acediscovery.blogspot.com Open in urlscan Pro
2a00:1450:4001:82b::2001  Public Scan

URL: https://acediscovery.blogspot.com/
Submission: On September 07 via api from US — Scanned from DE

Form analysis 2 forms found in the DOM

Name: WordForm

<form name="WordForm">
  <input name="WordBox" size="25" type="TEXT"><br>
  <input value="Click for a country" onclick="PickRandomWord(document.WordForm)" type="BUTTON">
</form>

POST http://feedburner.google.com/fb/a/mailverify

<form action="http://feedburner.google.com/fb/a/mailverify" style="border:1px solid #ccc;padding:3px;text-align:center;" target="popupwindow" method="post"
  onsubmit="window.open('http://feedburner.google.com/fb/a/mailverify?uri=acediscovery', 'popupwindow', 'scrollbars=yes,width=550,height=520');return true">
  <p>Enter your email address:</p>
  <p><input style="width:140px" name="email" type="text"></p><input value="acediscovery" name="uri" type="hidden"><input value="en_US" name="loc" type="hidden"><input value="Subscribe" type="submit">
  <p>Delivered by <a href="http://feedburner.google.com" target="_blank">FeedBurner</a></p>
</form>

Text Content

skip to main |skip to sidebar



THINGS I DO

I ask people to draw maps...
· Draw the World
· Draw Europe's nations
· Crowdsourced Continent maps

I make map cards:
· See map cards


And other things I write about:
· Little moments from travel
· London art & museums
· Football with foreign fans
· London shop geography





ABOUT THIS BLOG

I love geography, maps, tours, flags, etymology, and foreign pop culture.







GREY BRUSSELS


Sunday, March 06, 2016


The day I arrived in Brussels was very grey. It didn't rain but slate, granite
and charcoal clouds filled the sky.

While I was wandering around looking for colourful Art Nouveau and Art Deco, the
grey above inspired me to find very below.





















2 comments  

Labels: architecture, Belgium




BRUSSELS' BUILDINGS


Saturday, February 27, 2016

I went to Brussels a few months ago.

There, I spent some time wandering around the city looking for the Art Deco and
Art Nouveau architecture that the city is famous for.


My two favourite places were the tucked away remains of the Gresham Hotel (part
of the Royal Museums complex) and the Horta Museum (which sadly does not allow
photography).


It's maybe an obvious point but much of the architectural features are high up
on the buildings and cannot be seen in detail from the ground, loosing some of
the finesse.

Equally many of the buildings are not always publicly accessible so their
interiors remain unseen.

Nonetheless, many marvellous mosaics, wonderful windows, swirly sinowy steel
railings and more can be seen.












1 comments  

Labels: architecture, Art Deco, Art Nouveau, Belgium, mosaic




MANCHESTER MOSIAC


Saturday, November 14, 2015

I visited Manchester recently.

While there, I followed a Royal Geographical Society audio tour on Victorian
Manchester.

It started at the newly refurbished Manchester Victoria station, with its
marvellous tiles, and brought me to see buildings relating to how newly
industrial Manchester cared for its poor and destitute.

Outside one brick building, I felt a surge of emotion about that institution
helping those who were being left behind in the Victorian industrial metropolis.

Each brick, to me, symbolised all the small kind acts taken place there.

My fanciful notion aside, Manchester is a place full of brickwork and tiles, a
city made of mosaics, the many making the whole.
















0 comments  

Labels: manchester, mosaic, tiles, train station, UK, United Kingdom




CROWDSOURCED CONTINENTS: THE WORLD


Friday, October 30, 2015


For the past few years, I've been going to events in London asking people to
draw maps of continents.

I went to a Latin American festival, Canada Day and USA Independence Day events,
a UK / Australia cricket match, a European folk music festival, an African Craft
Fair and a variety of Asian events.

At each, I asked people at the event to draw a map of that event's continent.
Some people came from the continent, some from elsewhere.

