Friday, 31 July 2009

Sita sings the blues with Annette Hanshaw


The complete film can be downloaded or buy the DVD here
Thanks for this Chris

Annette Hanshaw

PHOTO FILE 2





This is the track to the studio I used in Wales for many years,it needed constant clearing as the brambles tried very hard to take over,in fact I seemed to spend more time clearing than I did painting as it was more fun and closer to nature. I didn't much use mechanical means (strimmers etc)much because of the noise and smell but kept doing it the old fashion way with a scythe and billhook. Sadly all gone now as I am too ancient for that amount of work so the brambles won in the end. :O(

Thursday, 30 July 2009

CHILLING OUT

Spent the last few weeks turning a basement corner in to a music room
here is the result.

EARLY BIKER


Wednesday, 29 July 2009

Eat your heart out Amy Winehouse

PHOTO FILE 1


Not Whistlers mother

Tuesday, 28 July 2009


Geergen Tot~Jans 1465-1495.... Detail from "The Holy Kinship

WEST MERSEA POSTCARD

Could almost be a Claude Monet painting.

1930s COOL

Monday, 27 July 2009


IMPORTANT MESSAGE

Mad Great Niece

From her Facebook photos.
I'm so pleased family characteristics have
passed down the line.

My friend Mei

latest photo

Sunday, 26 July 2009

Saturday, 25 July 2009

Friday, 24 July 2009

MERSEA ISLAND and the marshes




MERSEA ISLAND on the essex coast



Was near to here on the marshes as a boy and have never been able to forget it. but moved to London then went the wrong way down to the West country and miles away from the sea. I do wish the man giving the commentary would pronounce Mersea properly but otherwise its a lovely little film and one can almost smell the mud.I do think it was a better place to be in the 40s when I was there but you can say that about almost everywhere.

CHICO & MARK

DOCTOR DOCTOR


CARTOON

Found this on Velobanjogent's site, its a cartoon drawn by my father way back in the twenties
Dont ever get in this lady's way.

Thursday, 23 July 2009

Wednesday, 22 July 2009

HAUSFRAU?


I should co co......

Steam aeroplane......1930s

The Beslar Airspeed 2000


Maybe we should go back to steam? Wouldn't it be great to see them chuffing around the sky? Maybe get fresh water from the clouds?near silent engine could whistle a warning coming in to Heathrow. Make flying magic,green and far less annoying for us underneath.
Better than any Airbus. Details

Eclipse

Photo by profbriancox twitter

Mysteries of the universe

Why does cheap sliced bread make better toast?

Thinks......................

Raffelo Sanzio (Raphael) 1483~1520
Allpaintings

Saturday, 18 July 2009

1950s?

My friend Mei

In a Japanese sweet shop.Mei clearly co~operating in the hope of being rewarded .The girl in the background isnt trying to lift that pole and I'm quite sure the black bowl is not pick & mix.

Friday, 17 July 2009


CLOSE UP

Photo by Masako Takahashi

FRONTISPIECE

Train in Tokyo
Photo ~~~~ Masako Takahashi

Thursday, 16 July 2009


LANGUODOC

Drawing by Colin Grimes 16 July 09

Leonardi da Vinci

WILLS WOODBINES the bad and the good

There was a time when I could have died for just one of these.Well after many thousands I nearly did.
But another time a girl whom I didn't know at a party gave me four of them and a box of matches because I had run out. I was so touched I later phoned her and married her two weeks later and stayed that way for near on fifty years.
And who remembers Juke Box Jury in glorious black and white?

