View allAll Photos Tagged re_issued
For New Years I have re-issued a couple from southwestern Ontario - Toronto Union station a waiting a Rapido train for Montreal nears departure time, as the hogger inspects his charge FPA4 6762 on June 22, 1975.
I replaced all the valves of my re-issue 1957 Vox amp. Not all of them are new though, the one on the left is actually dated 1958! They sound gorgeous...
Kamera: Zero 612F
Film: Rollei Retro 400S + Red filter
Kjemi: Rodinal (Stand 1:100 / 60 min. @ 20°C)
Fornnordiska Klanger: Bronslurar (1984) [1991 re-issue]
Høgt blæs Heimdall,
set horn til vêrs,
Mæler Odin
med Mims hovud.
- Voluspå 46
This image was previously posted then deleted... now fixed, retouched and re-issued. The same bird is in all three takes.
Happy Sunday Sliders!!!
It's a Beautiful Day - White Bird
www.youtube.com/watch?v=ScFBqyAN8Bw
White bird
In a golden cage
On a winter's day
In the rain
White bird
In a golden cage
Alone
The leaves blow
Across the long black road
To the darkened skies
In it's rage
But the white bird
just sits in her cage
Alone.
White bird must fly
Or she will die
White bird
Dreams of the aspen trees
With their dying leaves
Turning gold
But the white bird
just sits in her cage
Growing old
White bird must fly or she will die
White bird must fly or she will die
The sunsets come
the sunsets go
The clouds pile high,
the air moves slow
And the young bird's eyes
do always know
She must fly
She must fly
She must fly
White bird
In a golden cage
On a winter's day
In the rain.
White bird
In a golden cage alone
White bird must fly or she will die
White bird must fly or she will die
White bird must fly or she will die
Re-issued/reposted
Leica M6 2022 re-issue | Kodak Gold @ 200
Digitized with Olympus OM-1 Digital | Valoi Easy 35
Home developed in Cinestill
Negative Lab Pro v3.1.1 | Color Model: Frontier | Pre-Sat: 3 | Tone Profile: LAB - Standard | WB: Auto-Neutral | LUT: Natural
lovelight's re-issue.
so, you may take the last four photos as my lowly new year presents.
Happy 2008!
:)
While sitting waiting to see the re-issue of Avatar at IMAX in Melbourne I took this shot of the promotional poster for the upcoming sequel.
For New Years I have re-issued a couple from southwestern Ontario - "Pups in Flight" . . . the CP Galt Subdivision westbound pickup (mainline local) with 4 - pups exits Woodstock, Ontario with the sweet sound that only a pack of SW1200RS's in run 8 can make - June 6, 1976.
The lady from morocco......
3,250.views, fav 180 times ...288 comments...my most successful picture]
LINK TO RE ISSUE OF THIS PHOTO IS BELOW
Car park find.
Car: Chevrolet Bel Air.
Engine: 3859cc in-line 6.
Year of manufacture: 1955.
Date of first registration in the UK: 1st October 2018.
Place of registration: Not known, registration is an age-related re-issue..
Date of last MOT: 11th September 2020.
Mileage at last MOT: 14,455.
Date of last change of keeper: No previous recoded keepers.
Number of previous keepers: 0.
Date taken: 14th May 2023.
Album: Classics in Cardiff May 2023
Car: Vauxhall Victor Super FD.
Year of manufacture: 1959.
Date of first registration in the UK: 1st June 1990.
Place of registration: Not known, registration is a non-geographical re-issue.
Date of last MOT: 29th June 2011.
Mileage at last MOT: 5,270.
Date of last change of keeper: 19th September 2022.
Number of previous keepers: 5.
Date taken: 9th April 2023.
Leica M6 2022 re-issue | Kodak Gold @ 200
Digitized with Olympus OM-1 Digital | Valoi Easy 35
Home developed in Cinestill
Negative Lab Pro v3.1.1 | Color Model: Frontier | Pre-Sat: 3 | Tone Profile: LAB - Standard | WB: Auto-Neutral | LUT: Natural
Car: Vauxhall Victor Super FD.
Year of manufacture: 1959.
Date of first registration in the UK: 1st June 1990.
Place of registration: Not known, registration is a non-geographical re-issue.
Date of last MOT: 29th June 2011.
Mileage at last MOT: 5,270.
Date of last change of keeper: 19th September 2022.
Number of previous keepers: 5.
Date taken: 9th April 2023.
I made this photograph as I approached 70 years of age, but it felt like I was 7 years old again as I was squatting down in the street, preparing to make this shot. And this photograph looks like it could have been made in 1959 instead of 2021.
Many of you know my story of how I started making photographs. My mother gave me my first film camera and taught me how to use it, then challenged me to be an explorer in my small town. I asked her what I should shoot, and she said "something classic". At my young age, I asked her "what is classic", and she replied "that's what you have to figure out". In retrospect, that's awesome, isn't it?