I then took all these maps and laid them on top of each other to create a jumbly
mind-memory-map of these continents. And here are all those maps, as the world.

Some were clear - Africa, Australia, South America - and some much less so -
Europe and Asia.

In all, we can see that maps are made by drawing, constructs in the moment, made
from memory which is patchy and personal, familiar and fascinating.

I've had really interesting conversations with the 87 people who drew these
maps, and hopefully, you enjoy them too.






0 comments  

Labels: Africa, Asia, Australia, cartography, europe, hand-drawn,
iaskpeopletodrawmaps, map, maps, multimapped, North America, South America




CROWDSOURCED CONTINENTS: ASIA


Thursday, October 22, 2015

Since 2009, I have been (on-and-off) asking people to draw maps of continents
which I then overlay on each other.

I've asked people to draw South America, Australia, North America, Europe and
Africa.

But I've waited a long while to 'do' Asia. Mainly as I didn't know how to
approach Asia.

I had previously asked people at a SouthEast Asian festival to draw some maps,
could I follow that idea with more regions. Should I divide Asia into regions
and, if so, which regions?

The answer had been staring me in the face rather obviously: ask people to draw
'Asia' - a seemingly simple but complex challenge.

In August and September, I went to a variety of events where I asked people to
draw Asia:


 * London Korean Family Festival
 * London Mela
 * Vietnam Discovery
 * Japan Matsuri

I met people at these events who I asked to draw Asia. And I also asked a few
friends who have connections to Asia. So here is the result.



It's quite a tangle of lines, shapes, places. Asia seemed to be a difficult
concept for the people I asked: where does it start and end? where does it
include? 


Many people only drew their own country. 


Thanks to: Phuong, Alex, Darren, Aaron, Kris, Koa, Ekta, Hang Catie, Shuk Kwan,
Raj, Suraj, Mohammad, Tina, Jeff, Sultan, Keejung, Niie, Dana, Chris and Taemin
for humouring me and drawing a map.

Here are their maps individually.






And that is my last crowdsourced continent map: in my next blog, I'll show all
the continents together.






0 comments  

Labels: Asia, cartography, hand-drawn, iaskpeopletodrawmaps, map, maps,
multimapped




CHICANO CHICAGO


Sunday, September 13, 2015


In Chicago, this day last year, I visited the Pilsen neighbourhood to see some
murals painted on its walls.







Coincidentally, a Mexican Independence Day parade was taking place.

The parade was a very festive occasion, with floats, trucks, vintage cars,
motorbikes and riders on horseback making their way along a long, straight
street.

Along the way I saw...


 * Comedy with a man pushing a trolley-like cart with three female mannequin
   heads wearing sunglasses perched on top. (Sadly he went past me too quickly
   for a photograph.)
 * After the parade, lots of families gathered in a park for a picnic and an
   American football game amid shouts of "these ladies need water ASAP" and
   "double bubble, double bubble!"
 * It was interesting to see these Mexican and American traditions mix and
   mingle, which on a sunny day in Chicago felt like the American dream coming
   true.


























0 comments  

Labels: Chicago, Mexico, USA




DUBLIN: ST STEPHEN'S GREEN


Monday, July 27, 2015


I visited Dublin a few months ago. I hadn't been to Dublin for more than 12
years (my trips back to Ireland take me to Cork instead).

Dublin felt like an invigorated city to me, lively and exciting. My visit
coincided with excellent sunny weather (rare for Ireland), so I took the
opportunity to sit in the sun and people-watch.

I wandered around and sat in Stephen's Green for an afternoon, one of the main
garden squares in the centre of Dublin.

I saw and heard the following microcosms of Dublin:



 * Lots of teenage girls queuing up to meet a boyband with no name that hadn't
   made any music.
   
 * Two young guys talking about women (and magpies) with every sentence filled
   with swearwords.
   
 * A woman saying to another, "You were gone up like a tomato!"
   
