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Look out world. I'm off work and ready to party! In the mood for maybe Ohana Rock Club.
(Not edited)
The lower sections of the facade walls painted with several layers of paint called aged concrete. I worked on it all afternoon and evening.
Work has just commenced in cutting back the vegetation growth around the area of Poulton No.3 signalbox at Poulton-le-Fylde Junction, the former line to Fleetwood, the next phase in the electrification work being carried out between Preston and Blackpool North. On Tuesday 7th February 2017 contractors are busy shredding vegetation from the cutting on the former Fleetwood line as Northern 156 440 passes forming the 1N62 12:29 Manchester Airport to Blackpool North service. The line to Fleetwood was closed to passengers in 1970 and to freight services in 1999, but the home signal still remains in place and has now been revealed with cut back of growth!
Further information on the signalbox can be found here:
www.flickr.com/photos/ingythewingy/7956732122/in/photolis...
And the preservation society here: www.pwrs.org/about/history/
© Gordon Edgar - All rights reserved. Please do not use my images without my explicit permission
During the last year we were fortunate enough to have some garden space to escape from the house (we indeed camped in the garden for a few weeks). Over winter we were more house bound, but now we have a warmish spell (it was literally double figures!) we have escaped to the garden again.
This photo in part me testing the eye focus on the X100F, which I'd never thought to try before, mostly as I don't take many people pictures. But the few pictures I'd taken of people in the spur of the moment do tend to have the face slightly out of focus, so I figured it was time to try use this new technology. This photo has the camera set to its shallowest depth of field and the photo has the face perfectly in focus, so job done!
Holzarbeiten - Verkaufsausstellung während eines Festes im Freilich-Museums-Gelände Hessenpark im Taunus.
Big monstroctopus custom. :D Can’t really tell by this photo but he’s a big one. About 2 1/2 feet antler to antler.
I have been on a knitting kick lately. The project in purple is a linen sweater inspired by a Nicky Epstein design and the neutral garment in back is a finished dress inspired by a Lily Chin design.
We recently had our departmental holiday luncheon with Secret Santa gift giving. I'm fortunate to work with a really nice group. The pottery yarn bowl was the gift I was given - how thoughtful and beautiful! I'd not used one before. Now, I can't imagine knitting without it. It holds my yarn in place, and I now longer have to chase my yarn out from under my desk after it falls when I'm unraveling more yarn.
For those of my "crafty" friends who are interested, the yarn bowl comes from Ning's Pottery.
Best wishes for the holiday season and the New Year!
Maker: George Seeley (1880-1955)
Born: USA
Active: USA
Medium: photogravure
Size: 8 in x 6 1/4 in
Location: USA
Object No. 2010.160
Shelf: A-7
Publication: Camera Work, XXIX, January, 1910
Photography:the first eighty years, Colnaghi, London, 1976, pg 223
Robert Doty, Photo-Secession, Stieglitz and the Fine-Art Movement in Photography,
Camera Work, The Complete Illustrations 1903-1917, Taschen, 1997 pg 491
Camera Work, A Pictorial Guide, Dover, 1978, pg 76
Robert Doty, Photography as a Fine Art, George Eastman House, Rochester, 1960, pl XXI
Other Collections:
Notes: George Seeley was a student of painting and drawing in Boston when he met Fred Holland Day, who introduced him to the pictorial possibilities of photography. His debut came in 1904, when Seeley exhibited fourteen photographs in the First American Photographic Salon in New York. A reviewer enthused: "Mr. Seeley is the new man for whom we are always on the lookout, and his advent among pictorialists will be the sensation of the year." The statement proved true. Critical of the exhibition but supportive of Seeley's work, Alfred Stieglitz invited Seeley to join the Photo-Secession, with which he remained for six years, exhibiting and publishing his photographs. After the break with Stieglitz's group, declining interest in the Pictorialist aesthetic and the increasing unavailability of platinum paper after World War I contributed to the demise of Seeley's photographic career. He continued to exhibit his work into the 1930s, although he had practically ceased to make new work. An amateur ornithologist who was active in his church, Seeley took up oil painting in his later years and was a correspondent for the local Stockbridge, Massachusetts, newspaper. (Source: The Getty Museum)
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Waited all day for the dishwasher repair man to call, so I had lots of time on my hands. Windows completed and front steps installed.
She is the most spoiled dog. Here she is on with my co-worker Lance. She jumps all the way up onto his shoulders, just to look outside.
Commision work for Kuranosuke
head: NYX Doll Limos
taken by: Sony Xperia Z
I'm doing full service, from skin color matching since it's a hybrid doll, blushing and face up removing, nails painting, face up, and extra scars on his back <3