View allAll Photos Tagged traders
This trader would embroider any name on any fabric of your choice. I was struck with the Salvador Dali like beard and hairstyle he displayed. An artist extraordinaire!
Nomad provide excellent chips and always have a queue!
More about Buddhafield Festival traders on our website.
© Sharon Oliver, Official Festival Photographer 2011
I finally made it to Trader Joe's, just a few blocks from my new apartment. Every once in a while you walk into a store and think, these guys have a good business plan. I arrived ten minutes prior to closing, and there was a flock of people who got off the bus across the street and sprinted in, visibly thankful to have made it before the doors shut. Inside were 300 customers and 250 employees, 549 pairs of really tight jeans, and 700 tattoos. The food is reasonably priced and incredibly well-packaged, it's impossible not to want to buy everything, especially food you'll never eat, so it can just sit in your pantry and look fucking beautiful. The trip inspired the attached craigslist ad.
Trying my new a7rii along with lightroom cc. This is 6 horizontal images stitched together in lr cc. It did a good job but id like to try taking the photo again to get everything in focus.
Sibsey Trader Windmill is one of the few six-sailed mills remaining in England. The mill was built in 1877 by local millwrights Saundersons of Louth, in a typical Lincolnshire style, to replace a small post mill. It is not exceptionally tall, containing only six floors above ground, and the height to the top of the cap is 74 feet 3 inches. The slenderness of the tower, and the flat landscape in which it stands, together create the impression that it is bigger than it actually is, and make the sails, already admittedly large, look enormous.
Source: Sibseytradermill.co.uk
In the early 1960's Remploy ran quite a number of these Thames Trader pantechnicon vans.
This rare colour picture of one was taken in 1964 at an unknown location.
Trader Joe's, Not responsible for damage caused by shopping carts sign Stamford, CT 6/2016, pics by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube
This woman did not speak, but she didn't seem to mind being photographed. Her eyes seem to burn into your soul.
This is a replica of a ship that traded China in the 18th century. The original, named Götheborg, made three trips return, but sunk near Gothenburg harbor about 250 years ago. A replica was made and this is her maiden trip. This ship will sail to south east Asia by South America and Australia, starting in October 2005.
seen at trader jack's. possibly from a wrov radio station contest, where you could call in with confucius sayings and win la choy dinners or a "genuine" rickshaw (though this would hold only children under 10), in honor of the chinese new year in 1968.
This Trader was photographed in Gun Hill Scrapyard about 7 years ago now. It was a petrol powered 2/3 ton tipper, ex local builder in Manningtree. It had sat in that yard about 25 years and the only parts missing of it were the back lights and the bonnet badge. It gave up lots of very useful and extremely hard to obtain spares! The most valuble being a complete set of cab glass!
Continuing with my Colston Project.
To photograph all mentions and commemorations in Bristol to the slave trader Edward Colston and his influence on Bristol.
A row that has freshly been ignited by the recent decision to rename the Colston Hall, Bristol's comparatively small concert venue to a name that does not honour the transatlantic slave trade.