 * A young woman playing the ukelele (badly) to raise money for a charity trip
   to Uganda. An older woman passed her, commenting with a disdainful Dublin
   drawl, "Don't give up yer day job!"
   
 * 3 young women having a picnic. One had (evidently) just married. They were
   catching up, in the most insincere tones I've maybe ever heard. Cork accents,
   like.
   
   "Hoooow's married life?"
   "Noooo different"
   "So, how was the wedding?"
   "Great!"
   "Did you have a great time?"
   "Great time!"
   "Wassss it fabliss?"
   "Fabulous!"
   "And you'd definitely go back?"
   "Definitely go back!"
   "And how was the hotel?"
   "Beautiful!"
   "And the food?"
   "Out of this world!"





0 comments  

Labels: Dublin, Ireland, travelmoments




CIRCLE LINES | GLASGOW SUBWAY


Monday, June 01, 2015




Deep in the cold and damp of Saturday morning in January in Scotland, I took a
trip on the Glasgow subway - a one-line railway which loops around the city.


But while Glasgow is a mainly grey city architecture-wise, its subway was a more
colourful experience 


The train itself: three cute bright orange carriages - like an oversized Berocca
tube - bolting, barrelling, zipping through the tunnels.


A woman (who looks like Hayley from Coronation Street) wearing bright turquoise
coat, a man in a bright orange hi-vis vest, a station with pastel pink walls, a
girl with a bright pink bobble hat, coat and shopping bag, a man with a bright
red scarf, a lady's bright purple handbag, a bright green hat, and a cerise
beret.


And then there was the colourful scenes all around me:

 * Someone telling a long story to her mother about Amy and Lindsay and the job
   they both applied for.
   
 * An old lady rolling her shopping trolley onto the carriage with a sigh.
   
 * A woman entering and grimacing, "Something smells, doesn't it man? They
   should put air freshener."
   
 * A woman asking her child, "Did you bring toilet roll? No? We'll need to get
   hankies."
   
 * A police officer asking a little girl, "Have you been to the shops? Did you
   buy any knick knacks?"
   
 * A teenage girl admonishing her little sister, "Stop acting so smart!"
   
 * Someone saying," Every time the council's used it makes the case complex."
   
 * A man loosing his footing, tripping on top of another man, says "Aye, we're
   close now!"






0 comments  

Labels: circle-line, Glasgow, Scotland, travelmoments




CIRCLE LINES | ON THE LOOP IN CHICAGO


Sunday, May 17, 2015

Chicago's L train doesn't actually have a circular line, but a group of lines
which come together in a circle line effect in a part of the city called The
Loop.







So with a few strategic station changes, it's the next best thing.

I rode around, amid lots of people on their phones, and saw and heard:


 * A middle-aged woman speaking into a walkie-talkie: "OK, I'm on!"
 * A young Woman pulling on a baseball cap like armour
 * A woman pursing her lips and momentarily bopping in her seat twirling her
   hands around
 * Two girls with bright pink coats, with white, blue and red beads braided into
   their hair.
 * "It's going be alright. It is going be all right," says a woman into her
   phone.
 * A boy in a purple hoodie looks derisively at a woman's bright pink phone
   holder.
 * Young woman cheerfully declaring, "I noticed it! I noticed it!"
 * A middle-aged lady with resplendent red accessories (shoes, spectacles,
   handbag and shoulder bag) intently reading the Bloomingdales' catalogue.
 * A woman sketches a large drawing with dashed lines and arrows into her
   sketchbook.
 * A doleful man slumped against the train wall while carrying a book of torts
   and laws.
 * A woman wearing a bright peach and yellow blouse chewing and popping luminous
   green gum
 * A cheeky young boy propping his feet up on a seat between two men, both of
   whom studiously ignore him and his feet.






0 comments  

Labels: Chicago, circle-line, people-watching, travelmoments, USA




CIRCLE LINES | YAMANOTE LINE, TOKYO


Saturday, May 09, 2015

Sometimes when I'm travelling, I like to simply sit on a train and watch people
near me, places passing by. And what better way to do this than on a circular,
loop line.

