Skip to content
Log in
Register
Shopping cart
0
Folders
748
Scottish Fisheries Museum
752
Museum Boats
754
Research
Item
of 81
Edit item
More
Select
Share
Feedback
Relaunching 'Research, LK62', after restoration of hull.
This item is active and ready to use
Relaunching 'Research, LK62'
Relaunching 'Research, LK62'
Purchase options
Use
Category
Reproduction
Circulation
Duration
Region
Required information
Media options
Comments
(0)
Item details
iBase ID
1423
Title
Relaunching 'Research, LK62', after restoration of hull.
Description
Relaunching 'Research, LK62', after restoration of hull. L-R: Mrs J.S Watson, J.S. Watson, Hew Lorimer, and Robert Prescott. J.S Watson was the Principal of the University of St Andrews from 1966 to 1986.
Relaunching 'Research, LK62', after restoration of hull.
L-R: Mrs J.S Watson, J.S. Watson, Hew Lorimer, and Robert Prescott.
J.S Watson was the Principal of the University of St Andrews from 1966 to 1986.
Copyright Status
The Scottish Fisheries Museum Trust Ltd
Physical Location
Bk 1 p71
Restricted Notes
Labels
1970-1979
1980-1989
Boat launches
Boatyards
Documentary
Formal wear
Harbours
Hull
Identified people
LK - Lerwick
Men
Monochrome
Multiple people
Museum personnel
Negatives
Photograph
Portrait orientation
Research
Sail
Scotland
SFM copyright
Unknown geographical location
Women
Zulu
File metadata
Uploaded by
Uploaded on
2022-05-19 09:43:44
File name
OPTIMISED_SFM_2385.jpg
File type
Image
File extension
JPEG
File size
0.48 MB
Width
1057 px
Height
1050 px
Megapixels
1 MP
Aspect ratio
1/1
DPI
300
Resolution
FPS
Duration
Capture date
Capture device
Perfection V800/V850
Colour space
RGB
Colour profile
sRGB IEC61966-2.1
Video codec
Video bitrate
Audio codec
Audio bitrate
Audio sample rate
Audio bits per sample
Audio channels
This item includes these files
Image
Links
Collections with this item
Other items like this
Open full page
Clear all
Search within
By text
By keyword
By folder / collection
By recent searches
Export
More
Print
Export data
Collection
More
Lightbox
More
Edit
More
Workflow