View allAll Photos Tagged 1...
January 1, 2011
Okay Soooo I started a 365 last year and i failed haha. I have made another goal to do it again. I hope I can do it! My Birthday was yesterday, it was a great new years eve and 19th birthday! This is my old camera thats hanging around my neck, im excited to start this new project with my new camera! and by the way my underwear has cameras on it :]
I really want to be a photographer for Teen Vogue! My dream is to be one of the youngest photographers for Teen Vogue.. its about teenagers right?? Well im one!! haha
check out all the pics here : facebook
Ever since i broke my lens, and kinda screwed up my camera's body I've been going through old pictures. This one made me think a lot. The 'pala' did. What does it mean? At first I thought of it as some sort of symbol for the connection between the two souls. How you become one with Guru sahib's blessings. But how can u be one yet not be attached? So i pondered... a whole LOT! Then i came across something recommended to me by a friend and it all made sense. So again, i wanted to share... cause sharing is caring rite? And because I know a LOT of ppl getting married these months. PS, PS, AS, AS, AS (no repeats). This is just my way of wishing you all TONS of happiness. So, give it a read. It's Khalil Gibran's description of a marriage.
You were born together, and together you shall be forevermore.
You shall be together when white wings of death scatter your days.
Aye, you shall be together even in the silent memory of God.
But let there be spaces in your togetherness,
And let the winds of the heavens dance between you.
Love one another but make not a bond of love:
Let it rather be a moving sea between the shores of your souls.
Fill each other's cup but drink not from one cup.
Give one another of your bread but eat not from the same loaf.
Sing and dance together and be joyous, but let each one of you be alone,
Even as the strings of a lute are alone though they quiver with the same music.
Give your hearts, but not into each other's keeping.
For only the hand of Life can contain your hearts.
And stand together, yet not too near together:
For the pillars of the temple stand apart,
And the oak tree and the cypress grow not in each other's shadow.
=) yep!
--------------------------------------------------_/\_----------------------------------------------------
Guru sahib has been repeating the same lines to this pondering mind forever! It JUST hit me though.
Attachment ?
bhram kee kooee thrisanaa ras pa(n)kaj ath theekhyan moh kee faas ||
kaattanehaar jagath gur gobidh charan kamal thaa kae karahu nivaas ||1||
maaee man maero bas naahi ||
nis baasur bikhian ko dhhaavath kihi bidhh roko thaahi ||1|| rehaao ||
bikhai bikhai kee baasanaa thajeea neh jaaee ||
anik jathan kar raakheeai fir fir lapattaaee ||2||
... kio shhootto kaisae tharo bhavajal nidhh bhaaree ||
raakh raakh maerae beet(h)ulaa jan saran thumhaaree ||1|| rehaao ||
vas aanihu vae jan eis man ko man baasae jio nith bhoudhiaa ||
dhukh rain vae vihaaneeaa nith aasaa aas karaedhiaa ||
gur paaeiaa vae sa(n)th jano man aas pooree har choudhiaa ||
jan naanak prabh dhaehu mathee shhadd aasaa nith sukh soudhiaa ||2||
vah!
Today my account becomes 1 year old!! I´m really happy I was able to get this far and improve in my photographing skills. Thanks to all the supportive people and especially to Ivan or CatrineDemew who was the first person ever to give me its frienship and its favorites haha. If you are tagged I consider you someone really special to me :3.
If your not tagged; don´t worry, you are also special!
Canon AE-1 - Canon FD 50mm f1.8 - Kodak Tri-x (ISO 400)
Scansione da negativo (Epson Perfection 3490)
A Lost European Culture, Pulled From Obscurity
By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD
Before the glory that was Greece and Rome, even before the first cities of Mesopotamia or temples along the Nile, there lived in the Lower Danube Valley and the Balkan foothills people who were ahead of their time in art, technology and long-distance trade.
For 1,500 years, starting earlier than 5000 B.C., they farmed and built sizable towns, a few with as many as 2,000 dwellings. They mastered large-scale copper smelting, the new technology of the age. Their graves held an impressive array of exquisite headdresses and necklaces and, in one cemetery, the earliest major assemblage of gold artifacts to be found anywhere in the world.