I like to think that a circular line brings you a 360° view of a place (it's not
always the case, but it's a nice idea).

This is the first in a semi-regular series of posts on circular travelling -so
if there's a circular loop line where I am, I'll get on board!



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Years ago when I visited Tokyo, I spent a few hours travelling around on the
Yamanote line.

It's a circular line travelling through most of the major stations in Tokyo,
including Ginza, Shibuya and Shinjuku.

As I sat on the train, I took notes of sights I saw and sounds I heard and
revelled in the people-watching.

I saw:

 * Green stripes on platform to show where to stand
 * A girl with purple and gold bag and gold shoes
 * The five people opposite me lined up, all asleep
 * A chorus of polyphonic music greeted us at every station
 * Outside offices, and lots of them
 * Huge concrete faceless skyscraper structures at Akihabara
 * A MUJI warehouse
 * A pyramid covered in sparkling lights at Yurakucho
 * Passengers reading books with non-descriptmd plain covers: beige or plain
   white, some with very simple patterns.
 * The station Mamamatsucho pronunced differently in English and Japanese
 * The monorail to Haneda airport flying over the metro line 
 * A tiny dog in a woman's handbag. She's been on the train for 6 stops ago,
   before I had noticed
 * Nobody else seems to noticed the dog
 * A grown man reading a comic, showing the words "Here's the world War 1 flying
   ace returning to the aerodrome"
 * Lots of snorting and sniffing sounds
 * At Ebisu station, the man next to me sleeps and slumps against me
 * A guy whispering into his phone
 * As the train continues around, the dog starts to bark lightly. The woman
   holds its mouth.
 * The man next to me then notices the dog and pets it
 * A poster in station declares: "Never stop the explaining!"
 * At Osuka station, a man tucks his (dry) umbrella into his trousers. It's half
   genius, half weird.






0 comments  

Labels: circle-line, Japan, people-watching, Tokyo, travelmoments




MODERN BRASÍLIA


Wednesday, February 25, 2015









I took a trip to Brasília on my recent holiday to Brazil.


Brasília is Brazil's capital city, deep in the interior of the country.


But Brasília is barely 50 years old, all built between 1957 and 1960.


The whole city is built in the superbly modern shape of an airplane. Its central
fuselage is a long ceremonial boulevard surrounded by amazing modernist
buildings like these in the photos.






0 comments  

Labels: architecture, Brasilia, Brazil, photography




BRAZIL'S HUMBLE PLASTIC CHAIR


Wednesday, February 11, 2015

One of my favourite things about Brazil is the way they use humble plastic
chairs. I see it as very Brazilian.





 To us, they're simple garden furniture. In Brazil, these plastic chairs come in
all sorts of colours, sometimes branded with company logos.






They're at bars, restaurants, a party can be pitched up anywhere. They're
arranged haphazardly. It's not important to be neat, to be formal, what matters
is somewhere to sit, to eat, to drink, to talk, to joke, to see what's going on
around you, to be together with friends or family.










So for all the wonderful symbols of Brazil - landmarks, caipirinhas, flags,
flora and fauna -  the simple plastic chair looms large for me.








0 comments  

Labels: Brazil, photography




RIO DE JANEIRO STREETS


Thursday, February 05, 2015

Rio de Janeiro does not have one main shopping street - unlike Buenos Aires or
Istanbul.






While it might seem like Rio's beaches are the hub of all energy, there is still
lots of life and activity to please people-watchers in Rio.  As I walked around
the city, here's what I saw...



 * A poodle wearing four bright blue socks
   
 * A thin hipster-ish man wearing skinny jeans and a smock shirt playing a
   picalillo in middle of traffic
   
 * A middle-aged man fainting on the street, with people crowding around trying
   to help
   
 * A young dude working the door of a restaurant checking out every guy that
   passed him by
   
 * A mother calming her truculent little boy, saying "tranqui, tranqui!"
   
