View allAll Photos Tagged men
I was reminded of this shot when I saw Eses Moto's image yesterday:
www.flickr.com/photos/tokyo_lama/36544779021/in/dateposted/
Check out his photo stream...there's some brilliant street photography to be found! :)
Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mk.II
Olympus M.Zuiko 45/f1.8
Hook up on FaceBook , 500px or Ello
Follow me on Twitter
"Eleven men. Until February 17, 1937, there had been only one fatality, setting a new all-time record in a field where one man killed for every million dollars spent had been the norm. On February 17, ten more men lost their lives when a section of scaffold carrying twelve men fell through the safety net."
While factory production of sillar has reduced the number of works that choose to pass on their skill from generation to generation, there are still some 50-odd maestros canteros, or quarry-men, who continue to work just as their fathers and grandfathers did before them.
Piles of stones reputedly built to commemorate the deaths of three men in a snowstorm. They are built on top of a Bronze Age burial mound.
A salute to us liberal lefties . . . I love it! A fashion and political statement at the same time. Fifth Avenue Window at Bergdorf Goodman's