View allAll Photos Tagged sundaypost

184-186 Fleet Street, London EC4, late c19-early c20.

186 is the Dundee Courier Building.

Sally Adams

 

70, 5 foot high statues of the Scottish cartoon character "Oor Wullie" were cast and decorated by various artists. Here he's dolled up as Marilyn Monroe.

 

City Square, Dundee.

Stuart McAlpine Miller

 

70, 5 foot high statues of the Scottish cartoon character "Oor Wullie" were cast and decorated by various artists.

 

Here, Wullie is hidden among many other characters. Refers to "Where's Wally?"

 

City Square, Dundee.

 

One eye actually is slightly higher than the other.

A review of Pafos, published in the Sunday Post newspaper

On the left is the clock of St Dunstan-in-the-West church. The figures ringing the two bells are perhaps meant to represent the giants Gog and Magog. The clock was installed on the church in 1671, and was the first public clock in London to have a minute hand. The original church was demolished in 1828; at this time, the clock was removed to a mansion in Regent’s Park. It was restored to the rebuilt church in 1935 to mark the Silver Jubilee of King George V.

 

On the right are the old London offices of D. C. Thomson & Co., the Dundee-based publishers of the Sunday Post, the People’s Friend, the People’s Journal, and the Dundee Courier.

Interview with Peter Ivins from Peter Ivins Eye Care in the Sunday Post, June 3 2012.

 

"Our eyes are rated as our most attractive feature but most people take them for granted until they fail. Leading Scots optometrist Peter Ivins lectures in eye health. He told Janet Boyle The Honest Truth about the windows to our soul."

April 17th 2011 The Sunday Post, not delivered but dumped in Castlehill Road, Carluke

Ellen Brown

 

Based on the William Morris textile design. The strawberry thieves are the thrushes. Brown also helped with the artwork of the iPad game of the same name developed by the V&A museum.

Taken with the Nikon L830, using as a starter camera so i can handle the basics

Scanned on 02/04/2023.

Taken from a photocopy of a 'Sunday Post' page dated 28th April 1946.

My copy is A3 sized and too big for my scanner but I don't think anything has been lost in these scans.

The fold lines were on the original newsprint.

I found this and other copies inside the cover of a book and had forgotten they were there.

Michael Hansen and Kate Wright, 4J Studios Ltd.

 

70, 5 foot high statues of the Scottish cartoon character "Oor Wullie" were cast and decorated by various artists.

 

Based on the character Creeper from the game Minecraft. 4J Studios were involved in the development of the console version of the game.

 

City Square, Dundee.

Rather pleasingly, given most newspapers have departed Fleet Street, this remains the London office of D C Thomson.

Herrett_080408_0023

Former offices of Sunday Post, People's Friend, and People's Journal in Fleet Street, London

  

Copyright © Roberto Herrett. All rights reserved.

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Almost a year old...

She's become a little devil in the making... Love her so much

Craigatin House & Courtyard #Pitlochry makes The Good Hotel Guide's top 10 of the most stylish B&Bs in Scotland! www.sundaypost.com/fp/the-good-hotel-guide-picks-out-10-o...

Pat was the first working-class woman on TV who was seen as Coronation Streets first sex symbol. A lady which working-class women admired and idolised to be.

 

Image & Source | www.sundaypost.com/fp/pat-was-britains-first-soap-siren/

- goodbye? - I doubt it! - would like to think I've taken this pic for 'posterity' but methinks the only things that really matter to some are power and money and soon there will, unfortunately, be a mk2 version of this right wing, xenophobic and misogynistic 'newspaper'......... (rant over....)

This poor animal was sadly put down as he had been attacked by some thugs with an air rifle in the car park above Loch Tulla onthe A82.

 

www.sundaypost.com/news3.htm

  

cartoon, Oor Wullie, Sunday Post

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