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A water pump in Lewes, Sussex.
Created in 1874 by subscription, meaning it was built or created through donations or payments made by a group of people. I can't find any info to show how long it was used for, but it's good to see the cup on its chain is still there.
It looks to have been restored at some point during the 1800s as well, but it's difficult to see the date.
My latest London visit was Last Saturday 2nd December. I led a group of 15 from Bognor Regis Camera Club for an Architecture and Night Photography trip round the City of London. This was also my first shoot with my new Camera a Sony Alpha 68 bought a week ago. This shot was taken on the South Bank by the Millennium Bridge looking towards St Paul’s Cathedral. The bridge was designed to line up perfectly with the Cathedral Dome.
The new camera was a little overdue. My trusty Sony A700 was first released in 2007 and bought second hand in 2012 while the A68 was released in 2016. The Camera takes the same lenses and is a crop sensor though with much higher resolution and far better focusing. One problem I had to resolve was that as I use Photoshop CS5 the Camera Raw available cannot recognise the cameras files. As I was determined not to be forced by Adobe into their subscription system another RAW editor was required. A little research turned up a little known RAW editor, Capture One, which is better than Camera RAW which is increasingly used by professionals. Even better is that it is free for Sony users though it costs £250 for other file types. It also does HDR type editing and a catalogue system similar to Lightroom. I wanted a simpler workflow for single images and found that I could use the right click menu to open a single RAW file, process it, export as a TIFF and then edit further in Photoshop
The picture was taken on a tripod with a Sony A68 with a Sigma 10-20 mm lens at 17mm. No HDR but one image RAW processed in Capture One including Dynamic range editing. Then processed in Photoshop include Topaz DeNose and Adjust.
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So happy Today ❤ Have a nice week Flickr Friends!
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The village of Rushbury is roughly five miles from Church Stretton and eight miles from Much Wenlock. The founding date of the parish church is unknown, but according to British Listed Buildings it was most likely built around Saxon times. There was a major rebuild in the 12th century. The name St Peter was known by around 1740. Between 1548-1792 the church belonged to the lord of Rushbury manor. In the 1800s the rector of Rushbury received £40 a year in half of grain and corn tithes from the local population. It is known that in 1716 there were two Sunday services, one with a sermon and communion six times a year. In the mid 18th century, sacrament offerings (charity money) were given to the poor.
The Grade II*-listed church was restored in 1855-1856 by William Hill of Smethcott with the costs being met by subscriptions and grants from the Hereford Diocesan Church Building Society. The registers begin in 1538, but there are several gaps in the 16th and 17th centuries.
I am not going to renew my subscription to flickr, if you like my job and want to follow me , pleas join me on:
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You can own your own copy of this build! I am excited to announce that I am featured as the first AFOL in Brickloot's new, Lego only, V.I.B. subscription box!
For a limited time you can get 20% if you use code: FORLORNEMPIRE
If you want one, act soon, I think they aim to start shipping them around the 20th or so!
The Roundhouse was erected in 1794 by the Kymin Club as a picnic house for its members, people prominent in Monmouth society. They met on Tuesdays, 'dining together in a social and friendly manner'. Built on the highest point of The Kymin to take advantage of the astonishing views, particularly those to the west, over the town and towards the mountains around Abergavenny. Nelson and the Hamiltons breakfasted here in 1802. Monmouthshire County Council gave the building to the National Trust in 1902 after a public subscription. recently restored by National Trust when converted back from a dwelling to its appearance at the time of Nelson.
Miscellaneous shots from recent trips to London... 4 posts.
St. Johns school in Wapping, founded in 1695 with Girls and Boys segregated - long before the term "gender neutral" was ever thought of! A lot of Wapping has recently been redeveloped so it was pleasing to find a few buildings being preserved and showing things as they used to be...
For those that haven't yet been informed through Facebook or my website, I will be moving to a subscription based model for photo viewing. The move has been prompted by health concerns and the increasing, copyright infringement of my photos. I will still be posting to Flickr but at a reduced amount. You can read more about it here: rainforests.smugmug.com/Members-only/Subscription-members
Many thanks for your understanding and all the support.
Okay, that's just a BIT of a markdown. 1 year of the Wall Street Journal AND all online for 99 bucks, down from 576. HALP!
A 24mm wide angle low level tilt view of Stroud Subscription Rooms, Stroud, Gloucestershire, England.
Here is a peek at our product in the upcoming subscription crate, Upgrades 1.0, from Second Life Syndicate! An all Sci-Fi themed crate with 6 designers bringing you all original content.
You can purchase your Pre-Order on our Marketplace store or at our in world location.