 * A good-looking man walking along a busy street wearing only a skimpy sunga.
   Only in Rio!
   
 * A young teenage boy pleading through tears and wails with a shop security
   guard
   
 * A tiny old lady clutching her phone to her face and conspiratorially covering
   her mouth
   
 * Guys carrying used drinks cans in fishing nets, a modern update on a
   traditional economy.
   
 * A man selling books in the middle of traffic while wearing a bright grass
   green suit and carrying a huge sign. 






0 comments  

Labels: Brazil, Rio de Janeiro, travelmoments




BUSTLING BUENOS AIRES


Tuesday, February 03, 2015

Every city has its zones: the political quarter, business quarter, entertainment
district.

One of the first things I'll do in a new city is head for the main shopping
street to watch the comings and goings.






In Buenos Aires, that main street is the Calle Florida, which has been partly
pedestrianised for more than a hundred years.

As I walked along, here's what I saw.


 * A man furiously spraying the air with an aerosol
   
 * A woman with a full head brace
   
 * People positioned every few yards along the street saying "cambi cambi
   cambio" in every manner of refrain.
   
 * Adverts for the McTriple, meat-obsessed Argentina's answer to the Big Mac
   (three burgers in one)
   
 * A woman carrying a 7 foot tall lampstand and shade wrapped entirely in bright
   lime green plastic
   
 * A man playfully tussling his girlfriend's long blonde hair, so much so that
   it ends up splayed across the ice cream cone she's eating.
   
 * A group of Orthodox Jews handing out boxes of Channukah lights
   
 * A blonde woman in a bright baby blue dress walking two pink painted poodles
   
 * A woman walking hand-in-hand with her two young daughters, all three of them
   wearing the same sparkly silver shoes
   
 * A big burly black man carrying 15 flashy handbags on one arm.
   
 * A man power-walking to work wearing a  tracksuit, football shirt and carrying
   a formal leather briefcase 






0 comments  

Labels: Argentina, Buenos Aires, travelmoments




HOT XMAS


Monday, February 02, 2015

I recently spent Christmas and New Year in Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil.





Christmas in hot climates is pretty surreal, seeing decorations in sweltering
sunshine or against bright blue skies.





Christmas lights and decorations vary from pretty and good to ridiculous and
tacky. Overall though, for us in Europe, they light or cheer up the darkest time
of the year and bring a little glitter to the gloom.










Not so in the southern summer, but they were rather entertaining and fun for me
to see how Christmas traditions translate in different climates.













My favourite sight - which I saw from a car so no time to photograph - was of a
Christmas tree on a beach, made of clear and green discarded plastic bottles.







0 comments  

Labels: Argentina, Brazil, christmas



Older Posts

Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)
 


COUNTRY NAME CHOOSER - CLICK TO CHOOSE!






ARCHIVES

 * ▼ 2016 (2)
   * ▼ March (1)
     * Grey Brussels
   * ► February (1)

 * ► 2015 (13)
   * ► November (1)
   * ► October (2)
   * ► September (1)
   * ► July (1)
   * ► June (1)
   * ► May (2)
   * ► February (5)

 * ► 2014 (31)
   * ► December (2)
   * ► November (3)
   * ► October (1)
   * ► September (1)
   * ► August (4)
   * ► July (5)
   * ► June (7)
   * ► May (2)
   * ► April (3)
   * ► March (1)
   * ► January (2)

 * ► 2013 (32)
   * ► December (4)
   * ► November (3)
   * ► October (4)
   * ► September (4)
   * ► August (1)
   * ► June (2)
   * ► May (4)
   * ► April (2)
   * ► March (3)
   * ► February (3)
   * ► January (2)

 * ► 2012 (16)
   * ► November (2)
   * ► October (2)
   * ► September (1)
   * ► August (1)
   * ► July (1)
   * ► May (1)
   * ► April (2)
   * ► March (1)
   * ► February (1)
   * ► January (4)