The striking designs of their pottery speak of the refinement of the culture’s visual language. Until recent discoveries, the most intriguing artifacts were the ubiquitous terracotta “goddess” figurines, originally interpreted as evidence of the spiritual and political power of women in society.
New research, archaeologists and historians say, has broadened understanding of this long overlooked culture, which seemed to have approached the threshold of “civilization” status. Writing had yet to be invented, and so no one knows what the people called themselves. To some scholars, the people and the region are simply Old Europe.
The little-known culture is being rescued from obscurity in an exhibition, “The Lost World of Old Europe: the Danube Valley, 5000-3500 B.C.,” which opened last month at the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World at New York University. More than 250 artifacts from museums in Bulgaria, Moldova and Romania are on display for the first time in the United States. The show will run through April 25.
At its peak, around 4500 B.C., said David W. Anthony, the exhibition’s guest curator, “Old Europe was among the most sophisticated and technologically advanced places in the world” and was developing “many of the political, technological and ideological signs of civilization.”
Dr. Anthony is a professor of anthropology at Hartwick College in Oneonta, N.Y., and author of “The Horse, the Wheel, and Language: How Bronze-Age Riders from the Eurasian Steppes Shaped the Modern World.” Historians suggest that the arrival in southeastern Europe of people from the steppes may have contributed to the collapse of the Old Europe culture by 3500 B.C.
At the exhibition preview, Roger S. Bagnall, director of the institute, confessed that until now “a great many archaeologists had not heard of these Old Europe cultures.” Admiring the colorful ceramics, Dr. Bagnall, a specialist in Egyptian archaeology, remarked that at the time “Egyptians were certainly not making pottery like this.”
A show catalog, published by Princeton University Press, is the first compendium in English of research on Old Europe discoveries. The book, edited by Dr. Anthony, with Jennifer Y. Chi, the institute’s associate director for exhibitions, includes essays by experts from Britain, France, Germany, the United States and the countries where the culture existed.
Dr. Chi said the exhibition reflected the institute’s interest in studying the relationships of well-known cultures and the “underappreciated ones.”
Although excavations over the last century uncovered traces of ancient settlements and the goddess figurines, it was not until local archaeologists in 1972 discovered a large fifth-millennium B.C. cemetery at Varna, Bulgaria, that they began to suspect these were not poor people living in unstructured egalitarian societies. Even then, confined in cold war isolation behind the Iron Curtain, Bulgarians and Romanians were unable to spread their knowledge to the West.
The story now emerging is of pioneer farmers after about 6200 B.C. moving north into Old Europe from Greece and Macedonia, bringing wheat and barley seeds and domesticated cattle and sheep. They established colonies along the Black Sea and in the river plains and hills, and these evolved into related but somewhat distinct cultures, archaeologists have learned. The settlements maintained close contact through networks of trade in copper and gold and also shared patterns of ceramics.
The Spondylus shell from the Aegean Sea was a special item of trade. Perhaps the shells, used in pendants and bracelets, were symbols of their Aegean ancestors. Other scholars view such long-distance acquisitions as being motivated in part by ideology in which goods are not commodities in the modern sense but rather “valuables,” symbols of status and recognition.
Noting the diffusion of these shells at this time, Michel Louis Seferiades, an anthropologist at the National Center for Scientific Research in France, suspects “the objects were part of a halo of mysteries, an ensemble of beliefs and myths.”
In any event, Dr. Seferiades wrote in the exhibition catalog that the prevalence of the shells suggested the culture had links to “a network of access routes and a social framework of elaborate exchange systems — including bartering, gift exchange and reciprocity.”
Over a wide area of what is now Bulgaria and Romania, the people settled into villages of single- and multiroom houses crowded inside palisades. The houses, some with two stories, were framed in wood with clay-plaster walls and beaten-earth floors. For some reason, the people liked making fired clay models of multilevel dwellings, examples of which are exhibited.
A few towns of the Cucuteni people, a later and apparently robust culture in the north of Old Europe, grew to more than 800 acres, which archaeologists consider larger than any other known human settlements at the time. But excavations have yet to turn up definitive evidence of palaces, temples or large civic buildings. Archaeologists concluded that rituals of belief seemed to be practiced in the homes, where cultic artifacts have been found.