Wednesday, 15 July 2009

MORE MAX RAABE

Rene Maltete

IRAN AND NOKIA

News
World news
Iran
Iranian consumers boycott Nokia for 'collaboration'
Comments (17)
Buzz up!
Digg it
Saeed Kamali Dehghan
guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 14 July 2009 21.22 BST
Article history
The mobile phone company Nokia is being hit by a growing economic boycott in Iran as consumers sympathetic to the post-election protest movement begin targeting a string of companies deemed to be collaborating with the regime.
Wholesale vendors in the capital report that demand for Nokia handsets has fallen by as much as half in the wake of calls to boycott Nokia Siemens Networks (NSN) for selling communications monitoring systems to Iran.
There are signs that the boycott is spreading: consumers are shunning SMS messaging in protest at the perceived complicity with the regime by the state telecoms company, TCI. Iran's state-run broadcaster has been hit by a collapse in advertising as companies fear being blacklisted in a Facebook petition. There is also anecdotal evidence that people are moving money out of state banks and into private banks.
Nokia is the most prominent western company to suffer from its dealings with the Iranian authorities. Its NSN joint venture with Siemens provided Iran with a monitoring system as it expanded a mobile network last year. NSN says the technology is standard issue to dozens of countries, but protesters believe the company could have provided the network without the monitoring function.
Siemens is also accused of providing Iran with an internet filtering system called Webwasher.
"Iranians' first choice has been Nokia cellphones for several years, partly because Nokia has installed the facility in the country. But in the past weeks, customers' priority has changed," said Reza, a mobile phone seller in Tehran's Big Bazaar.
"Since the news spread that NSN had sold electronic surveillance systems to the Iranian government, people have decided to buy other company's products although they know that Nokia cellphones function better with network coverage in Iran."
Some Tehran shops have removed Nokia phones from their window displays. Hashem, another mobile phone vendor, said: "I don't like to lose my customers and now people don't feel happy seeing Nokia's products. We even had customers who wanted to refund their new Nokia cellphones or change them with just another cellphone from any other companies.
"It's not just a limited case to my shop – I'm also a wholesaler to small shops in provincial markets, and I can say that there is half the demand for Nokia's product these days in comparison with just one month ago, and it's really unprecedented. People feel ashamed of having Nokia cellphones," he added.
News of the boycott has appeared on the front page of Iranian pro-reform papers such as Etemad-e Melli, owned by the reformist candidate Mehdi Karroubi. Hadi Heidari, a prominent Iranian cartoonist, has published an image of a Nokia phone on a No Entry traffic sign.
A Nokia spokeswoman refused to comment on the company's sales in Iran.
The Iranian authorities are believed to have used Nokia's mobile phone monitoring system to target dissidents. Released prisoners have revealed that the authorities were keeping them in custody on the basis of their SMS and phone calls archive, which was at officials' disposal.
One Iranian journalist who has just been released from detention said: "I always had this impression that monitoring calls is just a rumour for threatening us from continuing our job properly, but the nightmare became real when they had my phone calls – conversations in my case.
"And the most unbelievable thing for me is that Nokia sold this system to our government. It would be a reasonable excuse for Nokia if they had sold the monitoring technology to a democratic country for controlling child abuse or other uses, but selling it to the Iranian government with a very clear background of human rights violence and suppression of dissent, it's just inexcusable for me. I'd like to tell Nokia that I'm tortured because they had sold this damn technology to our government."
NSN spokesman Ben Roome said: "As in every other country, telecoms networks in Iran require the capability to lawfully intercept voice calls. In the last two years, the number of mobile subscribers in Iran has grown from 12 million to over 53 million, so to expand the network in the second half of 2008 we were required to provide the facility to intercept voice calls on this network."
In other sectors, state-run TV has also been targeted by protesters who have listed products advertised on its channels and urged supporters to join a boycott. Companies are running scared, and viewers have noticed the number of commercials plummet.
"We don't have many choices to show and continue our protests. They don't let us go out, they have killed many, we are threatened to text people or distribute emails, they have summoned people who shout Allahu Akbar ['God is great'] on rooftops at nights, so we need to look for new ways," said Shahla, a 26-year-old Iranian student.
"I can obviously see on the TV that they are facing an [advertising] crisis. This at least shows them how angry people are," she added.
The SMS boycott, meanwhile, has apparently forced TCI into drastic price hikes. The cost of an SMS has doubled in recent days. Protesters view the move as a victory
Guardian

~~~~~KIT FOR YOUR LIVING ROOM~~~~~


EARLY MOTORING

My God! There actually were back~seat drivers.
Rollo tandem car. 1912
Photo from Surrey Vintage Society

Tuesday, 14 July 2009

TEXTING


KEEP DEATH OFF THE PAVEMENTS

Monday, 13 July 2009

WHAT'LL YOU DO?


Leo Reisman & his orchestra

A GENTLEMANS MOTOR

Hispano~Suiza.