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Great Yarmouth Row 38 is Ferrier Row or Charles Moore's Row. This view looks west. At the eastern end by the market is a blue plaque that states that near this site stood Boulter's Museum 1778-1802.
Until the 2nd World War most Great Yarmouth residents lived in houses in the narrow passages known as The Rows that ran East to West between the river and the sea. The few main streets ran North/South. The Rows date from medieval times and recorded numbers of them have varied over time up to as many as 156.
At one time they were known by names such as after a resident or a business and therefore some had more than one name. A numbering system was introduced and I think this goes up to 145. Some had overhanging buildings and were therefore tunnel-like.
Many of them were destroyed in the 2nd World War and many that are left these days are passageways used as short cuts, although Market Row and Broad Row are lined with shops.
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A reconstruction of a Great Yarmouth Row can be seen in The Time and Tide Museum in Yarmouth showing what life would have been like at one time in one of the rows.
Cathédrale St-Pierre
I'm well and truly in Geneva this week. This is a shot of the nave of St. Peter's Cathedral in the Old Town of Geneva, Switzerland.
Olivia's 38 of 52 on Flickr
Side by side over on the Two and Fifty photoblog...
Em breve as fotos semanais não serão da barriga, mas do bebê.
Soon the weekly pictures will not be from the belly but from the baby.
Photo #38 of 365
Not the most exciting photo I have ever taken, but the best one on this day.
A dramatic Spring morning with heavy clouds and torrential rain one minute, followed quickly by blue sky and sunshine!
Dropped off my daughter Tallulah at her preschool, and saw this rainbow arcing over Mendocino on the way back to the car. Made hast for a better vantage point and got off this one exposure before the rainbow faded.
Ironically, Tallulah's preschool is called Rainbow School, and is located in a building at the base of the white church at the left of the frame.
38/365 ~ Coin Laundry on Maple Street, just off 7th. I love finding the old store fronts and signage in Hendersonville. Some of them like this one were painted on but have stood the test of time. What I really get curious about are those that are carved in stone. Did they really think they were going to be there forever? That no other business would ever inhabit that building? The worst offenders are the banks - I'll post some of those soon.
This Coin Laundry (Currently David Huntley Office) is directly across the street from our Train Depot. Pretty handy for getting off the dusty trains when you were covered in suet from the coal burning engines.
Seventh Avenue East developed as a commercial district during the late 19th and early 20th centuries around Hendersonville’s first depot, established in 1879. The majority of the buildings are simple one and two-story brick commercial and warehouse structures in the typical pattern of buildings connecting to each other. There are thirty-two contributing structures.
A T-38 from Vance Air Force Base flies overhead before turning to line-up for an approach at Lubbock Preston Smith International Airport. The T-38 is from Vance Air Force Base, Oklahoma.
Old sign on a closed post-office in Taunton.
Wonderful Deco lettering.
Taken with Minolta MD Macro Zoom 35-70mm f3.5 on Panasonic GX7.
The Northrop T-38 Talon is an American supersonic jet trainer. It was the world's first supersonic trainer and to date, is also the most produced. It remains in service as of 2009 in air forces throughout the world including the United States Air Force (USAF), which remains its largest user.
The basic airframe was used for the light combat aircraft F-5 Freedom Fighter family. In addition to USAF pilots, T-38s are also used by NASA astronauts, the U.S. Naval Test Pilot School (other T-38s were previously used as USN aggressor aircraft), other NATO pilots under a joint training program, and some under civilian ownership.
Performance
Maximum speed: Mach 1.3 (858 mph, 1,381 km/h)
Range: 1,140 mi (1,835 km)
Service ceiling: 50,000 ft (15,240 m)
Rate of climb: 33,600 ft/min (170.7 m/s)
Wing loading: 70 lb/ft² (340 kg/m²)
Thrust/weight: 0.65
113 Picture in 2013, #38 - Art
Adapted Banksy design done by me for our sons bedroom wall. Playing drums as this is one of his favourite past-times.
On a 3' x 3' MDF board.
Stencilling is harder than you might think. Few problems with paint leaking beneath my stencils resulting in me having to make further stencils to paint over the paint bleed.
Planning to add a toxic green spillage from the drum lying down which will then drip down wall beneath the picture but waiting until room is redecorated.