The household pottery decorated in diverse, complex styles suggested the practice of elaborate at-home dining rituals. Huge serving bowls on stands were typical of the culture’s “socializing of food presentation,” Dr. Chi said.
At first, the absence of elite architecture led scholars to assume that Old Europe had little or no hierarchical power structure. This was dispelled by the graves in the Varna cemetery. For two decades after 1972, archaeologists found 310 graves dated to about 4500 B.C. Dr. Anthony said this was “the best evidence for the existence of a clearly distinct upper social and political rank.”
Vladimir Slavchev, a curator at the Varna Regional Museum of History, said the “richness and variety of the Varna grave gifts was a surprise,” even to the Bulgarian archaeologist Ivan Ivanov, who directed the discoveries. “Varna is the oldest cemetery yet found where humans were buried with golden ornaments,” Dr. Slavchev said.
More than 3,000 pieces of gold were found in 62 of the graves, along with copper weapons and tools, and ornaments, necklaces and bracelets of the prized Aegean shells. “The concentration of imported prestige objects in a distinct minority of graves suggest that institutionalized higher ranks did exist,” exhibition curators noted in a text panel accompanying the Varna gold.
Yet it is puzzling that the elite seemed not to indulge in private lives of excess. “The people who donned gold costumes for public events while they were alive,” Dr. Anthony wrote, “went home to fairly ordinary houses.”
Copper, not gold, may have been the main source of Old Europe’s economic success, Dr. Anthony said. As copper smelting developed about 5400 B.C., the Old Europe cultures tapped abundant ores in Bulgaria and what is now Serbia and learned the high-heat technique of extracting pure metallic copper.
Smelted copper, cast as axes, hammered into knife blades and coiled in bracelets, became valuable exports. Old Europe copper pieces have been found in graves along the Volga River, 1,200 miles east of Bulgaria. Archaeologists have recovered more than five tons of pieces from Old Europe sites.
An entire gallery is devoted to the figurines, the more familiar and provocative of the culture’s treasures. They have been found in virtually every Old Europe culture and in several contexts: in graves, house shrines and other possibly “religious spaces.”
One of the best known is the fired clay figure of a seated man, his shoulders bent and hands to his face in apparent contemplation. Called the “Thinker,” the piece and a comparable female figurine were found in a cemetery of the Hamangia culture, in Romania. Were they thinking, or mourning?
Many of the figurines represent women in stylized abstraction, with truncated or elongated bodies and heaping breasts and expansive hips. The explicit sexuality of these figurines invites interpretations relating to earthly and human fertility.
An arresting set of 21 small female figurines, seated in a circle, was found at a pre-Cucuteni village site in northeastern Romania. “It is not difficult to imagine,” said Douglass W. Bailey of San Francisco State University, the Old Europe people “arranging sets of seated figurines into one or several groups of miniature activities, perhaps with the smaller figurines at the feet or even on the laps of the larger, seated ones.”
Others imagined the figurines as the “Council of Goddesses.” In her influential books three decades ago, Marija Gimbutas, an anthropologist at the University of California, Los Angeles, offered these and other so-called Venus figurines as representatives of divinities in cults to a Mother Goddess that reigned in prehistoric Europe.
Although the late Dr. Gimbutas still has an ardent following, many scholars hew to more conservative, nondivine explanations. The power of the objects, Dr. Bailey said, was not in any specific reference to the divine, but in “a shared understanding of group identity.”
As Dr. Bailey wrote in the exhibition catalog, the figurines should perhaps be defined only in terms of their actual appearance: miniature, representational depictions of the human form. He thus “assumed (as is justified by our knowledge of human evolution) that the ability to make, use and understand symbolic objects such as figurines is an ability that is shared by all modern humans and thus is a capability that connects you, me, Neolithic men, women and children, and the Paleolithic painters in caves.”
Or else the “Thinker,” for instance, is the image of you, me, the archaeologists and historians confronted and perplexed by a “lost” culture in southeastern Europe that had quite a go with life back before a single word was written or a wheel turned.
