View allAll Photos Tagged relatable

At Detroit / Wayne County Metro Airport.

All these pictures relate to my blog for Gardeners World Magazine

www.gardenersworld.com

 

while you are at it, try my other blog

web.mac.com/blackpittsgarden

     

 

Image from 'A Lytell Geste of Robin Hode, with other ancient & modern ballads and songs relating to this celebrated yeoman. To which is prefixed his history and character, grounded upon other documents than those made use of by ... “Mister Ritson.” Edited by J. M. Gutch', 001726444

 

Author: HOOD, Robin.

Volume: 01

Page: 413

Year: 1847

Place: London

Publisher: Longman, Brown, Green & Longmans

 

Following the link above will take you to the British Library's integrated catalogue. You will be able to download a PDF of the book this image is taken from, as well as view the pages up close with the 'itemViewer'. Click on the 'related items' to search for the electronic version of this work.

 

Life emotions related to chemistry through a kiss...

Athens 2013

Love+ Salt

My GAPS training lunch- can anybody relate to it? ;-) l am loving the cultured foods served today - that apparently were tested by Dr Mercola and he's been blown away with the amounts and strength of probiotic cultures found in it. #GAPStraining2013

 

Mike Posner Concert Thiel College 2014

Work Hike Group Up Table Mountain

Legend relates that two Irish Princes washed ashore during a storm, fell in love with two of the seven daughters of the King of Kintail. Having promised to send their five brothers for the remaining sisters, the Princes married the two youngest Princesses and returned to Ireland. The five sisters waited in vain, and eventually asked the Grey Magician of Coire Dhunnaid to extend their vigil beyond life itself, whereupon he turned them into mountains.

 

March 19, 2014. Boston, MA.

Kick Butts Day 2014. Representatives from the Department of Public Health (DPH) today joined more than 250 young people from across the Commonwealth at the State House for the national observance of Kick Butts Day, recognizing the contributions of teenagers in smoking cessation and prevention efforts.

The young people participating in today’s event are part of DPH’s youth movement, The 84, which represents the 84 percent of young people in Massachusetts who don’t smoke.

High school students involved in The 84 have been educating their communities and their local lawmakers about issues relating to tobacco and, working with local health boards and other programs; have promoted effective tobacco prevention strategies in their communities. Members of The 84 Movement have been vital in fighting the way tobacco industry markets its products to youth.

© 2014 Marilyn Humphries

The Problems Relating to the Management & Excavations of the Archaeological Ruins of Herculaneum / Pompeii as Reported in Foreign Press (1904-2002). "Prof. Amedeo Maiuri 77, Archaeologist of Pompeii," The N. Y. Times, Apr. 8, 1963, p. 47 [1/2].

 

"relating to the motion of material bodies and the forces and energy associated therewith"

 

A creative outing with my photo club - Inland Empire Photo Club - where we played with light and motion and long exposures to create kinetic art. It was a wonderful, creative evening.

Pre-logical reasoners: Put-er-Iner (12-18 mo.), Forseer (18-24 months), Associater (2-4 years), Fantasizer (4-7 years). Logical reasoners: Logical Thinker I (7-11 years), Logical Thinker II (11+ years)

+

Projects 018

 

Image from 'A Lytell Geste of Robin Hode, with other ancient & modern ballads and songs relating to this celebrated yeoman. To which is prefixed his history and character, grounded upon other documents than those made use of by ... “Mister Ritson.” Edited by J. M. Gutch', 001726444

 

Author: HOOD, Robin.

Volume: 02

Page: 316

Year: 1847

Place: London

Publisher: Longman, Brown, Green & Longmans

 

Following the link above will take you to the British Library's integrated catalogue. You will be able to download a PDF of the book this image is taken from, as well as view the pages up close with the 'itemViewer'. Click on the 'related items' to search for the electronic version of this work.

 

The "Gled" or Hawk that Symbolized the Gledstanes Family.

 

The Gledstanes name relates to the gilded bird of prey hanging outside the house. 'Gled' is an old Scottish word for red-tailed kite, which are often found nesting among 'stanes' or stones

 

Just a stone’s throw from the castle, this 500-year-old building is a towering testament to tenement life in Edinburgh’s Old Town. It was once owned by merchant Thomas Gladstone, who extended and remodelled the building to create opulently decorated apartments. Gladstone attracted wealthy tenants including William Struther, Minister of St Giles’ Cathedral, and Lord Crichton, as well as the high-end grocer John Riddoch, who traded from the ground floor.

