The Limbo Connection's photos with the keyword: condensation

Some Crazy Watercolour

26 Sep 2023 6 102
Fujifilm X-E1 with Fujinon 35mm f/1.4 lens.

Mermeladas B&W Edit

03 Dec 2021 5 173
Nikon D2Xs set at 100 ISO with a Nikkor 50mm f/2 AI lens.

Flirtation on a Large Scale

17 Apr 2021 2 2 118
AF Zoom-Nikkor 35-70mm f/2.8 at 70mm. Shot through an attractive film of condensation in a double glazed window. Filtration on a large scale.

Mermeladas

30 Jun 2020 1 132
Nikon D2Xs set at 100 ISO with a Nikkor 50mm f/2 AI lens.

London Camera Exchange Window

03 Jan 2019 3 2 174
City of Bath; Nikon D300s + Tamron 17-50mm f/2.8 lens. I like looking in LCE's windows for the good laugh they provide with their optimistic pricing structure. With the aggressive presence of increasing numbers of on-line traders in secondhand equipment, the days of LCE must be numbered. Especially if they fail to wipe the condensation from the inside of their windows within the first three hours of trading - this was the view shortly before midday.

The Rising Sun, Frog Lane, Christian Malford

30 Aug 2016 1 289
This is a picture of the interior of the ‘Rising Sun’, the one remaining pub in Christian Malford. It used to play second fiddle to the mighty ‘Mermaid Inn’ on the main road at the other side of the village. Then the M4 motorway opened and the main road was downgraded. The ‘Mermaid’ closed and the ‘Rising Sun’ somehow survived despite the calamitous decline of the traditional English pub. The ‘Rising Sun’ was built in the 18th century and was formerly a smithy. Its proximity to the railway halt which was in operation between 1926 and 1965 provided a sideline selling tickets for the Great Western Railway for some, but not all, of those years. The postal address of the ‘Rising Sun’ is Station Road, Christian Malford. This is curious because there never was a station in Christian Malford. The rudimentary timber-built halt was unstaffed, had no facilities, and no footbridge over the two short platforms. Even when there was a halt, the road was not named after it. Perhaps some strange romantic nostalgia influenced the street-naming authorities who wanted to convey a sense of importance to the village long after it had become so unimportant that even the ugly little halt had been taken away. As a matter of historic fact, the street on which the ‘Rising Sun’ is situated already had a perfectly good name as evidenced by official census documents of the second part of the nineteenth century. It was known as ‘Frog Lane’. Nikon D700 + Nikkor 50mm f/1.4 AF-D lens.