 * ► 2011 (30)
   * ► October (2)
   * ► September (2)
   * ► August (4)
   * ► July (8)
   * ► June (3)
   * ► May (3)
   * ► April (1)
   * ► March (5)
   * ► February (1)
   * ► January (1)

 * ► 2010 (55)
   * ► December (3)
   * ► November (2)
   * ► October (2)
   * ► September (3)
   * ► August (4)
   * ► July (5)
   * ► June (14)
   * ► May (3)
   * ► April (4)
   * ► March (5)
   * ► February (3)
   * ► January (7)

 * ► 2009 (60)
   * ► December (1)
   * ► November (5)
   * ► October (6)
   * ► September (3)
   * ► August (4)
   * ► July (3)
   * ► June (9)
   * ► May (6)
   * ► April (9)
   * ► March (6)
   * ► February (3)
   * ► January (5)

 * ► 2008 (90)
   * ► December (3)
   * ► November (8)
   * ► October (8)
   * ► September (5)
   * ► August (8)
   * ► July (8)
   * ► June (16)
   * ► May (10)
   * ► April (10)
   * ► March (8)
   * ► February (2)
   * ► January (4)

 * ► 2007 (63)
   * ► December (1)
   * ► October (5)
   * ► September (2)
   * ► August (4)
   * ► July (4)
   * ► June (4)
   * ► May (13)
   * ► April (4)
   * ► March (6)
   * ► February (10)
   * ► January (10)

 * ► 2006 (57)
   * ► December (5)
   * ► November (8)
   * ► October (4)
   * ► September (6)
   * ► August (5)
   * ► July (11)
   * ► May (2)
   * ► April (6)
   * ► March (3)
   * ► February (2)
   * ► January (5)

 * ► 2005 (7)
   * ► December (5)
   * ► November (2)




BLOGS I LIKE

 * Diamond Geezer
 * Ian Visits
 * Karinski
 * Londonist
 * Schlagerblog
 * Strange Maps




GET THIS BLOG BY EMAIL

Enter your email address:



