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Accession Number:spa.817.1.2
This leaflet was distributed in Edinburgh in July 2012.
Conservative Friends of the Union were one of the Yes campaign groups for the 2014 referendum.
The Scottish Political Archive is housed at the University of Stirling. The archive is home to the oral interviews, personal papers and associated material from prominent Scottish politicians. For further information about the work of the archive please visit our website www.scottishpoliticalarchive.org.uk
From the Gary Carlson Collection (RF2014-46) at the Marine Corps Archives and Special Collections
OFFICIAL USMC PHOTOGRAPH
So the Centre Street Food Pantry needed a leaflet holder, for their leaflets and for local notable charities and helpful services. So instead of having them buy one on their small budget I made one at work. As a nice thought I made a grey scale version of their logo and raster engraved their logo into it.
Sales leaflet for Walkers, Parker & Co Ltd. c1930's
Cheshire Archives and Local Studies ZCR 245/7191/1
A new range of printed and downloadable marketing collateral highlighting this leading IT support vendor's 'traditional' offering as well as its new cloud-based managed support expertise.
This set has different languages to those in www.flickr.com/photos/pdeaves/34698366343/in/album-721576.... Additionally, each language now has an appropriate flag to help visitors identify the right one more quickly.
Clockwise from left: English, Russian, Portuguese, Spanish, Japanese, Italian (the only 'duplicate' language with the previous series) and Polish
The leaflets arrived at last! I can't put alongside the originals because I handed that in with my submitted work this week. But they look great, despite a couple of errors - I was too hasty to get them to the printers. I also bought this leaflet box off Ebay which can be fastened to the diplay board. Everything is well and truly coming together now.
A leaflet from First showing the new Solent Ranger services, the X4 (largely unchanged) and the X5, made using a combination of the 4, 4A and the 5.
I'm currently going through various booklets and leaflets that I recently dug out from my stash that I thought would be interesting, and scanning them.
For full pdf, please feel free to flickrmail me.
Download flyer Organized psd file, multiple options, unique design, easy replace image through smart object, free fonts, help file included. Enjoy!
Photo of a bumblebee on a field scabious flower taken by Roger Butterfield on 20th July 2002.
Leaflet published by Napier Richards Ltd.
Leaflet design produced by Mildot for VDC's E-commerce line of services. Hanoi, December 2010. This is the iCoin leaflet.
One of our hundreds of leaflets display racks in London and the South East.
Location: Fulham Central Library
Greater Lotus, probably Lotus uliginosus, leaves with hairs on the rim. Dargo VIC Australia, December 2012.
The information leaflet produced by British Railways, London MIdland Region, to accompany the introduction of the first fully automatic level crossing barriers in the United Kingdon; this was at Spath, just north of Uttoxeter in Staffordshire, on the Churnet Valley line. The British Transport Commission, the masters of British Railways, along with the Ministry of Transport, had been interested in the adoption of this technology since the 1950s when the concurrent savings in manned level crossings that this system offered began to appear desirable. after a fact finding tour in Europe and legal consent granted by Parliament in 1957 the BTC introduced its Provisional Requirements for such crossings in 1958.
The crossing chosen for the first application, made in 1959, was for this at Spath where BR stated that the existing manned crossing equipment was outdated and required replacement. The equipment, manufactured for British Railways by Westinghouse Brake and Signals, was operated by track circuits and came into use on 5 February 1961. Described in the Press as a "robot crossing" there was initially a requirement for a crossing keeper to be in attendance. This was finally dispensed later in the year subject to some additional road signs being provided as the level crossing at Spath was on a T-junction and there were concerns about cars queuing over the tracks. The crossing was also fitted with "Second Train Coming" signs to alter waiting drivers to the fact the barriers may remain down despite a train apparently having passed; these were not commonly installed on later examples.
A few early attempts to avoid the crossing by zig-zagging soon found their way to the Magistrates' Court and duly dealt with. Although Spath 'showed the way' the actual crossing and the equipment were destined to have a ridiculously short life. As the Beeching "Axe" marched on and BR began to drastically prune the railway network services were withdrawn from the line in 1965 and the level crossing abolished.