Yes, I drove a brand new '57 Mercury, loaned to me for an hour. The back window was flat and retracted. It must have been the Turnpike Cruiser. Easily topped 100 mph. I was 16.
coolhanduke wrote:
There is a restaurant that sits on the hill outside Vegas. There is a great view of the whole strip but you need a zoom lens.
I’ll try to find the name.
Follow the light and hope the streets are wet.
Leaving the fifty's and beginning to lose their beauty.
Haven't lived there for 60 years, but looks like home to me. Thank you.
Gotta be the wheels. Sure ain't the car.
Franky, I agree with Linda, my first impression was that the pictures were slightly out of focusl
Bought a new one 1957. Drove it straight to the service station. Removed the muffler, poured gasoline in it and let it burn for awhile. Sweetest sound. Like a machine gun.
I love each and every one but none will fit in my garage.
There is always the very rare exception, as with everything, but a leading line from a corner just doesn't look right. My wife has been an award winning painter for 40 years. She follows and teaches this advice. It is the same for photography.
I have a Canon MX882. Old but worked well using generic ink cartridges. Began giving a warning that the ink absorbing pad was nearly full. Finally stopped printing. Googled how to change ink pad; seemed complicated. Bought a new printer at Best Buy. Geek Squad came to install (free). Tech was easily able to remove ink pad, rinse it out with water & reinstall. He did not have to disassemble anything. Printer now works as well as before. Returned new printer for refund. Saved me $400. Maybe I just got lucky with a technician who knew what he was doing. I have never had an Office Depot or Amazon ink cartridge dry up. I print something once a week to keep the ink flowing.
I had severe myopia (near-sightedness) since age 6. New glasses every year but could see perfectly 5 inches away. As an emergency physician I could find foreign bodies that no one else could see. I sutured with 7-0 thread, but couldn't read an alarm clock. Finally told to have cataract surgery, one eye at a time. R eye corrected to 20/20; L eye corrected to medium distance. Floaters more obvious. Still need glasses, but had to retire fm emergency medicine because I could see no better up close than the other physicians. Can drive and fly w/o glasses but can't read charts. Vision definitely brighter and colors more correct according to wife. Eventually cataract surgery becomes necessary for everyone if you live long enough, but you may have to reprocess important old photos. Altogether worth it. Find a good ophthalmic surgeon. Have computer glasses plus progressive lenses.
ONLY instance where an AR-15 would be justified.
If you can't lift it or push it, you shouldn't be riding it. Learned the hard way.
As a physician, I spent my career trying to make injuries/lacerations heal with the least possible scar. It goes against my grain to deface perfectly clear healthy skin. Maybe if you are trying to hide something. The most beautiful sight is flawless skin, no matter the color. Even wrinkles are beautiful in comparison.
I purchased a new Olympus OM-D EM-1 and 3 PRO lenses a few years ago when it first came out. It doesn't do everything an EM-3 can, but I am still happy with it. I don't do everything of which it is capable, but it does all I need. I have had Nikon and Canon in the past. Olympus makes good cameras.