 

By the mid-1800s, only the poorest of the city’s inhabitants remained in the Old Town and this once luxurious tenement fell into disrepair. Gladstone’s Land was one of the first buildings that the National Trust for Scotland acquired, rescuing it from demolition in 1934.

 

Today, Gladstone’s Land shows how the wealthy went about their lives at a time when the cramped Lawnmarket was at the heart of one of the fastest-growing and most influential cities in the world. www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/edinburgh/gladstonesland/i...

March 19, 2014. Boston, MA.

Kick Butts Day 2014. Representatives from the Department of Public Health (DPH) today joined more than 250 young people from across the Commonwealth at the State House for the national observance of Kick Butts Day, recognizing the contributions of teenagers in smoking cessation and prevention efforts.

The young people participating in today’s event are part of DPH’s youth movement, The 84, which represents the 84 percent of young people in Massachusetts who don’t smoke.

High school students involved in The 84 have been educating their communities and their local lawmakers about issues relating to tobacco and, working with local health boards and other programs; have promoted effective tobacco prevention strategies in their communities. Members of The 84 Movement have been vital in fighting the way tobacco industry markets its products to youth.

© 2014 Marilyn Humphries

The first accounts relating to Meleto date back to the eleventh century, at which time it was a property of the Benedictine monks. Subsequently it became the property of a certain “Guardellotto”, a member of a local feudal family, whom Frederick I Barbarossa dispossessed of his properties, giving them to the Ricasoli-Firidolfi family.

 

The family branch of Firidolfi da Meleto originated here. The name “Meleto in Chianti” was first included in the “Libro degli Estimi” (Book of surveying) of the Florentine Guelphs as property of Firidolfi family in 1256.

 

Its location, set between the Republics of Siena and Florence, ensured that the Castle was the background of many wars between the Guelphs and the Ghibellines, one of which was the second Aragonese invasion of Chianti in 1478 when it was occupied by enemy troops, and during the Medici War, in 1529, when it was besieged by the Senesi militia. For more information, see: www.castellomeleto.it/eng/castle/historical-background.php

This photo taken during lab on Friday helped me to better relate the emergence theory to a visual. In other words, the skulls helped me better understand the concept of emergence. Starting from the left, the three skulls shown are of: the Peking man (homo erectus), homo sapien, and Australopithecus afarensis. The emergence theory asks many questions, such as how did humans evolve and how did the environment affect us? The difference in these three artifacts clearly shows the arising of novel and coherent physical structures and characteristics that emergence is all about. The physical changes that can be seen in the skulls are most definitely a reflection of ways in which the environment affected humans and their need to fit in with the evolving complex systems. If you compare the three, you can notice how different features seemed to emerge as time passed. If you look at Australopithecus, much of their facial structure is horizontal-like, while Homo erectus shows a more evenly proportioned look and eventually Homo sapiens’s facial structure is more vertical and narrow. As the environment changed, the ways in which each creature functioned advanced leading to features that could better suit their lifestyle (neurological changes that could lead to a change in brain size which could mean a larger skull, brow lobe in Australopithecus became the frontal lobe in humans, or even changes in diet which could change their teeth size). The coming together of populations and even the isolation of populations could also account for the progressive changes that each of these skulls demonstrate.

Jenny North, Head of Policy at Relate, asks the panel gender role can be better balanced to create a happier world.

  

The post Relatable appeared first on Daily LOL Pics.

 

via Daily LOL Pics ift.tt/2K4zUrV

All these pictures relate to my blog for Gardeners World Magazine

www.gardenersworld.com

 

while you are at it, try my other blog

web.me.com/blackpittsgarden

 

  

Postcard

 

The Fay Thomas Collection includes family archives relating to the Thomas family. Moses Thomas (1825-1878) was a significant figure in the history of the area now known as the City of Whittlesea, Victoria, Australia. Thomas and Ann and their family lived at "Mayfield", Mernda, Victoria.

 

Miss Lily Thomas (1871-1946), Thomas and Ann’s fourth daughter lived there all her life. She collected postcards which her family and friends sent her on a very regular basis. It was an easy and enjoyable way to keep in touch. Production of postcards blossomed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Lily’s collection encompasses the so-called Golden Age (1890-1915) with many postmarked 1906-1907. Some were sent to other members of the family.

 

The collection document the natural landscape as well as the built environment—buildings, gardens, parks, and tourist sites. Topographical Postcards showing street scenes and general views from Australian and international locations, some of which are artistic views. Popular postcard manufacturers such as Tuck’s Postcards are included in the collection.

Decorative cards, many embellished with floral motives (as a nod to the receiver Lily?) and embossing. Greeting cards are common for Christmas, New Year, Easter and of course birthdays.

