Pub 

1656 creative works found

  • Melbourne city pub, cnr Bourke and Spring, 1991, smokey bars are now a thing of the past

  • SOLD – VERY HAPPY MAY 09 JUST FOR FUN – South Australia has seafood a plenty – I thought this would be a comic piece which highlights their unique features – starring the Magnificent Cuttle fish found in this area and are spectacular in their habits.

  • True Blue Australian spotted at a pub in Chillagoe

  • Patty O’ Party ….wherever Patty is , the party is !!!

  • ” THE SPINING WHEEL ” PUB IN CASTLETOWNROCHE MALLOW CO.CORK This image was featured on Redbubbles home page for ST PATRICKS DAY .

  • The Compact Cassette, often referred to as audio cassette, cassette tape, cassette, or simply tape, is a magnetic tape sound recording format. Although it was originally intended as a medium for dictation, improvements in fidelity led the Compact Cassette to supplant reel-to-reel tape recording in most non-professional applications. Its uses ranged from portable audio to home recording to data storage for early microcomputers. Between the early 1960s and early 2000s, the cassette was one of the two most common formats for prerecorded music, first alongside the LP and later the Compact Disc. The word cassette is a French word meaning little box.

  • The new foyer of the Hackney Hotel Adelaide. A fabulous venue, delish meals, fantastic atmosphere & the Zubar is cool. See here /

  • Every year at a small town, well village, well pub and two houses just outside Dublin City and suburbs there was and most probably is a Bikers meeting at the Pub called after the..hamlet, .. Man o’ War. Great name for a bikers meet. There was live music, strippers, big tents, loadsa bikes a fun fair and plenty of booze and gear and other fun stuff like conversation and dancing and removing the hat of a tall biker with a forked beard and living to dance some more. Fred and Analis (the angel) were there from Sweden, as were all the gang from Raheny and Clontarf and not one of us had a motorbike (Joe did but it was a Vespa and he was a Mod, crazy man!). It was a great weekend and it was in 1995 methinks or maybe it was later?

  • Acrylic on board. / I love to photograph people in pubs, but fleeting expressions are hard to photograph. Here I have attempted to capture in paint one of those moments not caught on camera. Featured in LMAO Art.

  • Lost in the city again, albeit somewhat familiar but David was not sure of what time it was, the lights were on but they were somewhat different from what he thought they should be. Who was that man in the bar? The streets were not paved but covered in a sheet of tar? it was all very confusing. A reflection of actor David Muyllaert in a Dublin City pubs window on Westmoreland Street in 2003.

  • Oil on Canvas 100×150 cm Paintings from the Gone Bush series… Bush Inn Hotel Geelong

  • The We’re a bit different in Australia calendar features the travel photography of Australian journalist and photographer, Darren Stones. “G’day folks. The We’re a bit different in Australia calendar features humourous images of places and people I’ve encountered on my travels. With a farmer wearing gumboots selling her melons, a bloke dressed-up in pink as Marilyn Monroe, to a ute parked on a pole – I trust you get a belly laugh out of these images which are uniquely Australian. Thanks for viewing.” – Darren Stones Title of image: Cover – Henry Lawson Festival / January – Taking The Piss / February – Ute / March – Lightning Ridge Mine / April – Vendor / May – Henry Lawson Festival / June – Rabbit Poo / July – Drive-In / August – The Bird Lady / September – Australian Outback / October – Ocean Drive / November – Ettamogah Pub / December – Australia Rock Follow Darren Stones at Twitter: /

  • Got this shot inside a pub/disco. The bartender was firing up the table with alcohol. I liked the glowing flames in the darkness. So I captured it. This picture gives impression of revolution or being positive or inner desirs. Captured with simple Digicam, no effects. Thanks for visiting. You are visitor no.

  • Featured in Live, Love, Dream 5th Nov, 2008. / This is a beautiful thatched pub/restaurant, The Brace of Pheasants in Plush, Dorset. They have a wonderful menu and I was about to eat there, but, unfortunately, arrived at 15:05 and the kitchens closed at 15:00. Oh well, maybe next time. / The pub ‘sign’ is not a sign at all but an illuminated glass cabinet containing a brace of stuffed pheasants – a cock and a hen. I don’t know how long the glass box has been up there, but I know it wouldn’t be five minutes outside a London pub before some senseless yob would throw a brick at it.

  • I found this place whilst on a drive around the Preston area in Lancashire, NW England.. It is in a place called Guy’s Thatched Village, and seems to be a bit of a tourist trap.It is next to the Lancaster Canal. I liked the duck sitting on the roof! / Sony Alpha 350 DSLR & 18-70 lens tripod mounted, 3 shot autobracket (+/- 0.7) processed in Photomatix and edited in Picassa. / Featured in Country Bumpkin in June 2009 & Cottage Style Sept 2009 / / One card sold /

  • Ettamogah Pub is located 10 minutes north of Albury NSW The Ettamogah Pub is a cartoon pub that was featured in the now defunct Australasian Post magazine. The cartoonist Ken Maynard, loving empty spaces and having nothing around him, enjoyed an area just outside of Albury at Table Top, named Ettamogah,... AS IS Canon 50D # - / at-night: : : :

  • A wet morning in Padstow, but the Golden Lion looked inviting, / they do a great Crab Lunch.

  • . The Tithe Map shows it standing in a field called Preaching Meadow where, it is said, John Wesley preached here. The focal point of the village has always been the picturesque Red Lion Inn. We know it was already a well established hostelry in 1717 for when landlord Walter Lory died that year, the inventory of his “goods and chattels” included pewter dishes and porringers, candlesticks and cooking pots, stools, forms, benches and beds. /

  • Yorkshire UK The Bronte’s . / One of the best known pubs in Haworth, The Black Bull is apparently the hostelry where Branwell Bronte spent most of his time. Low ceilings, wood panelling and thick, heavy beams all add character to this ancient pub. Above the panelling, the rough cream walls are adorned with old photographs and paintings of the pub. . / One of the pub’s feature possessions is Branwell Bronte’s chair, on which he spent many an hour brooding over his beer, usually also under the influence of opium which he purchased from the apothecary opposite the pub. Information from Yorkshire Escapes, Textures added / C anon EOS 400d , / HDR 3 shot bracketing processed with photomatix , Tripod used. /

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