December was a rough month. I'm glad it's over. The day after our cat died, my daughter's mouse died. So we have rats now. :) This is Bebow. Bebow and her friend Teco are both terrified of my camera. I told them they better get used to it! ;0) This photo is decieving as Bebow is the brave one. She just doesn't like cameras... yet. She's also crazy fast, and I'm very nervous about her getting loose before she fully trusts us. I would never be able to catch her! I had rats as a kid, and in recent days I've watched plenty of rats on YouTube. I'm pretty sure Bebow is the fastest rat alive. ;-)
A cute picture my daughter took of Sneakers and Reepicheep the mouse is in the comments. :)
The little RX100 delivers the goods again. A grab shot of someone looking for a lunch of tired salmon.
I am pleased to present to you a special project from Randall Craig RTW in collaboration with Robsdolls.
1 Carnaby Street is a prototype fashion that I created for the Randall Craig RTW line. The fabric sold out before I was able to purchase enough for the production run and thus this fashion had to be dropped from the line. Only one of these dresses was ever created. This simple yet fabulously mod fashion was one of my favorites in the collection so I hated for it to go unseen. Fortunately, I was able to team up with Rob Thompson.
This beautiful Kyori was customized by Rob Thompson especially to wear this fashion. She has been rerooted with a blend of platinum and tickled pink saran hair. Her hair is worn in a high ponytail with thick bangs. Kyori’s makeup has also been enhanced with frosty pearl lipstick and eyeshadow.
The name 1 Carnaby Street is taken from the address of a plaque on Carnaby Street honoring fashion entrepreneur John Stephen, who was credited with beginning the mod fashion revolution in London.
Kyori in1 Carnaby Street will be available in the IFDC Live Auction benefitting the Children Affected by Aids Foundation.
Lens: ZEISS Otus 1.4/85
Camera: Nikon D800
Exposure: ISO 100, f/4.5 at 1/6s
Processed: Adobe LR v5.7
Location: Hudson River Water Front Walkway
1st Explore
Explored # 476
January 1, 2009
1000 views =]
I decided to do the whole one picture a week for 52 weeks thing, I figured I wouldn't be able to keep up with the 365 thing... Happy new year! =]
I felt really silly setting up a tripod in my bathroom....
Locomotion No. 1 is an early British steam locomotive built for the Stockton and Darlington Railway. Built by George and Robert Stephenson's company Robert Stephenson and Company in 1825. It was the first one to run on a passenger carrying line.
The No. 1 engine, called Locomotion, for the Stockton & Darlington RailwayLocomotion used all the improvements that Stephenson had pioneered in the Killingworth locomotives. It used high-pressure steam from a centre-flue boiler, with a steam-blast in the chimney, to drive two vertical cylinders, enclosed within the boiler. A pair of yokes above them transmitted the power downwards, through pairs of connecting rods. It made use of a loose eccentric valve gear,[3] and was one of the first locomotives to use coupling rods rather than chains or gears to link its 0-4-0 driving wheels together.
The locomotive is historically important as the first one to run on a passenger carrying line,[4] rather than for the innovations in its design. It hauled the first train on the Stockton and Darlington Railway on 27 September 1825.
In 1828 the boiler exploded, killing the driver. With advances in design such as those incorporated into Stephenson's Rocket, Locomotion became obsolete very quickly. It was rebuilt and remained in service until 1841 when it was turned into a stationary engine.
Canon AT-1 ~1977
Shutter 2" - 1/1000
Semi- automatic exposure. Once the aperture or shutter speed is chosen you have to make a circle and a needle, in the viewfinder, coincide.
Power source 6v battery
Canon FD Lens 50mm 1:1.4 S.S.C.
Almost 5 months have passed since my last upload. The reason behind this pause lies on the conditions that I experience in Greece.
In Greece, nowadays, there are three cases. Either you are unemployed or, if you are employed, you live within a constant state of insecurity of losing your job, either because the company you work is having problems or because they can find someone else who will be willing to work more hours for less money. All is justified in the name of “calming” the “markets”. As if the markets are demons or demi-gods who demand the lives of the people in order to be satisfied. This is madness!!
Unemployment is 26% and by the end of the year it will reach 34% of the active population! This kind of unemployment has been noted only in countries that have been facing long term wars. The health system is collapsing rapidly and the fascist party is getting more and more strong. We do not speak of a Far Right party but of a Fascist party on the steps of the Nazi party. Everyday that passes they become more and more popular with their mix of populist politics and hate speech.