My daughter wants one now!
I have left bedsheets in photo to give it a sense of place. Hope they are not just a distraction.
This is the first pair of jeans that I bought that actually FIT after I got hips. From the Gap, I got them for $6 on clearance, hemmed 'em, and promptly wore them to pieces. Still super comfortable except when I catch my toes in the holes putting them on.
My belly (and why I'm ready to go!) at 38 weeks (and 3 days) pregnant
side note: I had Ben EXACTLY one week later from this photo :)
Live at Epcot ~ Orlando, Florida U.S.A.
Southern Rock ~ 2014 Wine & Food Festival
World Showcase Stage ~ Central Florida
(one more closeup photo in the comments)
"Hold On Loosely" - 38 Special - Live 1981:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=vJtf7R_oVaw
The number of slots on an American Roulette wheel.
A "38" is often the name for a snub nose .38 caliber revolver.
The number 38 in Mandarin Chinese is an insult referring to someone who acts in an effeminate way.
David is 38 years old!
Paris 2011, Street Photography Now Project # 38
"When you hit that wall of utter frustration while photographing the street, when you are beyond tired and just want to give up, keep on walking - for another hour, or until the light goes entirely. Often the best photographs come when you least expect them - when you are the most exhuasted, and the most emotionally vulnerable." - Alex Webb
Local accession number: 13_05_000242
Title: 38th Mass. [back]
Statement of responsibility: Theo Lilienthal's Photographic Gallery, 102 Poydras St., N. O.
Creator/Contributor: Lilienthal, Theo. (Theodore), 1829-1894 (Photographer)
Genre: Photographs; Cartes de visite; Portraits
Date created: 1859-1870 (approximate)
Physical description: 1 photograph : print on card mount ; mount 11 x 7 cm (carte de visite format)
General notes: Title from item or from accompanying material.
Date notes: Date supplied by cataloger.
Subjects: Military personnel
Collection: Cartes de Visite Collection
Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department
Rights: No known copyright restrictions.
Memorial service held 05/02/2010 on the 38th anniversary of the Sunshine Mine Fire, May 2nd 1972.
Nikon F100
Portra 160VC
Nikkor 20mm f/2.8 Ais
The Northrop T-38 Talon is an American supersonic jet trainer. It was the world's first supersonic trainer and to date, is also the most produced. It remains in service as of 2009 in air forces throughout the world including the United States Air Force (USAF), which remains its largest user.
The basic airframe was used for the light combat aircraft F-5 Freedom Fighter family. In addition to USAF pilots, T-38s are also used by NASA astronauts, the U.S. Naval Test Pilot School (other T-38s were previously used as USN aggressor aircraft), other NATO pilots under a joint training program, and some under civilian ownership.
Performance
Maximum speed: Mach 1.3 (858 mph, 1,381 km/h)
Range: 1,140 mi (1,835 km)
Service ceiling: 50,000 ft (15,240 m)
Rate of climb: 33,600 ft/min (170.7 m/s)
Wing loading: 70 lb/ft² (340 kg/m²)
Thrust/weight: 0.65
Type: McDonnell Douglas F-4F Phantom
c/n: 4790
Owner: West German Air Force
Location: Greenham Common
Date: 23 July1983
Some quick shots of a '38 Chevy truck for an upcoming magazine article. The ride has some rat-rod elements to it, but the attention to detail is closer to what you'd expect on a show & shine vehicle. The best part is that this truck gets driven on a daily basis--in fact, it's all the owner drives in the summertime.
Check out my other website, sundaycruisefever.com to see more pics and get your weekly fix of hot rodding history-new articles every Tuesday, free wallpapers every Friday
With some assistance from Lorna and a couple of cheapy lamps I came up with this.
I've be wanting to take a photo like this for a while, but never got it right, balance of light to capture a bit of tattoo whilst remaining predominantly silhouette-like.
Press L to view on black.
Day 38: Picked up my new shades today - you must realize, I'm blind as a bat, so these have a heavy, heavy prescription. However, they weigh approximately 117 pounds less than my last pair (the Ray Bans), and thus will actually stay on my face and not break the bridge of my nose. Good times!
PS: could my lips look any more smarmy?