Well, it was the mid-1950's and I soon discovered that "classic" for me translated into the great American cars of that era. And that's what I pointed my camera towards more often than not. Many of you also know that within a few years, an intruder would enter our home armed with a shotgun, after watching me walk out of the front door and get on the school bus, and proceed to start shooting. My mother was killed and my father was left in critical condition, but eventually survived. I was 9 years old. I didn't touch a camera seriously for the following 40 years. At age 49, reeling from another personal crisis, I decided to pick up a camera again. Now, 21 years later, photography has helped me find the little boy from the mid-1950's who was so lost for so long.
Coincidentally, film photography is now experiencing a resurgence around the world. This photograph was made on my analog Leica M6, perhaps the most iconic 35mm film camera ever made. In response to the worldwide resurgence of film photography, this past week Leica announced they are re-issuing the Leica M6 film camera, and that has photographers around the world surprised and excited.
Sullivan, IN
2021
© James Rice, All Rights Reserved
Leica M6 TTL, 0.72
28mm Summaron
Ilford Delta Pro 100 (expired)
Developed: The Darkroom Photo Lab, San Clemente, CA
If something is at eye level, it is positioned at approximately the same height as your eyes.
"Eye Level" is a 1972 single by the Simon Park Orchestra. It was produced originally for the De Wolfe Music Library and selected by Thames Television to be the theme tune for their Netherlands-based detective series Van der Valk.
The tune became popular with audiences and Columbia Gramophone Company issued it as a single (catalogue number DB 8946) with the theme to Granada Television's drama series Crown Court, entitled "Distant Hills", on the B-side. The record entered the UK chart for just two weeks in late 1972. Almost a year later, the record was re-issued and in September 1973 it became a hit, with four weeks at No.1 and a further 20 weeks in the top 50. Total sales were 1,005,500, gaining the award of a platinum disc and becoming one of the 12 best-selling singles of the 1970s.
The trees I have to draw in a commissioned reconstruction drawing have proved difficult to get right. In an effort to improve them I have done a series of studies and enrolled inspiration from a fellow artist, Pat Southern-Pearce. This conifer tree is based on a drawing in Arthur L Guptil's 1922 book " Drawing and Sketching in Pencil", re-issued by Dover Publications in 2007. Hopefully the looser style will help me the trees in my reconstruction drawing looking more tree like.
Pottery works and bottle oven built 1913, Grade II listed. In 1897 Burslem pottery manufacturer James Macintyre & Co took on 26-year-old RCA graduate William Moorcroft as a designer and within a year he was put in charge of the company's art pottery studio. Moorcroft's first innovative range, the Art Nouveau style 'Florian Ware' was a great success and won him a gold medal in the St.Louis International Exhibition at the 1904 World's Fair. Unusually for the time, he adopted the practice of signing all his pieces. In 1912 Macintyre & Co changed direction to concentrate on commercial ceramic fittings for the burgeoning electrical industry and ceased production of art pottery. William Moorcroft set up his own company and the following year manufacture of his pottery was transferred to a brand new factory in nearby Cobridge. He introduced an extensive line of moderately priced domestic tableware in addition to his famous tube-lined hand painted art pottery which is still the method of decoration used by the company today. In 1926 his beloved wife Flo died of pneumonia complications at the age of 47. Two years later William married his second wife Marian Lazenby, whose family owned the famous London store Liberty's which had supported Moorcroft since the Macintyre days. In the same year, 1928 William's reputation was greatly enhanced when Queen Mary granted William Moorcroft a royal warrant. Shortly before William's death in 1945, his eldest took control of the business; in 1946 King George VI re-issued the royal warrant in Walter's name. However by the 1980's the company come close to collapse which by that stage had just 12 employees, when in 1986 business partners Hugh Edwards and Richard Dennis bought a controlling interest. Walter Moorcroft stayed on as design consultant until 1999 when his final range 'Rock of Ages' which launched. In 1992 Dennis and his pottery designer wife Sally Tuffin sold their shares in Moorcroft Pottery to Hugh & Maureen Edwards who became sole owners. In 1993 Rachel Bishop, recently graduated from Staffordshire University's ceramic design course, joined Moorcroft as only its fourth (and at 24 years of age, the youngest) designer since the company was founded. In 1997 the Moorcroft Design Studio was formed with eight designers working under Rachel's leadership. In 1998 the company built a new facility and launched flambé and sgraffito decorated ranges under the name of Black Ryden and Cobridge. However, in 2006 the venture was closed, the molds and the Burslem Pottery company name was sold to paintress Tracy Bentley, to concentrate on the core business of slip-trailed art pottery. Today Moorcroft studio has 5 designers lead by Rachel Bishop as Senior Designer now in her 30th year with the company. Moorcroft Pottery continues to produce highly collectible art pottery sold in greater numbers than even in the heyday of the 1920’s. Having survived a difficult couple of years due to the pandemic, W. Moorcroft Holdings Ltd goes forward from strength to strength. The company employs 69 highly skilled staff with a turnover of £1.7m backed by substantial assets including ownership of the land and factory buildings at Cobridge together with an extensive and valuable heritage collection – well worth a visit! Taken with a 1976 Polaroid SX-70 Land Camera Alpha 1 on Polaroid (TIP) film.
