View allAll Photos Tagged stackable

Best seen BIG

 

At Randolph's Restaurant located in Denver, Colorado USA a part of the Warwick-Denver, Colorado.

Truck cabs being delivered. Taken in Rantoul, IL in a motel parking lot.

Stacking peat in pyramids (second stage of drying), Derrygimlagh bog, Derrygimlagh, Co. Galway.

A friend and I took a stack-n-whack class. Here are a few of the blocks I've actually completed. It lives in a box somewhere in my domicile... Maybe someday it will turn into a quilt... ;-D

Olympus digital camera

I stacked all the photos up until it starts to zoom out. (a little more than half of a little less than 200 photos) Check out the timelapse video a few posts back.

to the competition

 

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Evening in the Stacks 2017 : An International Affair. Howard County Library System (HCLS) celebrates cultures of the world and the diversity of our community at the 2017 Evening in the Stacks: An International Affair. This year’s glamorous night of colorful entertainment and enlightening insights featured an intriguing conversation with author Nadia Hashimi. Ms. Hashimi discussed her international bestselling work, The Pearl That Broke Its Shell along with her other novels set in Afghanistan, including her newest book A House Without Windows. Held Saturday, February 25, 2017 at Charles E. Miller Branch & Historical Center.

Stackable Patio Furniture Obelisk

Stackable Patio Furniture Obelisk amazing picture

Stackable Patio Furniture Obelisk great idea

Stackable Patio Furniture Obelisk image

Stackable Patio Furniture Obelisk nice idea

Stackable Patio Furniture Obelisk picture

Looking for Stackable Patio Furniture...

 

patiofurniture.site/stackable-patio-furniture-obelisk/

Noticed these whilst in one of my favorite area's of Singapore... Little India.

 

Best viewed large and on black

I must say I listen to music whenever I can and in fact I still have a few of my old CDs lying around!

 

Flickr Lounge - Weekly Theme (Week 19) ~ Stacked ...

 

Thanks to everyone who views this photo, adds a note, leaves a comment and of course BIG thanks to anyone who chooses to favourite my photo .... Thanks to you all.

South Stack Lighthouse, Anglesey.

South Stack is set in a spectacular location to the north-west of Holyhead. The lighthouse acts as a waymark for coastal traffic and a landmark and orientation light for vessels crossing the Irish Sea to and from the ports of Holyhead and Dun Laoghaire.

 

History of the lighthouse

 

In 1645 when lighthouses were privately owned, King Charles II was petitioned for a patent to build a lighthouse on South Stack. The request was refused. However, 143 years after the original petition, Trinity House leased South Stack island and construction of the lighthouse commenced. On 9 February 1809, the station's oil lamps, designed by Daniel Alexander at a cost of £12,000, were first lit. In 1828 an iron suspension bridge was built to replace the rope catwalk that originally linked the lighthouse to the bottom of the 400 steps down the cliff face.

 

This was one of the many changes that have taken place at South Stack since 1809. The lights regularly became more efficient and in 1938 electric power replaced the oil that powered the lamps. In 1964 the iron bridge was taken down and a new one of aluminium was put up in its place.

 

The lighthouse was automated in 1984, and the keepers withdrawn. Today, the lighthouse is monitored and controlled by computer link from Trinity House Operations Centre in Harwich, Essex.

South Stack Lighthouse is built on the summit of a small island off the north-west coast of Holy Island, Anglesey, Wales. It was built in 1809 to warn ships of the dangerous rocks below.

 

The 91-foot (28 m)-tall lighthouse on South Stack was designed by Daniel Alexander and the main light is visible to passing vessels for 24 nmi (44 km; 28 mi), and was designed to allow safe passage for ships on the treacherous Dublin–Holyhead–Liverpool sea route. It provides the first beacon along the northern coast of Anglesey for east-bound ships.

 

Visitors can climb to the top of the lighthouse and tour the engine room and exhibition area. The lighthouse is open seasonally at the bottom of a 400 step path!

On the grounds of Fort Knox in Maine.

Stacked Platonic Solids reflected in a mirror.

Building bricks stacked in a pile near Huatulco, Mexico.

 

© Rob Huntley

Waterfall Stack.

What should I do with all those waterfall photos? I tried to make something experimaental again. This is a stack of 54 very similar photos. Nothing is sharp, but interestungly the pattern comes out very good. It's an waterfall abstract, maybe showing the essence?

This fun display was near the entrance to the park. I just liked the simple stack of these jack o lanterns.

Ibis Styles Hotel Gare de l'est Chateau Landon, Paris 10e

Proof that stacking on comet vs stacking on stars does make a difference, even for slow-moving comets.

 

This is comet C/2013 R1 (Lovejoy) on December 22, 2013.

Life jackets for all Oath-takers!

set of stack of white paper on white background.

Long gone to the streets...

Big here.

The sign on a Condo building called Bookmen Stacks in the North Loop.

I did the first 8- he did the top 9!

Stack of One Hundred Dollar Bills U.S.

This guy stacked these stones with out the use of any adhesives.

 

San Diego, CA 10/2011

Pembrokeshire. Home to many guillemots, noisy ones too, and smelly with the wind in the right direction!

The aerosol stack for the ARM Mobile Facility (AMF) stands ready to collect measurements during the second deployment of the AMF in Niamey, Niger.

 

From January 2006 – 2007, the ARM Mobile Facility (AMF) supported the Radiative Atmospheric Divergence using AMF, GERB, and AMMA Stations (RADAGAST) field campaign conducted in Niamey, Niger. The purpose of the experiment was to study dust storms, specifically their impact on incoming solar energy and monsoon generation.

 

Terms of Use: Our images are freely and publicly available for use with the credit line, “Image courtesy of the U.S. Department of Energy Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) user facility.”

caroline in the city: the home t

I was walking down a little street in Santa Fe, New Mexico and through an iron fence saw this yard. There was a nice stack of red rocks and a lovely statue in the background. Even though I'm not a big fan of New Mexico, I do really appreciate all the artwork that lines the city streets of Santa Fe.

40m tall chimney stack, remnant of the old copper mine in Burraga. Built in the late 1800's, closed down in the early 1900's.

47km from Oberon, NSW.

 

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