Parade 

1408 creative works found

  • Photograph – just before Bangkok’s Gay Pride parade begins.

  • Flag Day Parade . Use to be the stops were to change horses not fuel up

  • These young women are enjoying their Mardis Gras Parade in Cozumel

  • The Victorians had a special way of enjoying the sea air. with a sunset like this I can’t say that I can blame them!

  • i totally fell madly in love with Woodly Allen’s classic movie “Sleeper”, 1973. i made the costume he wore in the movie, i was maybe 17, & snuck into my hometown (Sebastopol, Ca (us) parade which they have every year (still to this day) in spring, “The Apple Blossom Parade”. Made the newspaper, woo hoo.

  • Young boy on father’s shoulders with bare bottom. Click once on image to enlarge. / /

  • Fringe parade, Brunswick St / Before they took away the parade and the pub.

  • I stumbled upon a young lady mesmerized by a peculiar design and its liquid reflections. The unsullied mind took its time to unravel the beautiful message carved in stone. There was carnage on the news later that night. Mostly self inflicted, the rest dished out by a mistreated Nature. In the Chronicles of Doom, looks like, we’ve got our name printed in bold. The way out will require no new plans, but a radically different way of reasoning. It can only be delivered by an inspired generation of free thinkers raised on ideals of Enlightened Humanity, the ones brought up to be creative, not productive. The youth of today. We have to believe they will be the ones to save us. If they don’t, no prayer ever will.

  • Part of a higgledy piggledy fence in a field in Piddlehinton, Dorset, just minutes from my home. I loved the different colours of the planks, which I enhanced just a tiny bit.

  • Coach and horses in the Lord Mayor’s Parade in Liverpool, England. / When an new major takes office in Liverpool there is a big parade which all the dignitries attend. Charities, societies, police, army and all sorts make a carnival through the main streets of Liverpool and people line the route. This coach and horses is like the type that would have gone through the streets years ago before the motor car

  • This colorful dragon was not only beautiful to see, but also had a wonderful smell – like most other flower “statues” in the yearly Dutch Flower Parade (Bloemencorso), held at the end of April. This shot was taken in a (partly) cloudy day, as most days in Holland, unfortunately, are…

  • Sharon & I have just come back from a trip to the War Memorial in Canberra. We will try not to upload the same photos, at the same time, but forgive us if it does happen. This was taken from outside the War Memorial looking up Anzac Parade to the new Parliament House.

  • Law and Order Series

  • these clydesdales were part of our annual float parade which is held in busselton

  • These enormous Delft Blue plates were not only beautiful to see, but also had a wonderful smell – like most other flower “statues” in the yearly Dutch Flower Parade (Bloemencorso), held at the end of April. This photo was taken during the Bloemencorso of 2006, when the parade’s wagons were on show on a main street in Haarlem, after 2-3 days of parading along the roads of Holland. “Hyacinth Delft Blue” was featured in the group Dutch Touch. Some Wikipedia info about Blue Delft: During the Dutch Golden Age, the Dutch East India Company had a lively trade with the East and imported millions of pieces of Chinese porcelain in the early 1600s. The Chinese workmanship and attention to detail impressed many. Only the richest could afford the early imports. Although Dutch potters did not immediately imitate Chinese porcelain, they began to do after the death of the Wanli Emperor in 1620, when the supply to Europe was interrupted. Delftware inspired by Chinese originals persisted from about 1630 to the mid-eighteenth century alongside European patterns. By about 1680-1700 several factories were using enamel colours and gilding over tin-glaze, requiring a third kiln firing at a lower temperature. One of the rarest Delft items recently on the market is a polychrome and gilded charger, Delft, circa 1680-85, Marked IW in blue for Jacob Wemmersz. Hoppesteyn, who was the full owner of Het Moriaenshooft (The Moor’s Head) Factory from 1664 until 1671, succeeded by his widow Jannetge Claesdr. van Straten. Delftware ranged from simple household items – plain white earthenware with little or no decoration – to fancy artwork. Most of the Delft factories made sets of jars, the kast-stel set. Pictorial plates were made in abundance, illustrated with religious motifs, native Dutch scenes with windmills and fishing boats, hunting scenes, landscapes and seascapes. Sets of plates were made with the words and music of songs; dessert was served on them and when the plates were clear the company started singing. The Delft potters also made tiles in vast numbers (estimated at eight hundred million) over a period of two hundred years; many Dutch houses still have tiles that were fixed in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Delftware became popular and was widely exported in Europe and even reached China and Japan. Chinese and Japanese potters made porcelain versions of Delftware for export to Europe. Today, Delfts Blauw (Delft Blue) is the brand name hand painted on the bottom of ceramic pieces identifying them as authentic and collectible. Although most Delft Blue borrows from the tin-glaze tradition, it is nearly all decorated in underglaze blue on a white clay body and very little uses tin glaze, a more expensive product. Delft Blue pottery formed the basis of one of British Airways’ ethnic tailfins. The design, Delftblue Daybreak, was applied to 17 aircraft.

  • Who doesn’t?

  • candid with easter island statue. british museum. summer 2008. easter parade © 2008 Urban Umbra

  • Abeautiful Draft pair at the Parade. Taken in Lenox,Massachusetts Sept 13th, 2008 Please check out my photos some of my Favorites / Featured Works in a Group: /

  • There she was doing Cha-cha-cha right down Main St. in Eugene’s Celabration Parade. The Eugene Celebration Parade represents the best of Eugene, Oregon in all its diversity. Not without controversy, this irreverent collection of left- and right interactions that define our community.

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