Unusual 19c
Unusual 19c
Picked this up recently: a 19c with a '19' decal on one side and (the remains of) a 52 decal on the other!
- Attachments
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- 20180609_075341.jpg (58.28 KiB) Viewed 1206 times
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- 20180609_075331.jpg (64.27 KiB) Viewed 1206 times
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- Posts: 596
- Joined: Tue Sep 17, 2013 4:51 am
Re: Unusual 19c
Cool! Well spotted.
Also pretty nifty how they got the anti gravity feature to work in this model on the cork ceiling!
Also pretty nifty how they got the anti gravity feature to work in this model on the cork ceiling!
Happy hunting!
Kurt
Kurt
Re: Unusual 19c
A nice unusual piece. Unfortunately the anti gravity feature didn't apply to the driver. They so often go missing.MatchboxFreak wrote:Cool! Well spotted.
Also pretty nifty how they got the anti gravity feature to work in this model on the cork ceiling!
John
There's nothing regular about wheels
There's nothing regular about wheels
Re: Unusual 19c
From the comments, I assume that some Members see the photographs inverted (which is how they were sent to me originally). However, on my laptop, after resizing and rotating using Paint, they display the right way up, both in the folder and in this post.
I've had this issue before. Does anyone know how to resolve it?
I've had this issue before. Does anyone know how to resolve it?
- tractorboy
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Re: Unusual 19c
OK for us in the southern hemisphere - guess you northerners will just have to turn your computers upside down or do a headstand.
Had a look online and came up this:
Images might display sideways or upside down after uploading them to your website thanks to the picture being taken on a phone or camera that is in landscape mode. While most image viewers will automatically rotate the image to the correct orientation when viewing it, most internet browsers do not.
In order to change the orientation on an image, you will need to open the picture in a dedicated image editing software, rotate it to your desired orientation, then save the image and re-upload it onto your website.
Note: Microsoft Paint, Microsoft Image Viewer, iPhoto and Preview (Mac) are not able to change image origination.
Had a look online and came up this:
Images might display sideways or upside down after uploading them to your website thanks to the picture being taken on a phone or camera that is in landscape mode. While most image viewers will automatically rotate the image to the correct orientation when viewing it, most internet browsers do not.
In order to change the orientation on an image, you will need to open the picture in a dedicated image editing software, rotate it to your desired orientation, then save the image and re-upload it onto your website.
Note: Microsoft Paint, Microsoft Image Viewer, iPhoto and Preview (Mac) are not able to change image origination.
"What one loves in childhood stays in the heart forever." ---Mary Jo Putney
Rodger
Rodger
Re: Unusual 19c
Good technical explanation here.
I think I've stripped the EXIF value from this photograph. Does it still display inverted for some Members? (If the problem has been resolved, I'll post details of how I did it.)
I think I've stripped the EXIF value from this photograph. Does it still display inverted for some Members? (If the problem has been resolved, I'll post details of how I did it.)
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- 19c-10.jpg (64.27 KiB) Viewed 1151 times
Re: Unusual 19c
Still beautifully upside down on my iPad!
Re: Unusual 19c
All images posted appear the correct way in sunny Manchester Hugh.
Re: Unusual 19c
It's Windows/Apple thing: Windows doesn't read the orientation metadata but Apple devices do.moston100 wrote:All images posted appear the correct way in sunny Manchester Hugh.