Barrack 

187 creative works found

  • The Bell Tower.. located on barrack street in Perth by the foreshore

  • The future king of the United States of America mocks you irrelevant opinions.

  • Camera: Olympus 35mm point n’ shoot

  • The Pepsi Center during the Democratic National Convention.

  • GOOD MORNING AMERICA, GOOD MORNING PRESIDENT OBAMA!
    by Philip Rogan

    Very very very happy that America has voted for change, for at least the promise of a better world and a more peaceful, democratic, fair …

    Very very very happy that America has voted for change, for at least the promise of a better world and a more peaceful, democratic, fair and social America. One where greed is no longer good and where the word United really means something.

  • These beautiful flowers belong to the old Army Barracks in the small town of Ross just North of Hobart. ROSS, Tasmania 2008.

  • more at www.calaido.com I am happy to announce that this image won a gold award of SWPP.

  • Having just tipped my camera and tripod over onto a, thankfully, very forgiving pile of crap on the floor I took this shot – which seemed to prove everything is in full working order… phew! The original contains little if any other colour, so it was a natural progression to filter it out, therefore placing emphasis on these lovely old locker doors instead.

  • The stairwells in the Officer’s Billet are the only area that seems to have attracted any real graffiti. The lighting here was so gentle & moody that it really just required careful composition and presentation.

  • Would you believe I actually desaturated the red by about 50%?!! I like the use this graffiti makes of the air-brick… A prize for anyone who can read the scrawl.

  • The typical three door pattern common to the main entrances of many an RAF Officer’s Mess. Seargent’s facilities only have one arched doorway, usually flanked by telephone booths instead. This area is one of the most ‘distressed’ parts of the building, having attracted metal thieves, pyromaniacs, graffitists and vandals, but it still retains more than a hint of it’s past glory.

  • This poor old squash court has suffered just about every form of injustice that can befall a derelict building… I don’t expect it to stand much longer. Gloomy skies can be a real Godsend for urbex – you’d be surprised at the amount of UV and IR light bouncing around off those low cloud bases, which can make for far more dramatic & original results than brilliant sunshine & blue skies.

  • I noticed this shot when I was leaning over to fold my tripod… So if we ever meet and you see me bending down, squatting or turning my head sideways, it’s not wind and I don’t have ‘I like to move it’ on an iPod, it’s because there’s a whole world of photo opportunities that don’t take place at eye-level..!

  • Located in the hills above Blaenau Ffestiniog is the lake of Llyn Cwmorthin,surrounded by the abandoned remains of barracks and houses that once where home to the workers of the slate mines and now an outstanding example of a Welsh slate mine that was abandoned at the turn of the 20th century. / In ever changing weather I think this portrays the grimness yet rugged beauty of the area with the gray slate buildings that housed the workers against the back drop of grey hills and the piles of rejected slate. / The grey menacing sky and the coldness of the water depict just a small insight to how they lived in what must have been extremely harsh conditions.

  • The deserted crumbling barracks of Cwmorthin which once housed the miners of the slate quarry above Blaenau Ffestiniog .

  • The remaisn of the old barracks over looking Llyn Cwnmorthin

  • The bell tower at the Barracks St Jetty is an unusual structure. I think you really like it or you don’t. I actually do – from this perspective the bronze “sails” are in keeping with the maritime theme and the history of the Battle of Trafalgar that the bells represent.

  • Seemingly this is the only angel playing the bagpipes found on a stained glass window. It is in the Garrison Church at Fort George Barracks outside Inverness. Taken with Canon 350D

  • Obama’s In Da House! / Bustin A Cap In The Ass Of America!

  • Obama Needs Your Change, / For The Change….

  • Political Concert Shirt, / The Obama Tour… / This Is It, One And Done… / Barrack Obama…

  • Ruins of barracks used by British under Admiral Nelson in the 1780’s. This is on the way to English Harbor, Antigua in the Caribbean. I used an Olympus OM 10 camera and traditional film. This photo was taken in August 1990.

  • The Barracks Arch at the end of St Georges Terrace in Perth’s CBD. The Barracks Arch is the only remaining part of the original barracks that was built in 1863, and contained 2 wings of 120 rooms. The Barracks was demolished in the 1960’s despite allot of public protest to make way for the Mitchell Freeway and some say to give the politicians a clear view of the city from Parliament house which is located behind the Arch on the other side of the freeway, you can see the building behind the Arch in the photo. I’ve been meaning to shoot at this location, and I just happened to have been driving through the CBD late at night, so there was plenty of parking, and no traffic, and nobody to get into my shots which was great! Canon EOS 7D.

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