Full release is on June 1st.
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Buxton, Derbyshire.
The tower was built in 1896, funded by public subscription, to replace a previous rough structure that had been built in 1820 to provide work for the unemployed.
NEWCASTLE CO DOWN WALK ABOUT ON 29-05-2022 ..................The name of the town is thought to derive from the castle built by Felix Magennis of the Magennis clan in 1588, which stood at the mouth of the Shimna River. This castle was demolished in 1830.[4][5] The town is referred to as New Castle in the Annals of the Four Masters in 1433, so it is likely that he built on the site of an existing structure.[6][7][8]
The Montgomery Manuscripts record that Newcastle was besieged and later captured by Sir James Montgomery of the Ards in April 1642 in the aftermath of the 1641 Rebellion (pp. 128–134). Prior to 1641 the Castle belonged to the Magennis', but after the rebellion the property was confiscated and granted to Robert Hawkins, great grandfather to Robert Hawkins who assumed the surname of Magill. The date 1588 was inscribed on a stone placed over the front entrance of the Castle, built by Felix Magenis. Newcastle passed from the Magills to the Mathews, and subsequently to the Annesleys. In the late 1700s the Castle was modernised by the Matthews and then the Annesleys, and rented by the Board of Customs for the accommodation of revenue officers. Around 1830 the castle was demolished and the 'Annesley Arms Hotel' was constructed within the original castle compound. The 3rd Earl Annesley built a new 'marine residence', called 'Donard Lodge' on the lower mountain slope above the town (it was demolished in 1966). St. John's Church was also opened on 'The Rock' in 1832 to accommodate the visitors and growing population in Earl Annesley's developing seaside resort.
The Newcastle fishing disaster occurred on 13 January 1843 when boats from Newcastle and Annalong set out for the usual fishing stations, and were caught in a gale. 14 boats were lost in the heavy seas including a boat which had gone to the rescue. Only two boats survived, the Victoria and the Brothers.[9] 73 men perished, 46 of whom were from Newcastle. They left twenty-seven widows, one hundred and eighteen children, and twenty-one dependents. A Public Subscription was raised and the cottages, known as Widows Row, were built for the widows and dependents.[10][11] A local song about the disaster says "Newcastle town is one long street entirely stripped of men"[12]
In 1910 Harry Ferguson flew a small plane across Newcastle beach in one of the first engine powered flights by aircraft in Ireland. He completed the flight in an attempt to win a £100 prize offered by the town for the first powered flight along the strand. His first take off ended badly, but according to a modern newspaper report 'He flew a distance of almost three miles along the foreshore at a low altitude varying between fifty and five hundred feet'. This event is recorded by a plaque on the promenade.
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I feel as though I've broken free from a self induced mind trap this week. You see, as retirement gets closer, on my hour long drives to work in the early hours of the morning I had begun to ruminate about "where am I with my photography". My spirit still feels as though I am 30, but my aches and pains tell my mind that I am old, and that is where I was feeling like I've been left at the starting gate with photography. Added to that feeling was the realization that as my wife and I plan our retirements out financially life is still throwing curve balls at us with a couple of expensive home repairs (I suppose buying an older home those will come up). So the thought of having to upgrade my 10 year old computer now because the newest version of Photoshop wouldn't run on my system was weighing on me as well. BUT then lightening struck! I had not realized that even though Adobe is a cloud based monthly subscription and would not update on my ancient Mac that I could still use older versions that WOULD work.
After figuring this out I feel revitalized and I have also realized that even though I cannot hike as quickly as I once could with a bag of gear, I can now enjoy the details along the journey. :-)
1. overdrive
2. thrillseeker
3. bucketlist
4. Big Brother is watching you
5. Close Encounters of the third kind
6. You need to clean your window
Recently restored Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad Subscription Club Car no. 2454 is seen on the end of the Whippany Railway Museum's excursion train on May 19, 2024, during the museum's 175th Anniversary of the CNJ event. Originally built by Barney & Smith in 1912 as open platform subscription car 484, the car was converted to a vestibule-equipped multiple unit (MU) trailer in the 1930s by American Car & Foundry. It was one of only five MU subscription cars built for the railroad, and operated on a service between Hoboken and Gladstone catering to the wealthy members of the club. Notably the car was the only Lackawanna MU to ever receive air conditioning, and was the lead car on multiple farewell runs for these cars, including the very last NJ Transit train that used the Lackawanna MUs in 1984. Car 2454 was acquired by the United Railway Historical Society of NJ, which began restoration of it in 2014. Exterior restoration was completed by 2018 and the car was moved to Whippany in 2019, where interior restoration would take place, coming to completion in 2021.