Delivered by FeedBurner




LABELS

 * 's-Hertogenbosch (2)
 * 2010 (1)
 * Abkhazia (1)
 * accent (1)
 * Adrian (1)
 * aerial (12)
 * Africa (5)
 * airport (1)
 * Albania (2)
 * Algeria (2)
 * America (4)
 * Amsterdam (2)
 * Andorra (2)
 * Angels (1)
 * Angels in America (1)
 * Antti Tuiksu (1)
 * Antwerp (3)
 * architecture (16)
 * Argentina (7)
 * Armenia (2)
 * art (32)
 * Art Deco (1)
 * Art Nouveau (1)
 * Asia (2)
 * auction (1)
 * Australia (7)
 * Austria (7)
 * Bacarra (1)
 * Barack Obama (2)
 * beach (3)
 * belarus (2)
 * Belgium (12)
 * Belgrade (1)
 * Benidorm (2)
 * Berlin (3)
 * Berlin Germany (1)
 * Bhutan (1)
 * blogging (3)
 * Bonde do Role (1)
 * Bosnia-Herzegovina (5)
 * Brasilia (1)
 * Brazil (13)
 * Brighton (1)
 * Britain (1)
 * Bruges (1)
 * budapest (1)
 * Buenos Aires (1)
 * Buffalo (1)
 * Bulgaria (6)
 * bus (1)
 * Cabo da Roca (1)
 * Cameroon (1)
 * campaign (2)
 * canada (8)
 * cards (3)
 * carnival (1)
 * carola (3)
 * cartography (44)
 * Cat5 (1)
 * celebrity (6)
 * charity (2)
 * Chicago (2)
 * children (1)
 * Chile (1)
 * China (4)
 * christmas (2)
 * cinema (1)
 * circle-line (3)
 * Colombia (3)
 * colours (2)
 * communism (2)
 * Connecticut (1)
 * Cork (5)
 * craft (1)
 * Croatia (4)
 * cuba (1)
 * Cyprus (5)
 * Czech Republic (5)
 * democracy (1)
 * Denmark (8)
 * design (2)
 * Discovery (5)
 * dmitry koldun (1)
 * drag queens (1)
 * dragonette (4)
 * drawing (1)
 * Dschingis Khan (1)
 * Dublin (1)
 * Durham (1)
 * Ecuador (1)
 * Egypt (2)
 * eiresong eurosong (11)
 * Eläkeläiset (1)
 * election (1)
 * Elephant and Castle (2)
 * Elin Lanto (1)
 * Eliza Doolittle (1)
 * environment (3)
 * Essex (1)
 * Estonia (4)
 * ethiopia (1)
 * Euro 2008 (11)
 * europe (6)
 * European Capital of Culture (3)
 * EuroRevision (30)
 * eurovision (60)
 * Evridiki (1)
 * exhibitions (4)
 * fashion (2)
 * favela (1)
 * film (6)
 * Finland (15)
 * flag (3)
 * flash mob (1)
 * Florida (1)
 * flowers (1)
 * fonts (1)
 * food (2)
 * football (43)
 * France (17)
 * gay (6)
 * geography (21)
 * Georgia (3)
 * germany (17)
 * Ghana (1)
 * Ghent (1)
 * Ghost Signs (1)
 * Gibraltar (1)
 * Girls Aloud (3)
 * Girls Can't Catch (1)
 * Glasgow (1)
 * Globe project (10)
 * gothenburg (2)
 * Grace Jones (1)
 * graphics (3)
 * Greece (10)
 * Green Lanes (1)
 * Greenland (1)
 * gypsies (2)
 * gypsy (1)
 * Haiti (2)
 * hand-drawn (37)
 * Heathrow (1)
 * history (5)
 * history of my house (2)
 * holiday (8)
 * Holland (4)
 * hotties (1)
 * humppa (1)
 * hungary (8)
 * HURTS (1)
 * iaskpeopletodrawmaps (42)
 * ice-cream (1)
 * Iceland (8)
 * Illinois (1)
 * India (1)
 * Indiana (1)
 * internet (2)
 * Iran (2)
 * Ireland (33)
 * Israel (4)
 * Istanbul (1)
 * Italy (13)
 * Ivory Coast (1)
 * Japan (12)
 * Jonas Bendiksen (1)
 * Kazakhstan (1)
 * Kikki Danielsson (1)
 * kosovo (1)
 * Kylie (1)
 * Lady Gaga (1)
 * landscape (4)
 * language (4)
 * Latvia (4)
 * library (1)
 * Linz (1)
 * Lithuania (1)
 * live music (33)
 * Liverpool (2)
 * london (108)
 * Luxembourg (1)
 * Lyon (1)
 * macedonia (2)
 * Madagascar (3)
 * madeira (1)
 * Madrid (4)
 * Maine (2)
 * malta (3)
 * manchester (1)
 * map (28)
 * map pictogram (5)
 * maps (4)
 * mapworks (5)
 * Marina and the Diamonds (1)
 * Maryland (1)
