View allAll Photos Tagged queueing
12:01am Saturday 16th July 2005 - the queue for Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince, from Waterstone's on Princes Street, Edinburgh, starts to move.
Linfield fans queue up to get a burger at half-time during their side's Irish League clash against Cliftonville at Solitude on 22.1.2011
We'd just come out. There is a queue most times for Grimaldi's. It's worth it. Apparently, Frank Sinatra used to eat there. He probably didn't queue, though...
not a proper stitch, but an idea of the queue on Sunday of the opening weekend to get into MONA (Museum of Old and New Art)
A selection of queue photos from Victoria Square, Birmingham.
Enjoy!
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The Postcard
A postally unused Comicard Series postcard that was published by E. Marks, Fine Art Publishers, Torbay Road, Kilburn, London N.W.6.
The publishers were obviously operating under a fairly broad definition of what constitutes 'Fine Art'.
The artwork is by Joner, and the card has a divided back.
Queue for the first ever Gadget Show. The organisers were expecting some 30,000 people over the three day device-filled weekend. Read my report on www.weirdandbeard.com/features/2009/4/gadget_show_2009
After queueing for an hour to walk out, we queued for over 2 hours to drive out of the field. There was no marshalling so it was a free for all. Everyone just pointed their cars at the exit and hoped for the best. Most were pretty good and filtered considerately (with one noteable exception!). When we got to the gate there was one poor girl sending cars through one at a time.
If they'd had four or five proper queues it would have been quicker because she could have let, say, five cars from each queue go through at a time. Very badly organised.
If I hadn't already mentioned it, the past week was Armory Arts Week where tons of art happenings and events took place in New York City. This is art by Kenjiro Kitade at Lorimoto Gallery in the Ridgewood-Bushwick border of Queens and Brooklyn.
As I'd mentioned, this was clearly a very popular spot for the local paddlers (those lucky dogs). It was a lot like whitewater for sea kayakers, and just like you might see a line at a popular play spot on a whitewater river, there was a queue in the eddy here. You can also see how the eddyline broadens & becomes more chaotic as you travel "downstream" from the point that creates it (shown by the seaweed in the Kayak Smurf model on the beach) - it was fun paddling around in that swirly stuff, you really couldn't anticipate what was going to happen next, it was like the real-life version of the old swimming-pool session game where somebody stands at the stern of your boat & tries to knock you over.