Europe, for Greeks, is dead. As it seems Greece is dead for Europe too. A new Europe is rising that in order to secure itself it is becoming smaller and smaller. As if to become secure it has to cut parts of its body. What a mental anomaly!
And then there are those people who live by their pensions. As the man in this photo coming out of a “1 euro shop”, dressed poorly, passing through a body of demonstrators, looking down, speaking to himself, lost somewhere on his thoughts.
This old man, lives with a pension of 300 or 400 euros. Now, he has to pay all his medicine, he has to eat and live with this money. And the prices in Greece are the same just like Germany. Greece is among the three most expensive countries to live in Europe!
On my side, while life has been hard there have been some good news too. “Gateway” magazine from China has published a set of my photos on greek crisis on its July issue. It was an 8 page article I wrote with photos I had taken. In the next days I will see to post some pages from the magazine with the text in English.
On the other hand, I am left with no camera to take photos (except from an automatic Panasonic Lumix) since my Olympus E-400 has broken into pieces after an accident I had. This has been very frustrating for me and while I have been trying to put some money on the side this is very very difficult.
Hope you enjoy the photo.
Some little studio work from yesterday. I got some new shelves for my studio from IKEA and I cleaned everything up because I want to do a bit more studio and flash work in the future. My plan is to do a 100 portrait project with 50mm focal length and flash work as main part of this project. There is no time frame but I don't want to do a portrait of a person twice that's mean I need 100 people for this project :-/ if you are interested to be a part of this, please let me know ;-)
Strobe info: VC300 in a gridded 120cm octa-box right from camera metered to F5.6 as main light. 400Ws monolight with light through umbrella left and far behind camera for fill light – metered to F2.8 or more less. Right and left behind me 430EX II in a 60x90 squared umbrella soft-box for rim – metered to F/4. 580 EXII with blue gel and full power spoted to the backdrop. Triggert with Pocket Wizard miniTT1, flexTT5 and Phottix Atlas.
Camera info: Canon EOS 5D mkII with Sigma 50mm 1.4 at 1/125 sec, F/5.6, ISO100
Hit L or use this one view large
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted in the We want more! Group :-)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"RP 1", ink and graphite on paper, 4.125" x 5.75".
_____________________________________
Relentless…the word I chose for this year, 2018. Or the word that chose me. Am I chosen by, or do I choose? I ask this question more often as my years pass by. So what is this word about? This word that chose me–relentless? Must I be relentless in my choosing? Did she choose me to be Mom? Or did I choose her?
The faint smile of knowing. I know that smile. The sideways looking. I know that look. The resolve of her mouth. I know those studied hatch marks. Those lines, drawn lovingly, knowingly. To be... relentless.
- Sherrie Lowly
_____________________________________
About the Redeemer Project: In November of 2017 I received an invitation from Bethany Kenyon of Redeemer University College in Ontario, Canada to participate in a two-person exhibition. My initial thought was to show a few paintings, but various considerations led me to the idea of making a series of small, postcard sized drawings. The drawings would be installed over the course of the exhibition one at a time, starting with just one. I invited my wife Sherrie to write a text for each drawing (see above) which I will post in relation to each drawing concurrently with when it (the drawing) is installed in the exhibition.
Here is the statement I wrote for the exhibition:
"The Redeemer Project"
The viewer: you complete the work. While my intention with this project is hopefully relevant, I invite you to look and think carefully prior to reading my statement. Perhaps start with "What does (the practice of making a) drawing mean?"
The subject: I see her face every day. Over the last 32 years Temma, our daughter, has been a constant presence in our lives. She is profoundly other. To use more medically clinical terms is to largely define her by who and what she isn't. I'm more interested in and constantly unraveled by who she is. The central stream of my work as a visual artist has been Temma-centric. She is emphatically present even while remaining an enigmatic mystery.
The project: Post card sized(1) ink (and a bit of graphite) drawings of Temma. Start the drawing from life, if need be(2) supplement with photographic reference. And again. And again.(3)
The artist: I like to think of (the making of) art as a relational practice, a representational practice, a political practice, a conceptual practice, a contemplative practice, a practice in being (present to), a practice in longing, a practice in loving.
