View allAll Photos Tagged quickness
Released in 2011 by Hot Toys. I bought this one in 2016 as used from Thailand. Unfortunately this one also has that pink panty but not a biggie for I have more Mk IV figs with intact red panties – although not sure if they will also change colours in time. It is dated and some features are not so crisp like more recent releases but I still love the doughnut and the case in the set!
Quick-Look Hill-shaded Colour Relief Image of 2014 2m LIDAR Composite Digital Terrain Model (DTM).
Data supplied by Environment Agency under the Open Government License agreement. For details please go to: www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/v...
For full raster dataset go to: environment.data.gov.uk/ds/survey
Hot Toys Hulkbuster figure from Avengers 3, Infinity War released in 2019. Comes in a huge heavy box and the figure is slightly over 20” tall. As it is a Power Pose edition there are only 6 points of articulation (head, two arms, two wrists and waist) and unlike MMS serious Iron Man figs only three AAA batteries and one on off switch lights up 18 LED spots. Easy to play with and I like it a lot!
Quick-Look Hill-shaded Colour Relief Image of 2014 0.50m LIDAR Composite Digital Surface Model (DSM).
Data supplied by Environment Agency under the Open Government License agreement. For details please go to: www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/v...
For full raster dataset go to: environment.data.gov.uk/ds/survey
Here's something to help you chill out in the dog days of summer. The short-lived Easter snowfall on April 8 blanketed the meadow near Swinging Bridge in Yosemite Valley. Wherever the morning sun hit, melting quickly occurred. You can see the snow burning to fog where the sun hits it.
Designed with Quick Snippers®
Using Reinforced Paper Materials
Jewelry Creations Designed by LIMIRI and Designer/Crafter Maria Soto
France's version of a McDonald's called Quick Burger. This particular franchise sits right next door to the famous Moulin Rouge.
K326PUT is a Vauxhall Cavalier 2.0 GSi . I always thought these were quicker than the SRi version ,they were certainly better equipped with sports leather seats , Tilt slide glass sunroof and bigger alloys ,this nice one is at the Llandudno Transport Extravaganza. Photo taken 05/05/18
A London & North Eastern Railway 'It's Quicker By Rail' poster publicising the scenic delights of the Norfolk Broads, an area dotted with windmills. Artist: Alison McKenzie. Scot McKenzie (1907-82) specialised in wood engraving and watercolours. She was the daughter of accomplished architect George McKenzie and sister, Winifred, also was an artist. Both women studied at Glasgow School of Art and Grosvenor School of Modern Art (London), and both later taught at Dundee College of Art.
Mason enjoys his book as his dad performs a quick diaper change with the experience and precision of a skilled surgeon.
Quick-Look Hill-shaded Colour Relief Image of 2014 2m LIDAR Composite Digital Terrain Model (DTM).
Data supplied by Environment Agency under the Open Government License agreement. For details please go to: www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/v...
For full raster dataset go to: environment.data.gov.uk/ds/survey
Quick-Look Hill-shaded Colour Relief Image of 2014 2m LIDAR Composite Digital Terrain Model (DTM).
Data supplied by Environment Agency under the Open Government License agreement. For details please go to: www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/v...
For full raster dataset go to: environment.data.gov.uk/ds/survey
Day: 069/365
Was never big into Quick Kick. Not in my collecting years at least. The original is pretty ugly looking and to be honest he's considerably difficult to use. No shirt. No shoes. No service.
All Cobra has to do is line their floors with nails or tacks and QK is pretty much s.o.l.
I dig this figure though as he's really unique; all new parts, which was EXTREMELY rare in the 25th line. He caught hell for the left hand and the lack of ankle articulation but niether really bug me at all. This is the best he's ever looked, imo.
All Saints, Kesgrave, Ipswich, Suffolk
Until well into the 20th Century, Kesgrave was just a quiet little village off the road between London and Yarmouth. At the 1851 census, when rural populations in East Anglia were reaching their peak, it was home to just 86 people. The tiny church of All Saints was perfectly large enough to serve such a population, and although it underwent a considerable restoration there was no need to enlarge it.
Today, more than ten thousand people live in Kesgrave, and the Borough of Ipswich has reached out to engulf it. You leave the centre of town on Woodbridge Road, which quickly becomes Ipswich's longest, dullest, straightest road. After about four miles it changes its name to Main Street as it enters Kesgrave, and continues its relentless passage eastwards. Two lovely moments punctuate this mundanity, both churches, and the first of them is All Saints.