Postscript. Moorcroft Pottery ceased trading 30th April 2025
A re-issue of an old photo. I changed the aspect ratio and did some color and noise work. This is a cruise ship docked at Ogden Pointe in Victoria, BC.
This is blended from five exposures. You can see that toward the center right where the same bird is seen five times and at the top where the same bird is seen three times before flying out of frame.
In memory of Jeff Hale (1923–2015). Jeff was born in Margate, England, and passed away in Talent, Oregon. Solid!
Tualatin Fred Meyer, 11:42 PM.
Media:
* YouTube Movies & TV: Hardware Wars (1978 short parody, 16mm motion picture film format; director's HD re-issue, 13 minutes running time). Jeff played Augie "Ben" Doggie.
* cineSOURCE: "Jeff Hale's Amazing Cartoon Career," by Karl Cohen, April 30, 2025
Railway to Budweis and federal street B3 cross river Danube in Steyregg.
The sky is lit by local steel and chemistry industry.
This is a re-issue; I adjusted the white balance to look more realistic.
STAX Museum of American Soul Music
926 E. McLemore Ave.,
Memphis, TN 38106.
Phone: 901-946-2535
Founded in 1957 as Satellite Records, the name Stax Records was adopted in 1961. The label was a major factor in the creation of the Southern soul and Memphis soul music styles, also releasing gospel, funk, jazz, and blues recordings. While Stax is renowned for its output of African-American music, the label was founded by two white businesspeople, Jim Stewart and his sister Estelle Axton, and featured several popular ethnically-integrated bands, including the label's house band, Booker T. & the MG's.
Following the death of Stax's biggest star, Otis Redding, in 1967 and the severance of the label's distribution deal with Atlantic Records in 1968, Stax continued primarily under the supervision of a new co-owner, Al Bell. Over the next five years, Bell expanded the label's operations significantly, in order to compete with Stax's main rival, Motown Records in Detroit. During the mid-1970s, a number of factors, including a problematic distribution deal with CBS Records, caused the label to slide into insolvency, resulting in its forced closure in late 1975.
In 1977, Fantasy Records acquired the post-1968 Stax catalog, as well as selected pre-1968 recordings. Beginning in 1978, Stax (now owned by Fantasy) began signing new acts and issuing new material, as well as re-issuing previously recorded Stax material. However, by the early 1980's no new material was being issued on the label, and for the next two decades, Stax was strictly a re-issue label.
After Concord Records acquired Fantasy in 2004, the Stax label was reactivated, and is today used to issue both the 1968–1975 catalog material and new recordings by current R&B/soul performers. Atlantic Records continues to hold the rights to the vast majority of the 1959-1968 Stax material.
Leica M6 2022 re-issue | Kodak Gold @ 200
Digitized with Olympus OM-1 Digital | Valoi Easy 35
Home developed in Cinestill
Negative Lab Pro v3.1.1 | Color Model: Frontier | Pre-Sat: 3 | Tone Profile: LAB - Standard | WB: Auto-Neutral | LUT: Natural
Car: Vauxhall Velox pick-up.
Year of manufacture: 1957.
Date of first registration in the UK: 1st November 2003.
Place of registration: Not known, registration is an age-related re-issue.
Date of last MOT: 7th April 2011.
Mileage at last MOT: 38,004.
Date of last change of keeper: 19th October 2022.
Number of previous keepers: 5.
Date taken: 9th April 2023.
Leica M6 2022 re-issue | Kodak Gold @ 200
Digitized with Olympus OM-1 Digital | Valoi Easy 35
Home developed in Cinestill
Negative Lab Pro v3.1.1 | Color Model: Frontier | Pre-Sat: 3 | Tone Profile: LAB - Standard | WB: Auto-Neutral | LUT: Natural
I had one of these 25 years ago. So when I saw this 25th anniversary re-issue, I had to get it. It's beautifully made, and yes, the body is all metal, just like I remember.
If only I had kept all my toys from back then, they would be worth a hell of a lot right now.
