View allAll Photos Tagged locking
© All of my photographs are Copyrighted and All Rights Reserved.
They may not be used or reproduced in any way without my explicit written permission.
I have no date for this, from a strip of negs found in the drawer! It's Lockes Sidings at Normanton, with 31308 on a freight. I guess around 1979.
THE LOCK...
#AbFav_TEXTURES
#AbFav_PHOTOSTORY
Hate is the lock,
Love is the key.
Body is the lock,
Soul is the key.
Ignorance is the lock,
Light is the key.
excerpt from the poem The lock and the key by Sri Chinmoy.
To hold the horses, stable wood! LOL
Taken at and old farm, the wood, the rust, it was so attractive and fascinating, the tones and textures inspiring...
Have a beautiful day and thank you for your comments, M, (*_*)
For more: www.indigo2photography.com
IT IS STRICTLY FORBIDDEN (BY LAW!!!) TO USE ANY OF MY image or TEXT on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
wood, slats, door, wall, lock, metal, rust, Flanders, architecture, horizontal, colour, NikonD200, magda indigo
The face has a wicked smile tempting the viewer to enter. However the door remains firmed chained and locked.
The old lock keepers cottages. Abandoned and derelict cottages can be found near to the old wet dock in Ipswich Suffolk UK. Hopefully, one day, they might be restored and used as homes. Who knows but if you have any info on them (past, present or future) then please leave a comment below. Thanks. March 2021.
For a short time these bucks seemed to have their antlers locked, but came loose and separated. Our beautiful world, pass it on.
Netham Lock
Netham Lock is the point at Netham in Bristol at which boats from the River Avon, acting as part of the Kennet and Avon Canal, gain access to Bristol's Floating Harbour.
Construction started in 1804 to build the tidal New Cut and divert the River Avon along the Feeder Canal to the harbour; a system designed and built by William Jessop and later improved by Isambard Kingdom Brunel.
A weir carries the river into the New Cut and boats use the adjacent lock. High tides often pass over the weir, and the river is effectively tidal to the next lock upstream at Hanham. Some spring tides can also pass over the weir at Hanham, making the river tidal as far as Keynsham Lock.
Access to the harbour is only possible during the day when the lock keeper will open the gates unless the water level in the river between Netham and Hanham is above or below the level of the harbour.
The lock-keeper's cottage, built in the early nineteenth century, is a grade II listed building and has a plaque listing it as Bristol Docks building number 1.The floral displays around the cottage and on the banking have attracted praise.
Netham Lock and the weir form part of Bristol's flood defence mechanisms and it was announced in December 2008 that they would be upgraded as part of the £11 million City Docks Capital Project.
Taken with a Nikon D7000
A couple of narrow boats work their " way " along the River Wey Navigation and are now passing through Millmead Lock in the centre of Guildford .
The former lock keepers' cottages at Bowling were designed by the distinguished Glasgow architect practice's of John Burnet, Son and Campbell and were built in 1896 on the Forth and Clyde canal, the oldest and longest canal in Scotland. Situated on the north side of the canal, they are the only Arts and Crafts lock keepers houses on the canal and were built for the Caledonian Railway Company, which owned the canal at the time. The houses are notable for having some fine Arts and Crafts decorative detailing and they form part of an important group of structures at the western entrance to the canal which includes the locks, the former customs house and the nearby bothy (all separately listed). This retention of their original context emphasises their association with the canal and is an important part of their interest. The houses also represent a time when the canal was developing due to the growth of the railway.
BritishListedBuildings.co.uk
All Time Low - Canals
www.youtube.com/watch?v=O2G6ZPYvQ1M
Rollingstone1's most interesting photos on Flickriver
© All rights reserved. Use without permission is illegal
Twenty years of abuse to my front door lock and key. Black and White to make it look even more abused.
Old CPR switch lock fastened to the relay box for the crossing gates at Bartlett Avenue in Toronto's west end.
From thedailylumenbox.com
Fuji Accros II shot with Chroma Double Glass 24mm f/11 on Leica Ic. Pushed to 200 in Xtol for 13 minutes at 68°F.
Eye to eye with a red kite.
Pentax K-3
Sigma 150-500nn
Aperture ƒ/5.6
Focal length 150.0 mm
Shutter 1/200
ISO 100