View allAll Photos Tagged vinegar

The bottles reminded me of Picasso's figures before his cubist stage, so I did some photo editing on the background and details to make the photo look more Picasso-ish. I don't know the artist name but I found the bottles at the Arts on Ten gallery in Flesherton, Ontario. The town is a haven for artists and a great place to visit. Source of textures: mostly mine and some pic monkey.

This was a happy experiment. I have very little experience with film photography and was pretty apprehensive about shooting towards a light source. I remember compensating a little for the extra light and opted for a slightly quicker shutter speed.

 

The image was taken in the historic kitchen at Ham House. Ham House is a National Trust property located on the River Thames near Richmond, London.

 

Location: Ham House, Richmond, London

Date & time: 07/04/18 - 14:30

Camera: Olympus OM-1 MD

Lens: Zuiko 50mm F1.8

Film: Ilford HP5 PLUS 400

Aperture: F5.6

Shutter speed: 1/250

The Shard and St. Thomas ' hospital just behind London Bridge station.

Coffee shops and fancy priced beers but a great location.

37719 wheels the 6V14 Hull Saltend - Baglan Bay acetic acid empties past Newport Alexandra dock junction yard.

No mistaking this service - even the empties had a pungent odour of vinegar (acetic acid) as they passed.

The lines to the left were freight only at the time and lead to Ebbw Vale tinplate and Galvanising works and to Machen Quarry which produced rail ballast

July 1996 dated shot

Hand drawn measured drawing, scanned and edited using illustrator, hopefully will be screen printed :-)

#AbFavFood

 

In one of my favourite shops. I often said a creative is usually creative in more than one area, like they say in Flemish: "creativity crawls where it cannot walk".

So, yes I love to be creative in the kitchen, and love to use different vinegars in salads, let them complement each other.

This shop displays a wall of them, and that is where I stock up on Chardonnay and Champagne vinegar and also Tomato-pulp vinegar.... YUM

I do not seem to find these in the UK. This is in Belgium.

 

THANK you for ALL your comments and visits, so appreciated, M, (*_*)

 

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Film: Kodak Ektar 100

Based on a few minutes with Google image search, this is my tentative ID. He landed on the leaves of the hibiscus I was sitting next to.

My favorite gf bread w/ salty olive oil and balsamic vinegar :)

Balsamico chicken with cauliflower

This is another of my wet cyanotype prints. A photogram of a geranium leaf from the garden. The paper was pre-treated with traditional cyanotype chemistry and left to dry. The leaf was placed on top and then a very dilute solution of white vinegar and water was splashed on to the paper before being covered with glass and exposed outdoors for 6 hours in full sun. The print was then rinsed in running water to remove excess chemicals and soaked in several clean water baths for about an hour to remove any excess chemicals and remaining vinegar.

Vinegar Yard at London Bridge.

The Battle of Vinegar Hill (Irish: Cath Chnoc Fhíodh na gCaor), was an engagement during the Irish Rebellion of 1798 on 21 June 1798 when over 15,000 British soldiers launched an attack on Vinegar Hill outside Enniscorthy, County Wexford, the largest camp and headquarters of the Wexford United Irish rebels. It marked a turning point in the rebellion, as it was the last attempt by the rebels to hold and defend ground against the British military. The battle was actually fought in two locations: on Vinegar Hill itself and in the streets of nearby Enniscorthy.

More information: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Vinegar_Hill

 

Vinegar Hill, Enniscorthy, County Wexford, Ireland

Late Victorian-30s Whitehouse vinegar bottle

The Bae Blog Post/Entry 003

The Fit

CandyDoll

Meangles Can Salt & Vinegar

 

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20251027_0643_R62-105 Champions Vinegar bottle

 

For this week's Crazy Tuesday theme: Bottle(s)

 

An old bottle found in the shed.

 

#16499

 

DAY 4

  

back in the busy, commercial streets, I find the shop I’m looking for. One of my favourites.

Not only am I creative with photography but also in the kitchen. I love to experiment, I love salads so I need oils and vinegars.

