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LONDON CAMERA EXCHANGE SHOPS - LONDON CAMERA


LONDON CAMERA EXCHANGE SHOPS - CREATIVE WEB CAMERA VF0090 DRIVER FREE DOWNLOAD - 3 CHIP VIDEO CAMERA.



London Camera Exchange Shops





london camera exchange shops






    exchange
  • a mutual expression of views (especially an unpleasant one); "they had a bitter exchange"

  • Give something and receive something of the same kind in return

  • Give or receive one thing in place of another

  • chemical process in which one atom or ion or group changes places with another

  • give to, and receive from, one another; "Would you change places with me?"; "We have been exchanging letters for a year"





    london
  • The capital of the United Kingdom, in southeastern England on the Thames River; pop. 6,377,000. London, called Londinium, was settled as a river port and trading center shortly after the Roman invasion of ad 43 and has been a flourishing center since the Middle Ages.It is divided administratively into the City of London, which is the country's financial center, and 32 boroughs

  • London is the capital of England and the United Kingdom. It is the largest metropolitan area in the United Kingdom and the largest urban zone in the European Union by most measures.

  • United States writer of novels based on experiences in the Klondike gold rush (1876-1916)

  • the capital and largest city of England; located on the Thames in southeastern England; financial and industrial and cultural center

  • An industrial city in southeastern Ontario, Canada, north of Lake Erie; pop. 303,165





    camera
  • television camera: television equipment consisting of a lens system that focuses an image on a photosensitive mosaic that is scanned by an electron beam

  • A camera is a device that records/stores images. These images may be still photographs or moving images such as videos or movies. The term camera comes from the camera obscura (Latin for "dark chamber"), an early mechanism for projecting images. The modern camera evolved from the camera obscura.

  • A chamber or round building

  • equipment for taking photographs (usually consisting of a lightproof box with a lens at one end and light-sensitive film at the other)





    shops
  • A building or part of a building where goods or services are sold; a store

  • A place where things are manufactured or repaired; a workshop

  • (shop) do one's shopping; "She goes shopping every Friday"

  • (shop) patronize: do one's shopping at; do business with; be a customer or client of

  • An act of going shopping

  • (shop) a mercantile establishment for the retail sale of goods or services; "he bought it at a shop on Cape Cod"











Yuletide for the glum




Yuletide for the glum





"Awww ...there's another dead fox", opined Mrs Bentos, looking sidelong out of the car window. "No, it's the same one", I replied, trying to keep the brittleness out of my voice, for we had passed poor Reynard about an hour before on our first attempt to leave the M11 and find London. Neither Mrs Bentos nor I are strict celebrants of Christmas. For black-hearted misanthropes such as ourselves one of the few advantages of the festive season is that "les autres" are mostly indoors, leaving the streets empty and places of resort pleasantly deserted. When we lived in Bristol our festive ritual was to drive over the Severn Bridge into Wales. This year we had to cast about for a new venue.
I had thought it might be a good wheeze to drive into central London, hoping for a kind of "Day the Earth Caught Fire" effect. The drive into London from the Bristol direction used to be a simple matter. Windsor Castle and Heathrow on your right, elevated section of the M4, Chiswick Flyover, park at the King's Mall shopping centre in Hammersmith and take the underground. But northeast London is, to me, terra incognita. After coming off the M11 onto the North Circular Road we plunged into the labyrinthine web of suburban streets, all decked out with fairy lights and Walt Disneyish plastic reindeer. Getting lost would be part of the fun we had told ourselves. All we had to do was keep going in a more or less southerly direction and we'd eventually come out somewhere we recognised. But after a few twists and turns which way was south and which north? An hour later we found ourselves joining the M25 at Waltham Abbey.
The second approach was more successful and we came into the City along unfamiliar Commercial Road ...Canary Wharf on the left and the London Suppository up ahead. The streets were not quite deserted. At Bank a huddle of Japanese tourists took photographs of the Royal Exchange. Probably Shintoists, I ruminated, gawping at them from the car as we waited at traffic lights ...Christmas as much a mystery to them as kami to us. We eventually parked, free, at the kerb, among many empty spaces, in Royal Hospital Road, and got out to stretch our legs. Around the corner on the Chelsea Embankment, the shades of Rossetti, Whistler, Thomas Carlyle, Hall Caine, Swinburne and Theodore Watts-Dunton seemed to muster among the melancholy dripping branches. At 1.30 in the afternoon it was almost too dark to take photographs and the little camera-shake warning light ...a red hand, wobbling as though of some palsy... appeared in the viewfinder. Mrs B. managed to snap this informal study however.

Beret: La Samaritaine, Paris, 1994.
Shirt: impossibly expensive from Jaeger, Bury St Edmunds ...my Christmas treat to myself.
Tie: charity shop, Clevedon.
Jumper: Austin Reed, Cambridge.
Overcoat: American, 1940s, from Zap vintage clothing store, Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
Trouserings: Marks & Spencer, Bristol.
Socks: Austin Reed again.
Shoes: Clark's Village, Street, Somerset.











Baldwin Street on a wet Monday morning




Baldwin Street on a wet Monday morning





Here we are in Baldwin Street, Bristol, waiting for the lights to change so we can get onto the Centre, on a dismal Monday morning. Yes, I know, it might have made for a more interesting picture if there'd been some traffic coming the other way but in this sort of situation you have to snatch whatever image you can. Ahead is the much reviled Millenium Promenade, with its wonderful sails and masts structure and the Hippodrome theatre and the shops of St Augustine's parade beyond. On the left, a cyclist has just wheeled his bike past the London Camera Exchange. If I remember right, that was more or less the spot where 'Eddie Shoestring' (Trevor Eve) was filmed in one of the opening shots in the 'Shoestring' tv detective series way back in the seventies, when the Hippodrome used to have its dot-matrix newscaster working at about roof level.
Taken with my 'point-and-hope' camera-phone mobile.









london camera exchange shops







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Post je objavljen 26.10.2011. u 16:16 sati.