 

Regular senders can be identified from Kyneton and the Great Ocean Road area, Victoria and there is a siginifant collection from Scotland (but not sent from there).

 

YPRL hold digital copies of the Papers of the Moses Thomas Family held at State Library Victoria

 

Copyright for these images is Public domain but a credit to the Fay Thomas Collection and YPRL would be appreciated.

 

Enquiries: Yarra Plenty Regional Library

 

We make 2 sizes that relate to diamiter. These two beauties are made from FSC cerified european Walnut. So smooth and a joy to hold.

A tableau relating to John Davey's tenure as lighthouse keeper (see below).

 

The chapel dates from 1321, built to provide a place of worship for those living and working around the harbour. From the Middle Ages, it has also served as a lighthouse and is said to be the oldest working lighthouse in Britain. In 1540, St Nicholas ceased to be a chapel under Henry VIII's Dissolution of the Monasteries.

From 1853 to 1871, a John Davey lived there as a lighthouse keeper, raising fourteen children. It was subsequently used as a reading room and a laundry. Neglected until 1962, it was restored by the Ilfracombe Rotary Club who turned the porch into a small chancel and maintain it with volunteers. Services are occasionally held there.

 

Relates to Leeds TOTW: Simplicity (18 Jan 2009)

‘I believe that relating to lyrics makes you feel less alone.’

 

18/04/11

March 19, 2014. Boston, MA.

Kick Butts Day 2014. Representatives from the Department of Public Health (DPH) today joined more than 250 young people from across the Commonwealth at the State House for the national observance of Kick Butts Day, recognizing the contributions of teenagers in smoking cessation and prevention efforts.

The young people participating in today’s event are part of DPH’s youth movement, The 84, which represents the 84 percent of young people in Massachusetts who don’t smoke.

High school students involved in The 84 have been educating their communities and their local lawmakers about issues relating to tobacco and, working with local health boards and other programs; have promoted effective tobacco prevention strategies in their communities. Members of The 84 Movement have been vital in fighting the way tobacco industry markets its products to youth.

© 2014 Marilyn Humphries

Art Toronto's Opening Night Gala, Metro Convention Centre, Toronto, October 2013 (photo by Ed Pien)

Artscape Gibraltar Point, Toronto Island, August 2013 (photo by Ibrahim Abusitta)

Relating academic achievement to poverty in Colorado schools.

March 19, 2014. Boston, MA.

Kick Butts Day 2014. Representatives from the Department of Public Health (DPH) today joined more than 250 young people from across the Commonwealth at the State House for the national observance of Kick Butts Day, recognizing the contributions of teenagers in smoking cessation and prevention efforts.

The young people participating in today’s event are part of DPH’s youth movement, The 84, which represents the 84 percent of young people in Massachusetts who don’t smoke.

High school students involved in The 84 have been educating their communities and their local lawmakers about issues relating to tobacco and, working with local health boards and other programs; have promoted effective tobacco prevention strategies in their communities. Members of The 84 Movement have been vital in fighting the way tobacco industry markets its products to youth.

© 2014 Marilyn Humphries

This concentration photo relates to the current pandemic we are in. This photo shows the extreme and preventative measures we do to stay safe. Many feel as if they are invincible to the virus which causes numbers of infections to rapidly grow. I had my model wear a glove and sanitize his other hand showing that even though he wore gloves he still needs to sanitize. I also had him wear a mask in context to COVID-19. I edited this photo to have a greenish tint giving off the feeling of sickness and a dark eerie tone.

 

Image from '[Historical Collections of the State of New Jersey ... relating to its history and antiquities, with geographical descriptions of every township in the State. [With illustrations.]]', 000194808

 

Author: BARBER, John Warner and HOWE (Henry)

Page: 413

Year: 1852

Place: Newark, N.J

Publisher: J. H. Bradley

 

Following the link above will take you to the British Library's integrated catalogue. You will be able to download a PDF of the book this image is taken from, as well as view the pages up close with the 'itemViewer'. Click on the 'related items' to search for the electronic version of this work.

 

In, relating to, or characteristic of a city or town.

Urban art sometimes known as graffiti is a style of art that relates to cities and city life often done by artists who live there!!

But that word just makes me think of urban art...

And in my dreams... THAT'S what I wanna be! I've stickered my town... Knit bombed it.. Filled it with wooly monsters.. Created a wish tree in the woods.. But one day I'm gonna cover it in a RAINBOW!

The Body Relates - A 4 Day Workshop by Ming Poon

1 2 ••• 54 55 57 59 60 ••• 79 80