 * Massachusetts (1)
 * massiel (1)
 * Mauritania (1)
 * Mediterranean (1)
 * melodifestivalen (11)
 * Mexico (3)
 * Mika (1)
 * Mini Viva (1)
 * Moldova (3)
 * Monaco (2)
 * Montenegro (1)
 * Morocco (3)
 * mosaic (2)
 * multimapped (7)
 * mural (1)
 * museums (9)
 * music / mp3 (21)
 * My world project (7)
 * Mykonos (1)
 * neology (3)
 * Nepal (1)
 * Netherlands (9)
 * New Hampshire (1)
 * New Jersey (1)
 * New York (6)
 * New York City (5)
 * New Zealand (1)
 * Newcastle (1)
 * news (10)
 * Nigeria (1)
 * nomenclature (1)
 * Nordkapp (1)
 * North America (2)
 * North Carolina (1)
 * Norway (14)
 * Norwich (1)
 * notebooks (3)
 * Nottingham (2)
 * Nouvelle Vague (1)
 * numbers (1)
 * O'Spada (1)
 * Ohio (1)
 * olympics (6)
 * Ostend (1)
 * overheard (2)
 * overlay (1)
 * Oxford (1)
 * painting (1)
 * Paloma Faith (1)
 * paraphenalia (1)
 * Paris (1)
 * Pennsylvania (2)
 * people-watching (2)
 * philippines (1)
 * Phonecards (1)
 * photography (57)
 * place quotes (15)
 * placenames (1)
 * Poland (7)
 * pop music (54)
 * popstars (13)
 * port (1)
 * Portsmouth (1)
 * Portugal (10)
 * post office (1)
 * posters (3)
 * Prado (1)
 * Prague (1)
 * preselection (3)
 * prints (1)
 * pubs (2)
 * puns (1)
 * quiz (3)
 * railway (2)
 * RCA (2)
 * reading (9)
 * Red Blooded Women (1)
 * regents park (1)
 * Rhode Island (1)
 * Richard X (1)
 * Riga (1)
 * Rio de Janeiro (2)
 * Robyn (4)
 * Rodrigo Moratto (1)
 * Roisin Murphy (1)
 * Romania (6)
 * Rome (1)
 * Russia (12)
 * Saint Saviour (1)
 * Sam Taylor (1)
 * San Marino (3)
 * schlager (7)
 * Scissor Sisters (1)
 * Scotland (3)
 * sculpture (3)
 * seascapes (2)
 * seaside (4)
 * Serbia (8)
 * Shetland (1)
 * Shop name geography (4)
 * sights (2)
 * sketch (1)
 * Slovakia (4)
 * Slovenia (4)
 * Sofia (1)
 * South Africa (1)
 * South America (3)
 * South Carolina (1)
 * South Korea (1)
 * Southeast Asia (1)
 * spain (23)
 * stationery (1)
 * statue (3)
 * stencil (1)
 * Stockholm (3)
 * street (1)
 * suburbia (2)
 * summer (1)
 * sunset (1)
 * Sweden (41)
 * Switzerland (5)
 * Syria (2)
 * Tallinn (1)
 * tattoo (1)
 * Tecnoctitlan (1)
 * Tel Aviv (1)
 * television (5)
 * Tennessee Williams (1)
 * The Ark (1)
 * The Gossip (1)
 * The Sounds (1)
 * theatre (1)
 * thomas struth (1)
 * tiles (1)
 * Togo (1)
 * Tokyo (1)
 * tourists (1)
 * train station (1)
 * trains (6)
 * Transdniestria (1)
 * travel (26)
 * travelmoments (20)
 * tree (1)
 * True or False tour (2)
 * Tunisia (1)
 * Turkey (7)
 * twitter (1)
 * UK (26)
 * Ukraine (9)
 * United Arab Emirates (1)
 * United Kingdom (2)
 * Uruguay (3)
 * USA (36)
 * vania fernandes (1)
 * vespas (1)
 * video (1)
 * Virginia (1)
 * west (1)
 * west end girls (1)
 * winners (1)
 * word play (1)
 * world (2)
 * World Cup (22)
 * World Expo (1)
 * Wyoming (1)
 * Yugoslavia (1)


 
 
 



 
Copyright © acediscovery | Powered by Blogger & Theme by ThemesCook
Diese Website verwendet Cookies von Google, um Dienste anzubieten und Zugriffe
zu analysieren. Deine IP-Adresse und dein User-Agent werden zusammen mit
Messwerten zur Leistung und Sicherheit für Google freigegeben. So können
Nutzungsstatistiken generiert, Missbrauchsfälle erkannt und behoben und die
Qualität des Dienstes gewährleistet werden.Weitere InformationenOk