View allAll Photos Tagged blackman
Hobart has some beautiful old seascape locations along its coast . Blackman Bay being one of them. The dawn colour also came out of nowhere which was a pleasant bonus!
Sergey Esenin.
The Dark Man.
"My friend, oh my friend, I’m sick to the end
I don’t know from where it came, all this pain
Maybe, with wind whistling through barren land
Maybe, as groves wilt in the fall,
Alcohol withers my brain."
I was just wrapping up after a 2 hour walk around and this young man pulled up on his bike, finished the day off nicely!
Hasselblad Sunset on Blackmans Bay, Kingston
A gentle reminder about copyright and intellectual property-
Ⓒ Cassidy Photography (All images in this Flickr portfolio)
St. Augustine, Florida 1982 - from my black and white negative archives, digitized. Re-released without watermark.
Cette actrice britannique est devenue populaire en étant la première compagne de Steed en combinaison de cuir dans la série The Avengers.
Source: Yves Arnold
My Photoshop Work.
My Own Creative.
© All rights reserved
Thank you friends for your visits, comments and faves... keep smilimg and keep clicking.. :)
N751AN Boeing 777-223ER American Airlines 4 Apr 2001
C37W24Y212 2x RR Trent 892
Azriel "Al" Blackman | 75 years of service
7BK
configured "F16C35Y194" until Mar 2016
re-configured "C45Y215" Mar 2016 - 2018
re-configured "C37W24Y212" 2018
std at BFM 23 Apr - 11 Sep 2020
Blackman's Shoe shop, Cheshire Street, London E2, Sunday 18 December 2016.
When I was at secondary school during the mid-1970s I used to go to Blackman's to buy shoes and Doctor Marten boots. They used to sell footwear that you couldn’t get elsewhere at reasonable prices and kids like me used to travel from all over London to visit Blackman’s.
The shop was in Brick Lane back then, and the area was very different to how it is today. Blackman’s is round the corner now, in Cheshire Street. But it’s still one of London’s classic shops.
Blackman's Shoes, 44 Cheshire Street, London E2 6EH
© All Rights Reserved - Black Diamond Images
Travelling the Pacific Highway, as it became named in May 1931, before vital bridges were constructed across the many large rivers along its East Coast route, was once a very slow and often circuitous journey.
In the days before the second world war punts (or ferries) were the only way of travelling by car up the coast.
One such ferry operated here at Blackmans Point, just down the road from where the famous 'U Pick' Ricardoes Tomato and Strawberry Farm is today.
Before the construction of the Port Macquarie Bypass and the opening in December 1961 of the Dennis Steel Truss Bridge the route to Blackmans Point on the north side of the Hastings River was indeed circuitous taking travellers in to Port Macquarie before travelling out along the southern shore of the Hastings River to a point where a vehicular ferry connected across the river to Blackmans Point on the north side of the Hastings River at its junction with the Maria River.
The Port Macquarie Bypass was able to reduce this often congested route through Port Macquarie from the Oxley Hwy turnoff to Blackmans Point from 22km to just 7 km.
The ferry ramp shown in this photo is the more recent of two ferry ramps located side by side at Blackmans Point.
The older ramp was located right on the point just a few metres to the left of this one and when it fell into disrepair it was abandoned and replaced with this ramp.
Once the Pacific Highway's steel truss Dennis Bridge was opened in December 1961 the ferry service to Blackmans Point was closed and this newer ramp became non functional, although it is used for boat launching these days.
While the Dennis steel truss bridge continues to service local traffic on 17 November 2017 a new bridge carrying the Pacific Highway across the Hastings River officially opened to traffic.
Located to the west of the Dennis Bridge, the new concrete span bridge was part of the 18 km long Oxley Highway to Kundabung upgrade.
The only remaining vehicular ferries operating on the Hastings River today are the Settlement Point and Hibbard Ferries.
Derivation of the Name Blackmans Point
Point on the northern side of the Hastings River,
immediately west of the junction of the Maria river- the
place where John Oxley saw natives in 1818? Mentioned in
Place of Banishment P/39, Hist of Port M P/21, 22. Dorothy
Edmunds says it was Black Mans Point- E.A. Mowle says it
was named after one of Oxley’s party (no Blackman in
party?) Reference
When I was just a youngster, most of those houses on the hill didn't exist. Blackmans Bay was still considered to be 'out in the sticks'. Not so today, with freeways to the city cutting travel time to the city of Hobart, this is a much sought after location.
JKPP : www.flickr.com/groups/portraitparty/
discussing : www.flickr.com/groups/portraitparty/discuss/7215762566598...
carly.blackman's photostream : www.flickr.com/photos/55694597@N02/
Halifax Joint Committee 204 CLT is an AEC/Park Royal Routemaster new in 1962 as London Transport RM1204. It was acquired by Blackman in 1997.
It was later bought back by Transport for London, refurbished and leased to Sovereign and later First for further operation in the capital. It subsequently passed to Tower Transit before eventual withdrawal from normal service. It was then acquired for use on Brigit's Bakery Afternoon Tea Tours around London.
I must admit that I have absolutely no idea where I took this photograph. I know I captured her in both Halifax and Huddersfield (she actually appears in the background of the previous photostream upload); but this doesn't seem to fit either location, based on that rather rural background. I know I did sample a ride on one of their Routemasters from Huddersfield to Halifax, but I can't recall if it was on this particular vehicle or on this particular day. I certainly don't recall getting off en route for a quick snapshot. What am I like?
Any ideas on where I was, please?
Somewhere in West Yorkshire, 27/02/1998.
(Now confirmed as Hope Street in Hebden Bridge, per comments below.)
R.I.P : the British actress of film, television & stage Honor Blackman (1925-2020).
Perhaps most remembered for her seductive role as Pussy Galore in the 1964 James Bond film, Goldfinger, with a distinctive rich voice accompanying her blonde beauty, she was also adept at drama and comedy.
I invited her to sit for her portrait in 1993, when she was 68, after she had seen the portrait I had painted of fellow actress Barbara Windsor the previous year.
It was quite a whirlwind of a sitting at her Wandsworth (London) home - fitting me in-between appointments - but with her patience, resulting in a portrait capturing an underlying peace and dignity.
~ Stephen B. Whatley, April 6, 2020
Oil on canvas, 30 x 24in/76 x 61cm