View allAll Photos Tagged smokestack
ARKIV 05/04/2005 - Smokestacks blowing black smoke from an old factory.
Belousovka near Oskemen, Kazakhstan - Kazakstan
Foto: Christopher Herwig - Kod 9266
COPYRIGHT PRESSENS BILD
Another mitten shot from the Monument Valley trip. The lighting was very interesting that day. I would love to see it at sunrise someday as well.
Smokestack from the 1920s. Photographed from the top of Skinnarviksberget. Probably a good view from up there. I have no fear of heights, so I would not mind climbing up, which is easy to while sitting at home in front of the PC editing photos.
Established in 1860, Pioneer Mill Co. was the first plantation to grow sugar commercially in Lahaina and the company built one of Hawai‘i’s first sugar mills. In 1928 the company erected a 225-foot high, brick-and-concrete smokestack. It was the tallest smokestack in Hawai‘i and became a natural landmark for drivers as well as a navigational guide for fishermen out at sea.
When Pioneer Mill Co. ceased operations in 1999, sugar cane fields lay fallow and the Lahaina mill was left to crumble. Once the last building was demolished and mill owners began to talk about dismantling the iconic smokestack, Lahaina’s community joined forces to save it as a historic landmark.
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Thank you, your views, favs and comments are greatly appreciated!
Smoke or steam ... which of these two I do not know, is blown into the air by an Industrial Chimney.
Location: Industrial Area Genk.
Country: Belgium.
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An Architectural Abstract. If you would like to hear Howlin' Wolf's version of 'Smokestack Lightning', please visit www.youtube.com/watch?v=A1FK620bS7A
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It was really cold yesterday..A northwest wind that just stung your face! These pigeons were trying to warm up by landing on this smokestack.
I hope everyone has a lovely day! ; )
A small stone tower on Dodds End overlooking Nenthead in Cumbria. This area is covered in old mine workings and ruined buildings. The lead and silver are no longer financially viable to extract but the remains of this activity are strangely beautiful. This is in the North Pennines Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. I would question the "Natural" part as industry and rural activities such as sheep farming and grouse shooting have transformed the natural. Still, what the hell? it is beautiful.
I grew up near this smokestack. For my entire life, any time I got a new camera or lens, I'd always take a photo of the stack. It became obligatory, a meme. Other photographers I know in the area did the same thing, even though we hadn't conspired together. It was just what you did!
I picked up a new gimbal and a 2x extender, meaning this is my very first post at ̶1̶0̶0̶0̶m̶m̶. It was night when I took this. Purpose of the test was to see if the new gimbal would stay in place steady enough to take a 4 second exposure and if the quality of the 2x extender was legitimate.
This photo was not cropped.
I'm pleased for now. Can't wait to try it out during a sunny day.
T007 starts to stretch it's legs a little heading out of Madison, passing the State of WI Crime Lab building, as golfers out of view to the left are completely oblivious to a pair of WSOR's finest on the point.
The 144-ft. smokestack is what remains of the Sherwood Distillery Company of Westminster, Maryland, a rye whiskey maker founded in the 1880s. The company apparently rode out Prohibition by selling its whiskey as prescription medicine, but went defunct in the 1960s.
A few years ago, David and I explored the Historic Tobacco Warehouse District of downtown Danville, Virginia. I was excited to see smokestacks from the past still standing.