View allAll Photos Tagged looping
In 2008, this little sign appeared on top of the National Preserve Sign located at Monroe Station. It's no longer there.
DB Cargo 66094 powers away from Grangetown Junction, Lackenby, heading the Branch Line Society-organised 17:16 Middlesbrough to Redcar Ore Terminal 'The Lackenby Looper' charter on Saturday 10th July 2022, in aid of the Martin House Children's Hospice. DB Cargo's 66198 was on the rear for this leg of the Teesside area charter.
© Gordon Edgar - All rights reserved. Please do not use my images without my explicit permission
Seamlessly Looping Background Animation Of Live Performance Video For Visual Artists Part 5. Checkout GlobalArchive.com, contact ChrisDortch@gmail.com, and connect to www.linkedin.com/in/chrisdortch
From the crossover at the Madison & Wabash Station. You can see that the scaffolding is down on those old buildings on the west side of the street...they look pretty good now. Here's what I saw last year: www.flickr.com/photos/mss2400/2311708183/
Seamlessly Looping Background Animation Of Stop Motion Filmed Effects Scenes. Checkout GlobalArchive.com, contact ChrisDortch@gmail.com, and connect to www.linkedin.com/in/chrisdortch
One of the many, many cool parts about hiking in Bryce is that the trails really stand out. We're on our way down the Fairyland Loop and over there, there's the return leg. It would be a few hours, but we'd be right over there.
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June 13th 2011, and we hoofed it into Bryce Canyon again for the Fairyland Loop. We hiked it clockwise this time, we've never done it that way and it was noticeably different.
Two Prudential Plaza (Loebl, Schlossman & Hackl, completed in 1990) framed by 205 N. Michigan (Fujikawa Johnson & Associates, completed in 1985, far left), Aqua (Jeanne Gang, completed in 2010, left) and One Prudential Plaza (Naess & Murphy, completed in 1955, right)
Maybe driving a 50-foot truck in the heart of the Loop is a bad idea--bicycle cop helps with traffic shutdown
2191 dewired at UBC loop with its trolley shoes tangled with the ones of an unknown E40LFR.
What happened:
2156 (the right-most bus in the photo) powered at the last PO/PO switch to the #9 terminus at UBC loop, but its poles came down while traversing the trailing switch from the #4 terminus. 2191, an outgoing #17 coasted through the PO/PO switch, but since the switch was still set to the side track, 2191's poles was switched to the side track. 2191's poles passed 2156 which was dewired, but hit the first #9 at the stop and thus dewired, and the right trolley shoe on #2191 got caught on the retriever cable.
Seamlessly Looping Background Animation Of Liquidesque Objects And Fluid Feel Scene Animation With A Hint Of Edgy Material. Checkout GlobalArchive.com, contact ChrisDortch@gmail.com, and connect to www.linkedin.com/in/chrisdortch
Gold tone wire with natural stone chips
please see my profile for more information or go to getwiredjewelry.livejournal.com/
atop 20 N. Michigan (built in 1885)
*Beers, Clay & Dutton designed the original eight-story building in 1885 for Montgomery Ward and Co., which used it as a warehouse.
www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1986-04-06-8601250530-...
"A quiet renaissance going on along Michigan Avenue south of Randolph Street has most of the virtues that architectural preservationists are forever encouraging. With rather consistent sensitivity, the mix of ordinary and distinguished buildings facing Grant Park are being renovated instead of torn down in the false name of progress.
As the work continues, one of the most interestingly redone structures has turned out to be the 20 N. Michigan Ave. building, formerly the John M. Smyth Co. furniture store. It is a splendid example of intuitive architecture --the kind of design and decision-making that cannot be taught by professors or copied from the work of others.
Nagle, Hartray & Associates Ltd. is the Chicago architecture firm that accomplished this transformation. They took a peculiar building that had practically no esthetic merit and turned it into a handsome structure that can hold its own against the classiest architecture on the street.
At the rooftop summit, shell-like ornaments top each of five piers rising up the side of the building. The shells may remind some people of Botticelli, or what have you, yet they are used unselfconsciously." -- Paul Gapp, Chicago Tribune architect critic, 4/6/1986
Seamlessly Looping Background Animation Of Matching Loops With Common Colors And Sci-Fi Models. Checkout GlobalArchive.com, contact ChrisDortch@gmail.com, and connect to www.linkedin.com/in/chrisdortch
Seamlessly Looping Background Animation Of Slow And Subtle Abstract Art In Motion. Checkout GlobalArchive.com, contact ChrisDortch@gmail.com, and connect to www.linkedin.com/in/chrisdortch