About
It was raised by public subscription as a memorial for Sir William L. Merewether, who served as 'Commissioner-in-Sindh'[1] from 1867 to 1877.
It is important landmark at the confluence of I I Chundrigar Road (previously McLeod Road) and M A Jinnah Road (previously Bunder Road).
Designed by James Strachan, the Municipal Engineer, the foundation stone was laid by the Governor of Bombay, Sir James Fergusson in 1884. It was formally opened to the public in 1892 by the Commissioner in Sind, Sir Evan James.
The Tower stands on a base of 44 feet square and rises to a height of 102 feet.
For More Great Info about Merewether Memorial Tower Visit the Following link you will love it and Know more about the Besutiful City My Karachi the City of Lights =)
forum.kalpoint.com/1241952-post26.html
The Shot
Three Exposure Shot (-2)(0)(+2)
Photomatix
Tonemapped generated HDR using detail enhancer option
Photoshop
Basic Adjustments , tools , Frames & Logo.
You
All comments, criticism and tips for improvements are (as always) welcome
Music : Listen it to View beautiful Karachi my City =)
www.youtube.com/watch?v=32HtNYoWyT4
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Atif (Xploiter ™) © All rights reserved.
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Coastal sunset scene from Saint-Malo (France).
This photo is offered under a standard Creative Commons License - Attribution 3.0 Unported. It gives you a lot of freedom to use my work commercially as long as you credit and link back to this image on my Flickr page.
Flickr resolution: 1800 x 1200 px
Also available for download at 5000 x 3333 px on my Patreon page, an ever-growing collection of high res images for one low monthly subscription fee. You can find this specific photo at the following post:
The subscription for the Winter Season of Unlimited began on December 1st and subscribers are already reaping benefits! Here's what you get, so far:
1. MadPea Magical Toy Rescue Unlimited HUD with exclusive train vehicle and 6 colored wands!
2. Daily toy prizes! Collect all the hunt toys to keep forever - just walk through the Magical Doorway!
Lots more content coming! Don't miss out on everything Unlimited has to offer. Join TODAY - the earlier you do, the more value you get!
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Introducing Luxe Box: an exclusive monthly subscription box with deluxe items from your favorite designers!
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Pay the fee to join the Luxe Box group in-world every month. The group opens on the 1st of the month and you have until the 15th of the month to join. You must join and remain in the group to receive your Luxe Box.
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On the 15th of the month, group enrollment closes. Stay in the group to receive your Luxe Box through a group notice on the 15th of the month.
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last month of the subscription [that went fast!] going out early this month as i'll be out of town. subscription to be back later this year in time for the holidays!
I am currently familiarising myself with Luminar Neo, for which I have purchased a two-year subscription, having become a little tired of the increasing cost of maintaining my ON1 Photo RAW product for seemingly minor incremental gains in capability. As part of my familiarisation, I decided to look at testing background removal and layer masking by taking a previously posted shot (‘Done Shopping’) and making an ‘Adamski Effect’ image out of it.
The Adamski Effect uses multiple images, combined to create a single, composite image. The most common application is to render one element of the photo in focus, with the remainder of the image subjected to motion add/or gaussian blur effects. It is named after the Polish photographer and digital artist Antoni Adamski.
The original image was shot using a (manual focus) Samyang 85mm f/1.4 lens mounted to a A7 with using a Pentax K mount adapter form Fotodiox. It was shot at f/1.4 with and exposure of 1/400that ISO 400.
Copyright © Dave Sexton. All Rights Reserved.
This image is protected under international copyright laws and agreements. No part of the image or the Flickr Photostream to which is belongs may be reproduced, stored in retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the Copyright owner’s prior permission.
Dozens of photos from this event, never bothered putting them up on Flickr till Covid house arrest made me trawl through old HDs looking for anything to post up to justify pay my Flickr monthly subscription.
Thanks for your views comments and faves.
The Euroa Public Hall in Railway Street was built in 1884 in red-brick by Maurice Garrett at a cost of £1537, raised by public subscription. From 1920 it has been known as the Memorial Hall when Edward Stribling presented it to the R.S.L.
It originally incorporated a number of shops and
offices.
Built in 1813 by a local farmer to mill grain, this mill has 3 floors and was built to a Lincolnshire style. It has 4 sails and an Ogee cap with an 8 bladed fantail.
There are 3 sets of mill stones, 2 of which are wind driven and 1 set which are driven from an external engine.
In 1884 the mill was extended and gained an extra floor.
The windmill has continued to work from the day it was built up to present day.