View allAll Photos Tagged lit
This picture was taken during our walk around the town of La Coruna, a coastal town in northern Spain.
A neon lit fairground ride at a Kengtung festival.
On Facebook at www.facebook.com/RemoteAsiaPhoto. More on my website www.remoteasiaphoto.com.
Embleem van Wagon Lits op slaaprijtuig Pullman 4129 (5184 873 0 111-2) tijdens de "Treinenshow" in Utrecht in verband met 150 jarig jubilieum van de NS, maandag 19 juni 1989.
1mile2 is a program that was developed by Visiting Arts London UK and adapted by Musagetes for Guelph. Visit www.square-mile.net to see other iterations of this initiative in cities around the world.
Scan of a slide print taken circa 1988; A vehicle I seem to have made a habit of snapping, No. 3801 was built in 1939 by CGT Paris for the Compagnie Internationale de Wagons-Lits, but was not completed until after the war. Furthermore the Night Ferry service from Paris to London did not resume until 1947.
No. 3801 was used on the last Night Ferry service in 1980, and was stored subsequently at Ostend. In 1984 it returned to the UK, again by ferry, after purchase by a group of the Bluebell's working members for use as overnight sleeping accommodation. It has been repainted from the later light-blue SNCF livery to the deep-blue CIWL livery.
NASA’s mega-Moon rocket with Orion and the European Service Module inside on the launchpad at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, USA.
While the rocket will propel Orion to supersonic speeds, the rocket itself is moved slowly but securely to the launchpad.
The Space Launch Systems rocket (SLS), with Orion atop it, left the Vehicle Assembly Building at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center at around 23:00 CET (22:00 GMT) on 17 March 2022 to begin its 6.5 km trip to Launchpad LC39B.
The first Artemis mission will send Orion to the Moon and back, farther than any human-rated spacecraft has travelled before. ESA’s European Service Module is the powerhouse that fuels and propels Orion and provides everything needed to keep astronauts alive, including water, oxygen, power and temperature control.
At 100 m tall, the SLS rocket is roughly the height of the Elizabeth Tower (Big Ben) in London, UK, or 16 giraffes stacked on top of each other. If you laid the rocket on the ground, it would take over a minute to walk from the engines to the tip of the launch abort system.
Credits: ESA–M. Cowan
P1080133_Artemis_MC
Denver Botanical Gardens walk bout for the Christmas 🎄 Lights when we came up to this section - it a reflection off the water of the Christmas 🎄 lights - I had to back up for a closer look - at first it looked like a lit hole.
Story and in-line style card available on my blog, Three Twisted Knots, at threetwistedknots.com/2018/01/28/the-call-of-stillness/
It's my birthday today, celebrate along with me! Hope you like these gorgeous geranium buds,
I loved the little "star" seed that floated by & attached itself to the little hairs of the buds!
(Best on black)
This tree really caught my eye. I've seen plenty of trees with lights strung throughout, but I can't recall seeing one before that literally had every little branch lit up.
Happy New Year and thanks for looking!
______________________________________________
Comments and constructive criticism always appreciated.
Sunset over the lagoon of Lord Howe Island, Australia. All the sunsets were like this the week we were there. You can see the waves from the ocean breaking on the outer edge of the lagoon, just below the horizon.
Thank goodness this lit up! It started well with James assembling the majority of the pieces. However, as you had to apply pressure to join the lit up pegs, the lego style pieces kept falling apart. Aaaaaaah! In addition, 2 of the circuit parts were wrong so I used them fully expecting the whole thing not to work as a result. James got bored and I spent an extra frustrated 30 minutes or so trying to finish!