View allAll Photos Tagged pipe
I was walking ... tentatively on this ice, trying not to slip and saw these ridged steps within the pipe ... came out cool ...
Last of gum wall shots...and tons of other photos that I wanted to upload- maybe more later....i have millions! I just realized after looking through my photos for a project for spanish class....that i never uploaded photos from my camping trips this summer! Or the rest of the photos from when I went to England...hmm....
I take too many pictures.
Outflow pipe at Blyth beach in Northumberland.
Thanks for looking :)
Website: www.markgreenfieldphotography.co.uk
I know, I know, pipes are (probably) neither alive nor sentient. So, the big one has not likely deployed a little spy pipe to snoop through a slat-covered window. But that's the way it looks, and it is more fun to think of it this way. As usual, there is also a mini-mystery: Why did someone write 14 and 63 on the wall?
Location: A back street in Strasbourg, Alsace FR.
In my album: Dan's Other Metal.
Die neuen Domhöfe in der Einkleidung der Baugerüste.
The new cathedral courtyards in the cladding of the scaffolding.
my mind was drifting off with thoughts of Strange & Unusual beings I'd met on my Cosmic trips & it all came flooding back
Entered in HYPOTHETICAL AWARDS Challenge...."Strange & Unusual Worlds & Creatures "
thanks for looking...best bigger....hope you have a great weekend
Pipe rigate (ridged tube) is good for runny sauces because they fill the tube as well as catching on the ridges. But what I really like about it is that it looks like a little boat... The sea is sea salt and the light is sunshine flooding in through the kitchen door...
Thank you for looking and for your encouragement
For ESL viewers, "pipe dream" is an idiom: an unattainable or fanciful hope or scheme.
There was no clear reason why these two pipes were painted so differently, but the difference made for some nice abstract realism. Also, the light was interesting and unusual. It made the wall look a different color on the left.
Location: A back alley in Mulhouse, Alsace FR.
In my album: Dan's Other Metal.
This is a little clay pipe that I found on the Thames foreshore at Blackfriars recently. The part shown here is about 1.5" long. I haven't been able to find out anything about it or date it, but I think the probability is that it is 19th century, but could be earlier. The face, particularly in profile looks African. The shore is often littered with remnants of clay pipes at low tide, but this is the first decorated one I have come across.