1 - The size of an artwork is always meaningful. The material used to make an artwork is always meaningful. The process used to make an artwork is always meaningful.
2 - Temma doesn't pose, let alone hold a pose. Most likely she has little understanding of what it means to be seen.
3 - The season of Lent and the common practice of reflection leading up to Holy Week (when the exhibition concludes) was not irrelevant to my thinking towards this project and exhibition.
AasP
1.26 Amsterdam
Boulevard of Light - Amsterdam Light Festival
Janet Echelman reshapes the urban airspace with monumental, fluid and moving sculptures that respond to environmental forces, such as wind, water and sunlight.
In India, Echelman created a new form of voluminous sculpture of fishing nets for the first time, without heavy and solid materials. To shape her projects, she works with a team of professionals from, for instance, the aviation industry and architecture.
1.26 Amsterdam is a referral to the earthquake in Chili of February 2010 that reduced the day by 1.26 microseconds. For Echelman, the opportunity to integrate the reflections of the light in the water in Amsterdam with her work is unique.
*****
Janet Echelman geeft een nieuwe vorm aan het stedelijk luchtruim met monumentale, fluïde, en bewegende sculpturen die reageren op omgevingskrachten, zoals wind, water en zonlicht.
In India creëerde Echelman voor het eerst van vissersnetten een nieuwe vorm van volumineuze sculptuur, zonder zware en solide materialen. Om haar projecten vorm te geven werkt ze samen met een team van professionals uit o.a. de luchtvaart en de architectuur.
1.26 Amsterdam is een verwijzing naar de aardbeving in Chili van februari 2010 die ervoor zorgde dat de dag werd verkort met 1.26 microseconden. Voor Echelman is de mogelijkheid om in Amsterdam reflecties van het licht in het water te integreren met haar werk uniek.
yashica mat 124g
fuji neopan 400
moersch tanol 1+1+100, 9,25min at 24'C
Even as I have over a dozen other rolls of film waiting to be developed in the fridge, some shot several weeks ago, I was eager to see the latest shots, so I developed the last roll I shot on vacation. And it's a disaster. Seems that my inner computer was not working correctly, as I underestimated the exposure times on 3/4 frames and they are almost totally clear. There were just 3 frames exposed correctly and I am posting two of these.
7/2024 - Monaca, PA
After ten years I figured it was time for new, updated photos of CSX's Monaca-Beaver bridge over the Ohio River. I find the design of this bridge incredibly interesting with it's middle suspended truss, cantilever design, and added standard truss on the northwest end. The total length is about 1,787 feet with a main span of about 769 feet. Built 1910. In the left background we have the NS Cleveland Line crossing over the Beaver River.
One of Stockholm's best-kept secrets, MS Patricia is a former private yacht turned bar that boasts an impressive four floors, two outdoor bars, a restaurant and terrace.
For over 20 years, Patricia has been hosting a gay night on Sundays, hosted by the fabulous Lars Åke "Babsan" Wilhelmsson. Expect lots of glitter, costumes, dancing, live music and juicy drinks.
i wanted to post an image of the Chicago Skyline for my 1,000th upload so here it is, a long exposure 16x9 crop with fast moving clouds over the city and some blurred out geese in the lake...have a good one friends...pls. View On Black
Featured in chicagoist.com's Extra Extra on 11/08/2012...
1/365
I completed a photo of the day in 2009 and 2012. I thought I'd do it again since I didn't take as many photos last year.
I've been going back and fourth to the hospital visiting my Great Auntie. The place was really quiet. I got a telephoto lens for Christmas and cannot wait to go out and take photos of nature with it :)
I was visiting the orang asli, when I saw this adorable girl. There will come more photo's for this set so keep updated!
NAME: 1 Malay
CAMERA: D3000
LENS: 18- 200 mm
BY: 65 mm
like us at Facebook or visit the Site
ARE YOU A STARTING PHOTOGRAPHER? Go then to this Facebook page Let's Photograph
Amtrak GG-1 926 was restored to the "bloody nose" scheme by Central New York Chapter NRHS in 2009. No. 926 was one of six G-motors to get repainted into the full Amtrak paint scheme. Orginally built in 1943 as PRR 4933, and retied in 1977. Currently on display at the New York State Fairgrounds outside of Syracuse, New York.