Garage Accessories
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Q&A–: Where is it ok for me to have a garage sale in downtown Atlanta GA?
I have a bunch of stuff in storage that I’m looking to sell before the holidays. Mostly clothes and bags but I also have some accessories and other things I can’t really sell on craigslist. Any help is greatly appreciated.
The following is the answer: (Hint: The correct answer provided by the users, does not guarantee the right.)
Answer by Keith O
G’day Princess,
Thank you for your question.
I would contact the local council about getting a permit. They normally cost between $ 5 and $ 20. Saturday morning is the best time to do it. You can even advertise it on Craigslist. They advertise other garage sales.
Regards
Answer by mccoyblues
The ONLY place to legally hold a garage sale is on your personal property with the proper permit. If you want to hold your sale on public property you need the cities permission. If you want to have your sale on someone elses property you need their permission.
In other words, if you are in an apartment and want to hold the sale in the parking lot or sidewalk, you need permission from the property owner or manager. If you want to hold the sale in a park or any public land you need the permission of the city.
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Beautiful:
Series VI

Image by Voxphoto
Forgive the geeky intrusion… but a few times lately I’ve wanted to explain to people how cool the "Series" filter system was, and finally decided a visual aid would help.
Using filters with my Olympus SLR system was always really easy, since all my lenses used the same 49mm size. Things got more complicated as I started acquiring more and more weird old cameras & lenses, no two of which had the same diameter filter thread.
In the 1940s and 50s, there was a hugely popular system of modular lens accessories called Series V, VI, VII, and so on. They allowed you to use one set of filters (in whichever diameter was large enough), which drop into different adapters matching all your different lenses.
The Series adapters were made as threaded, push-on, or bayonet attachments. The filter itself was held inside the adapter with a standard threaded retaining ring–or, optionally, a lens shade with the same threading. A few lenses (e.g. Argus and Canon rangefinder) had standard Series threading as their native filter thread.
Recently my pal Mark ended up having his garage turn into the Aladdin’s Cave of Series filters, after helping dispose of some photographic estates. Thanks to his generosity, I’ve now unearthed Series VI adapters matching virtually all my odd lenses (even a push-on one fitting the Diana!)–plus a nice assortment of filters, hoods, and close-up lenses….
This system isn’t so practical for polarizers (because you can’t grab the filter to rotate it); and it seems it fell out of favor in the era when SLRs rose to dominance. But if you ever have a chance to root around in the accessories bin at some swap meet or old-school camera store, the Series system is still pretty cool.
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