Here you can taste all kinds of specialties, tapenade and other spreads

One of the top ones is Champagne vinegar and Chardonnay vinegar not easy to find.

But at Oil&Vinegar, THEY have it! Here you can also fill your bottle, in the size you want.

A wall of different oils and vinegars, so well presented, wow I’m in heaven, lol.

Taking home some goodies!

  

Have a wonderful day, filled with love and beauty, M, (*_*)

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Port Orchard Farmers Market

macro 100 + bague allonge 31

vinegar hill is so weird

Film: Kodak Ektar 100

The Flickr Lounge-Bottles

 

This is a very old Vinegar bottle that Stu had many years ago.

Near the entrance to Vintgar Gorge (soteska Vintgar) one morning with mist hovering over the River Radovna, near Bled, Slovenia.

In Lightroom I de-saturated all the colors except for the ones I wanted to keep.

Immingham's 37885 on 6V14 07:30 Hull Saltend - Baglan Bay Acetic Acid Tanks at Water Orton 02/06/1995

Details:

Camera: Canon EOS 5D Mk II

Lens: Canon EF 70-200mm f/2.8L IS USM

Exposure: 3 exposures (-2,0,+2 EV)

Aperture: f/18

Focal Length: 190mm

ISO Speed: 100

Accessories: Manfrotto 190XB Tripod, Manfrotto 322RC2 Heavy Duty Grip Ball Head, Canon RC1 Wireless Remote

Date and Time: 16 January 2010 8.57pm

 

Post Processing:

Imported into Lightroom

Exported 3 exposures to Photomatix

Tonemap generated HDR using detail enhancer option

Opened HDR in CS3

Contrast adjustment

Unsharp mask filter

Imported into Lightroom

Cropped in Lightroom

Added keyword metadata

Exported as JPEG

 

From Wikipedia:

 

The Skipping Girl Sign or Skipping Girl Vinegar Sign, originally known as Little Audrey, is possibly the first animated neon sign in Australia, located in Victoria Street in the inner Melbourne suburb of Abbotsford.

 

The sign is a painted metal structure depicting a little girl skipping rope. At night it is outlined in neon, and the rope lights up in four positions in sequence giving the appearance of skipping.

 

It was erected at the Nycander factory on 627 Victoria Street in 1936 to advertise their "Skipping Girl" brand of vinegar, and was immediately popular, and became a well loved landmark. The sign was removed in 1968 when the factory was demolished, and following a public outcry, a smaller version was built in 1970 and placed on the roof of the 1930s Crusader Plate factory nearby at 651 Victoria Street.

 

The 1970 version was listed by the National Trust (Victoria) in 2000, about the same time the sign ceased operating.

 

In May 2008, an appeal was launched for public donations to restore the sign by AGL, the National Trust (Victoria), the Heritage Council of Victoria, the Melbourne Restoration Fund, 'Friends of Audrey', the public and the Skipping Girl owners representative, Spring & Parks Pty Ltd.

Vinegar Cup / helvella acetabulum. Straws Bridge, Ilkeston, Derbyshire. 26/04/18.

 

Yet another different view, (my last!), of a Vinegar Cup fungus I found almost one year ago. Viewed large, you can see some holes in the wall of the cup where invertebrates, probably slugs, had eaten it.

 

BEST VIEWED LARGE.

37667"Meldon Quarry Centenary" passes Somerton on 16/July/2001 with the Hull to Baglan bay empty vinegar tanks.

The Battle of Vinegar Hill (Irish: Cath Chnoc Fhíodh na gCaor), was an engagement during the Irish Rebellion of 1798 on 21 June 1798 when over 15,000 British soldiers launched an attack on Vinegar Hill outside Enniscorthy, County Wexford, the largest camp and headquarters of the Wexford United Irish rebels. It marked a turning point in the rebellion, as it was the last attempt by the rebels to hold and defend ground against the British military. The battle was actually fought in two locations: on Vinegar Hill itself and in the streets of nearby Enniscorthy.

More information: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Vinegar_Hill

 

Vinegar Hill, Enniscorthy, County Wexford, Ireland

Historic cabin situated in Paris Gibson Park, Great Falls, MT.

 

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