Who cares about it? A true rarity: negligible information on the web and no re-issue to date. But how much is it really worth (how many copies still exist on this material plane)? In my fanatic web searches, I have come across some great music blogs, ones that may not provide the information I seek, but lead in other glorified directions. For instance, I found this site: www.eastafricanmusic.com/
that at least put me in the general area of the 45 rpm’s origin. And the site’s administrator was nice enough to respond to my email asking for information about Mikah Njiru & Mugo, BUT could provide no information other than telling me that the CMS label (Capitol Music Store) in Nairobi, Kenya was owned and operated in the 1960s by a Southern Asian man.
The intangible quality: how did a 45 rpm from 1960s Nairobi, Kenya find its way onto a pile at a Hong Kong flea market in 2009?
Mikah Njiru & Mugo consists of male and female vocals and guitar. The music can most likely be classified as “folk music”, certainly in arrangement, but probably also in style.
www.kentanzavinyl.com/Kentanzavinyl/HOME_PAGE.html
In regards to lost and found 78s, LPs, and 45 rpms (and the relative rarity of their sonic waves), the protocol for fair-use (internet re-distribution by those NOT holding a copyright) seems to be that if a recording has not been re-issued (is not on the market), then whoever has a copy of the record may digitize it and make it available for free downloading. As of date, I have no equipment for digitizing vinyl records, and actually enjoy the due separation of recording formats: I shut down the computer and put a 45 rpm on the turntable.
The last and by far the best Düül record. The song "Paramechanische Welt" stands out, another version of it with English lyrics was published on a contemporary Ohr compilation and on the CD re-issue of 1996.
Cover by gil.
Love Is Peace - 16:56
Snow Your Thurst and Sun Your Open Mouth - 9:25
Paramechanische Welt - 7:34
An obscure British band recorded this album in Germany back in 1972. This is a 1980s re-issue on SPM. The original vinyl would cost you about three times as much as I have ever spent on any LP. To get an idea of their sound check YouTube - the singer himself has commented on the upload there, I think that's cool.
Red Sun
Bubbles
Watcha' Trying to Do?
I Wanna' Scream
Gravedigger
I had to make a larger version of this image (which is already in my stream) for a different purpose and ... well, this is where I store my images ....
If you're stuck and want to get back to my site, Utata, click here.
Sun partly reflected in the lake.... and the violet is real - I took it as it came out of the scanner, so WB not manipulated.
Due to popular demand, this time without the watermark :-)
No glossy restorations and manicured vintage 'collector' cars; no modern day re-issues... Just the Real Thing, 60+ years on and still rolling...
Original Brooks Mossbrook bag (not a re-issue) with the quick release. Probably worth quite a bit more than the bike it's on. Wrights saddle.
As Leica re-issue the M6 ... although to me it sounds like a M7 badged as a M6...
A picture from a Leica M7 with a tri-Elmar 28/50/35. Originally on a Kodak colour film and processed through Photoshop.
Sorry for the lack of uploads; I’ve had a few things on… I had a very short notice request yesterday. Full CD cover-art within a few hours, worked from a couple of snaps I took at an open-air party last year!! The request was from an excellent modern-folk band,
‘The Hittites,’ who seemed to want something halfway between a ‘true antique’ feel and a ‘supermarket budget re-issue’ feel. Although I've never done this before, it soon became apparent that most of the work (time-wise) was with the text overlay on the backleaf and insert, but the cover is what you do it for! So; simple and as easy it was to do, here it is…
Car: Ford Deluxe.
Engine: 3917cc V8 .
Power: 100 BHP.
Year of manufacture: 1949.
Date of first registration in the UK: November 2021.
Place of registration: Not known (registration is a age-related re-issue)..
Date of last MOT: No online MOT history.
Mileage at last MOT: Not known.
Date of last V5 issued: 18th July 2023.
Date taken: 1st June 2024.
Humber Sceptre Ser.III Automatic (1968-76) Engine 1725 S4 OHV
Registration Number LJC 510 R (Bangor, Mid Wales)
HUMBER SET
www.flickr.com/photos/45676495@N05/sets/72157623665287863...
Badged as a Humber and representing the top of the Rootes group range, with twin carburettors, quad head lights, and twin reversing lamps. The manual has a four speed all synchromesh gearbox with twin overdrive.
This car was bought from a scrapyard as a donor vehicle for the Estate version (64 in this sequence). The owners information sheet shows a picture of the car in the yard under a pile of other vehicles. When he got it home he decided it was to good to scrap, and set about restoring it to its present condition. It had been of the road since 1990 and was returned to roadworthy condition in 2007. He even managed to persuade the DVLA to re-issue the original number.
Diolch am olygfa anhygoel, 65,178,732
oblogaeth y Lloegr honno dros y Mynyddoedd
Thanks for a stonking 65,178,732 views
Shot 06.05.2018 at Catton Hall Car Show, Catton Hall, Walton on Trent, Derbyshire Ref 133-490