This must have been a very small church indeed before 1980, and the grand north porch must have quite overwhelmed it. The late medieval redbrick tower is one of several similar in this area, and again appears overgrand for the little nave. The buttressing is curious, as though the tower and nave had to be joined together at some point. You step through the porch, which is as high and almost as long as the church, into the north side of the former nave. The former chancel to your left is screened off to create a space for private prayer. Inside the door sits the 19th Century font, removed here from its former awkward space towards the tower. Unusually, it is signed by the workshop that made it, Smyth, Woodbridge
However, all of this is barely noticable, for ahead of you is one of the most splendid modern liturgical spaces in Suffolk. It is large and square, completely altering the expected dynamic, and moving the focus quite away from the former chancel. Wooden archbraces stretch from east to west, almost in the manner of an upturned boat, and the chairs focus on an altar placed centrally against the east wall of the extension. The whole piece is imaginative and articulate. It would have been easy, for instance, to simply place the new altar against the south wall, in the manner of a traditional church. However, here it is both unified with the former chancel, and surrounded in the approved Vatican II manner.
The architect was Derek Woodley, from Felixstowe. He is not well-known, but his work here deserves praise and recognition. He was also responsible for the fine entrance area at Kirton, and the restrained restoration of Iken after the dreadful fire. The furnishings, the needlework reredos, the glass and wood are all exquisitely done. The embroiderer was the Suffolk artist Isobel Clover, whose work is more familiar from Catholic churches, such as that up the road at Holy Family.
The extension dates from 1980, but even if it had not been required by the rapidly expanding population, major work was necessary to prevent the collapse of the former south wall. The cross beams from the extension are, in fact, holding up the old church. To the west of the new extension are church offices, and, that blessing in a medieval parish church, lavatories. On the west wall in a case are a pair of medieval sheep-shearing scissors, found when the extension was built, a reminder that Kesgrave has not always been underpasses and supermarkets.
This is a busy, successful building, where the congregation is growing again after a period of decline. I expect that the extension and consequent reorientation give a few other parishes pause for thought.
ILWU Jam Night @ the Yale! Featuring Shady Mae!
Photos by Ron Sombilon Gallery and Christopher Shyr Images
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A quick walk around Talkin Tarn on a cold January evening
Talkin Tarn is a glacial lake and country park near Brampton, Cumbria, England. The lake is a kettle hole lake, formed 10,000 years ago by mass glacial action.
The name is of Brittonic origin. The Brittonic dialect known as Cumbric was formerly spoken in the area. The first element, tal, means "brow" or "end" in Brittonic and modern Welsh, Cornish, and Breton. The second element is unclear. It may come from the Brittonic word which appears in Welsh and Old Cornish as can ("white") and Breton as kann ("bland, brilliant"). Talkin may be a hill-name meaning "white brow".
'Tarn' is derived from Old Norse 'tjǫrn' and then Middle English 'terne' meaning 'small mountain pool' or 'small lake'.
Talkin Tarn Country Park is owned and maintained by Carlisle City Council. It is home to the Boat House Tea Rooms, Brampton Sailing Club, and Talkin Tarn Amateur Rowing Club. The profits from the Tea Rooms and the pay and display car parking are reinvested in the up keep and improvement of the site.
Rowing is an activity at Talkin Tarn. The rowing club, Talkin Tarn Amateur Rowing Club, celebrated its 150th anniversary in 2009. Rowing races were first held on Talkin Tarn in the 1850s, and the Rowing Club was formed in 1859 by local townsfolk, several descendants of whom still live in the area. It is the oldest rowing club in the North of England, with the exception of Tyne Rowing Club, and is the 14th oldest non-university club in the country. Talkin Tarn Annual Regatta has grown considerably in recent years from a total entry of 20 in 1946 and 97 in 1988 to what it is today – very successful and one of the largest one-day regattas outside of London with total entries now in excess of 400.
On 9th November 1983 an Aerospatiale Gazelle Helicopter (reg G-SFTB) crashed into the tarn during a low level training flight from Carlisle Airport. The single occupant escaped the crash but the helicopter, once raised from the bottom, was damaged beyond repair.
Research on climate change carried out at Talkin Tarn was published in 2004.
Old buckles, stone axes, and urns have been found in the area.
#talkin #talkintarn #talkintarncountrypark
More photos of Talkin Tarn here: www.flickr.com/photos/davidambridge/albums/72157633050144969
The surprise I suppose is not that the eagle doesn't chew -- no teeth on the beak, right -- it's the immoderate amounts eaten.
Quick-Look Hill-shaded Colour Relief Image of 2014 0.50m LIDAR Composite Digital Surface Model (DSM).
Data supplied by Environment Agency under the Open Government License agreement. For details please go to: www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/v...
For full raster dataset go to: environment.data.gov.uk/ds/survey
The articles about home owners protecting their homes from burglars..bit dark but still playing with colour nonsense
When the big order rolls in I may get a few annodized. This is a 48t sprocket for 415 or 41 chain. I run #41 chain.
Quick workshop... final shots:
www.flickr.com/photos/ramsesm/4485716670/
www.flickr.com/photos/ramsesm/4485716844/
Blog: blog.ramsesmoya.com