2019 the Sextant, a Cork institution, closed its doors for the last time.

 

The actual building is an architectural conservation area so it cannot be demolished but as it is not a protected structure only the exterior has to be retained.

 

Busy Bartender, "Barley & Malt" Irish Pub in Hamburg, Germany

Kyiv, Ukraine.

 

SLR Camera: Minolta Maxxum 9 Ti

Lens: Minolta AF 85mm f1.4 G RS

Film: Kodak ColorPlus 200

Filter: Schneider B+W UV F-Pro

 

Film was processed and scanned by "Mark" Studio Lab. in Chernivtsi. I am happy with the results.

 

To see the pictures taken with this camera click here.

Thank you for your comments and Fav's.

Behind the bar of O'Reilly's in Brussels.

Irish Atmosphere in the Heart of Edinburgh :-) .

"Biddy Mulligans Pub" is the perfect place to enjoy Edinburgh's social scene. With an Irish theme and a lively, fun atmosphere .. And...Guinness is also here ;-)

 

Joyful week and November for all of you, my dear friends, cheers!

 

If you would love to purchase this art work you are welcome to my page at FAA: jenny-rainbow.pixels.com/featured/biddy-mulligans-pub-edi...

The Irish pub Celtic Ireland at the Groenplaats closed in 2011. In 2013 the building has been converted into residential apartments. (Source: Gazet van Antwerpen).

 

Guinness is an Irish dry stout that originated in the brewery of Arthur Guinness (1725–1803) at St. James's Gate, Dublin. Guinness is one of the most successful beer brands worldwide. It is brewed in almost 60 countries and is available in over 120. Annual sales total 850 million litres (1.5 billion Imperial or 1.8 billion US pints). (Source: Wikipedia).

 

Public Clock Photography by Arjan Richter

 

I always liked the Guinness Clock at the corner of Dorset Street and I have never found out why it was changed to Mayes. I have never been inside the pub in question but I assume that they did not stop selling Guinness.

 

It is had to believe this guy will be turning 86 in a couple of weeks. My wife and I took Dad out to Ash's Irish Pub for Fish and Chips with Guiness. Nice place in Olive Branch Mississippi.

The Cape Bar, Wexford Town, Ireland

Yesterday evening I trotted out on the icy sidewalks for an acquaintance's "office hours" as this tiny Irish pub in my section of the city. "Office hours" in this sense means that he announces he'll be there for a defined time period, and everyone who wants to stop by to see him should.

 

This time he brought his wife, and eventually four of their friends appeared. All of them at least 25-30 years younger than I, but even though I was the "old man out," we had great conversation for a couple hours.

 

Nice to get out of my usual rut for a change!

Johnny foxes Dublin mountains

My newest addition to the Wasabi District. About 3000 pieces and the size of a typical CREATOR Expert corner building.

 

Irish Pub on the first floor, while a hostel is situated on the 2nd and 3rd floors.

Sono sempre stato affascinato dall'atmosfera dei pub irlandesi; per ora non sono riuscito ancora ad andare in Irlanda e per questo "mi accontento" di visitare quelli che incontro nel mio girovagare.

   

Being a Paddy Irish Girl myself ..Heres my version of an Irish Pub ..Built on Secondlife

CLICCARE PER VEDERLA ONBLACK

  

www.youtube.com/watch?v=WeqM51-man0

 

Hevia Busindre Reel No Mans Land

I thought that it was ‘Biddles Bar’ even though I photographed it a number of times.

 

Bittles Bar is one of Belfast's more curious pubs located close to the Victoria Square Shopping Centre. Red-bricked and 'flat-iron' in shape Bittles is a wonderful example of a traditional Victorian Bar. Founded in 1868 the bar was originally called the Shakespeare reflecting is theatrical clientele.

Il bello della pen è che è piccola, non hai sti 2 chili di reflex al collo, ti senti libero, te la porti ovunque...e io infatti le prime foto non potevo che farle al cesso.

Ma un signor cesso.

 

March 19, 2020 - Decatur, Georgia - Mac McGee’s Irish pub in downtown Decatur. This was shot right after St. Patrick’s Day, the last day they were open.

This is located on Green Street rather than Capel Street.

  

Even though I live nearby I had never really been aware of this pub so I know very little about it but a friend mentioned that it is an "early house" as are many pubs in the area. My friend also mentioned that it was open from 7am to 2pm.

 

When I worked in Dublin Docks [a long time ago] there were many pubs that were known as ‘early houses’. They were pubs [public houses] that were granted a special licence which allowed them to open from Monday to Saturday at 7am. Such pubs catered for milkmen, dock workers, market traders, fishermen, night workers and those attending early-morning fairs and markets.

 

I suspect that there are now new fewer than twenty early houses left in Dublin and that most of them are near Capel Street or the nearby markets. There may be a few on the quays and near Pearse Street.

 

Looking back to the ‘good old days’ they may not have been such a good idea. I worked for a shipping company that employed dock workers and seamen who earned good money but many of them hardly ever went home to their families because they spent most of their non-working hours in local early house pubs. On pay-day their wives or their mothers would visit the pubs in order to collect whatever money was needed to run the home but in many cases there may not have be much left because the men often had to repay debts. The unfortunate result was many earned really good money but their families lived in poverty. The company did try a scheme whereby wives could visit the wages-office and collect part of the weekly wage packet but that scheme did not even last four weeks.

The FitzGerald - FitzMaurice dynasty is a Cambro-Norman and Anglo-Norman, and later Hiberno-Norman, aristocratic and royal dynasty. They have been peers of Ireland since at least the 13th century, and are described in the Annals of the Four Masters as being "more Irish than the Irish themselves" or Galls, due to assimilation with the native Gaelic aristocratic and popular culture.

 

The dynasty has also been referred to as the Geraldines and the main branches of the family are:

 

The Fitzmaurices and FitzGeralds of Kildare (Earls of Kildare from 1316, later Marquesses of Kildare and from 1766 Dukes of Leinster and Premier Peers of Ireland). The current head is Maurice FitzGerald, 9th Duke of Leinster.

The Fitzmaurices and FitzGeralds of Desmond (Barons Desmond, later Earls of Desmond).

 

Saint Patrick's Saltire or Saint Patrick's Cross is a red saltire (X-shaped cross) on a white field, used to represent the island of Ireland or Saint Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland. In heraldic language, it may be blazoned Argent, a saltire gules. Saint Patrick's Flag (Bratach Naomh Pádraig) is a flag composed of Saint Patrick's Saltire.

 

The red saltire's association with Saint Patrick dates from the 1780s, when the Order of Saint Patrick adopted it as an emblem. This was a British chivalric order established in 1783 by George III. It has been suggested that it derives from the arms of the powerful Geraldine or FitzGerald dynasty. Most Irish nationalists reject its use to represent Ireland as a "British invention".

 

After its adoption by the Order of Saint Patrick, it began to be used by other institutions. When the 1800 Act of Union joined the Kingdom of Ireland with the Kingdom of Great Britain, the saltire was added to the British flag to form the Union Flag still used by the United Kingdom. The saltire has occasionally served unofficially to represent Northern Ireland.

 

17.07.2017 - DRINK & DRAW

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