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Abandoned fishing boats and workshops on the shore in Dungeness.

Workshops by the canal basin. National Waterways Museum Ellesmere Port England. Hasselblad X1D

Massingy. Bourgogne. France.

Steam Workshop Budapest

MÁV No. 22.034 (275.034), class 275, 1'B1't, built 1929, max. speed 70 km/h

Today i finished my Workshop. For this build i was going through a lot of boxes with old Lego and found some interesting pieces to use. I put a lot of work in all the details and i hope it shows!

Ride the Wild Goat, Fish Creek Victoria

The Setup: Setting up a scene for a Halloween photo. Presenting the "Workshop of Horrors - where creepy is created". ♥

A beautiful workshop is reflected in a pond in the owners yard along with flowers and a swing

I took this slide in February 1977 and restored it and then changed the image and then turned it into a monochrome.

 

I'm fairly sure that's a Mercedes 1418 in front and it's a Scania 111 to the right nodding at us.

 

Both the workshop and the car park next to it have long been replaced by housing.

...at Erddig - National Trust Property near Wrexham.

At least I know where to go if I need to borrow a chisel...

I went on a workshop to Dean Mason's "Windows on Wildlife" down in Wimborne, Dorset.

He operates under a DEFRA license and so far this year has been able to introduce over 40 harvest mice into the wild.

If you are looking for a workshop where the owner cares for his mice, then this is it!

This was taken on my recent workshop in the Lake District and I'm not exactly sure where we were at the time - but somewhere down below that rainbow is Grassmere and I think that the hill in the background might be Grey Crag?

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Plymouth, Devon, England

captured in the abandoned Saw Mill E. (2015)

Iniciando Retratos com Pamela Machado.

Hey everyone! Here's a vig I made the other day for the Wandering Skies contest. Pretty happy with how this one turned out. I also made a small airship for the contest, so be looking for that soon! As I was building this I kinda imagined it as a corner of a workshop where my character builds his ship, so I included a few bits that will be included on the airship in this build.

 

Thanks for looking!

 

All glory to my Savior Jesus Christ!

Carter

New workshops released. Everything from a 4 day epic, processing or 1/2 day specialised workshops coming up.

 

4 day Hero Holiday at Mt Cook Oct 20-23rd

Landscapes 1/2 day on 26th August

Seascapes 1/2 day July 22nd

Astro 1/2 day on 24th June

And learn how to process them all with a 1/2 day on Lightroom or Photoshop on 12th August

 

Check them all out at www.heroworkshops.com/workshops

 

Posted with Photerloo

 

Workshops Book here

 

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Prints available at www.rjd.co.nz

This project began two years ago with the idea of a smithing workshop located on the inner corner of a building. To keep the house compact and have the chminey on a senseful place, a T-shaped building was the logical consequence. But I wanted to avoid a right angle between both wings of the building.

I started by building the workshop and the front door. Then added the oriel with the stained glass window as second step.

Getting all the angles right at the short roof sections of both oriels was quiet challenging.

I'm interrupting my series to show a few photos from my workshop in USA. I tell people that usually the first photos don't work and we all need a warm up. Well this time I liked the first photo taken at the workshop.

Hey you amazing Flickr people! So thankful to all of you for the kind words, comments and follows!

 

I usually do nothing but share pictures here, but wanted to let you all know that I do workshops and tours, and right now I have ONE spot left for this summer in Tucson, AZ for my monsoon workshops:

www.mikeolbinski.com/monsoon-workshop/

 

If you have any interest, please let me know!

This photo was shot during the Tuscany November 2019 photo workshop. See my photo workshops here www.hanskrusephotography.com/Hans-Kruse-Photo-Workshops/W...

In the clapper workshop at John Taylor& Co Bell Foundry in Loughborough.

26 / 01 / 20

 

What a day!! Well done everyone. The work you made during today's Light Painting Workshop is just amazing.

 

To receive an Info Pack about my Workshops please fire me an email.

 

Web: www.DavidGilliver.com

Email: hello@davidgilliver.com

Fairbuilt Guitar Company

Strike a pose

 

Sempre digo que fotografar é um vicio muito , muito contagioso...

Até minha gata aprendeu a gostar.

 

Foto: Renata Baião

momento certo, foto perfeita

obrigada querida, ficou linda!

La piazza (già detta piazza dei Sapiti, che fu creata all'inizio del XX secolo con l'abbattimento di un edificio ad opera di un benefattore inglese che voleva dare maggior aria e luce ad un dedalo di viuzze che ancor oggi caratterizza questa parte della città).

Solo nel maggio 2005 la piazza è stata ribattezzata ufficialmente con il suo nomignolo popolare per iniziativa dell'assessore Eugenio Giani. La ridenominazione ha portato a polemiche[3] relative all'opportunità di istituzionalizzare un simile toponimo, dal momento che a Firenze si indica con il termine "passera" l'organo genitale femminile.

Riguardo alle origini del toponimo, ci sono due diverse versioni. La prima fa riferimento alla presenza in loco di un'antica e rinomata casa di tolleranza (pare frequentato persino dal granduca Cosimo I de' Medici), il cui rudere fu appunto demolito negli anni venti del XX secolo.

Peraltro anche nella vicina Via dei Vellutini fino agli anni venti del XX secolo esisteva un altro bordello, che potrebbe essere all'origine del rinnovato nomignolo popolare della neo-realizzata "piazza dei Sapiti". Va detto che questo non è l'unico toponimo "sconveniente" dello stradario fiorentino, basti pensare a Via dell'Amorino (un tempo strada di case di tolleranza), Via delle Belle Donne, Via delle Serve Smarrite (oggi Via del Parlagio) e Via Vergognosa (oggi Via Borgognona; anch'essa sede un tempo di alcuni postriboli).

Una seconda ipotesi, supportata anche dallo storico Piero Bargellini (che però riguardava in antico un'altra piazza di Firenze), fa riferimento ad un evento del 1348: in quell'anno alcuni bambini del quartiere trovarono in questa piazza una passera morente e, credendo che fosse stata vittima di qualche monello o di un gatto, cercarono di salvarla senza riuscirci. La storia finì tragicamente, perché il volatile era ammalato di peste e questo fu l'inizio della tragica epidemia, descritta da Giovanni Boccaccio nel Decameron che doveva portare in pochi mesi alla morte di 40.000 fiorentini su 96.000 ed al crollo della potenza economica della città.

da Wikipedia

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