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I will be in China in August 2017. Beijing, Chengdu, Shanghai, and Dalian, plus other locations if needed. If you are female and willing to shoot with me, please message me before July 31. Thanks! Looking forward to seeing you! - CJ

Supermoon of 2023.

 

Craters visible in this monochrome shot; upper right quadrant. Shot from outside my house.

 

Nikon D850, 200-400mm f/4G lens, f/4, 1/200s, ISO 31.

 

Thanks to all of you who fave and/or comment on the photograph!

Greetings,

We're happy to inform you that we've made our new man's suit update.

 

It has various colors and patterns of suits in recently.

It shows individual style of suits with various sensitivity and element.

In addition, customers who also wanted to complete a distinctive suit by themselves with their sensibility.

We will reflect this trend and update variety colors of suits in several times.

  

We are prepared blue series suits for first.

  

[ Color me Blue! ]

  

It is mixed trendy blue color and rhythmical check pattern.

A jacket and pants are required and vest is optional.

It's a semi-suit set which is possible to be rhythmic with jacket and pants.

You could mix and match by yourself in your taste.

  

* We will give an accessory from pictures as a special gift who order [Color me Blue] during July!

* Special gift - Giving one in Corsage, badge, ribbon tie, and white belt in random

  

Gift Presentation Period : 2016.07.01~07.31

  

Thanks for your interesting and love.

Freedomteller

East-German postcard by VEB Progress Film-Vertrieb, Berlin, no. 128/69, 1969. Photo: Unifrance-Film.

 

French actor of Spanish origin Louis de Funès (1914-1983) was one of the giants of French comedy alongside André Bourvil and Fernandel. In many of his over 130 films, he portrayed a humorously excitable, cranky man with a propensity to hyperactivity, bad faith, and uncontrolled fits of anger. Along with his short height (1.63 m) and his facial contortions, this hyperactivity produced a highly comic effect, especially opposite Bourvil, who always played calm, slightly naive, good-humored men.

 

Louis de Funès (French pronunciation: [lwi də fynɛs]) was born Louis Germain David de Funès de Galarza in Courbevoie, France in 1914. His father, Carlos Luis de Funès de Galarza had been a lawyer in Seville, Spain, but became a diamond cutter upon arriving in France. His mother, Leonor Soto Reguera was of Spanish and Portuguese extraction. Since the couple's families opposed their marriage, they settled in France in 1904. Known to friends and intimates as ‘Fufu’, the young De Funès was fond of drawing and piano playing and spoke French, Spanish, and English well. He studied at the prestigious Lycée Condorcet in Paris. He showed a penchant for tomfoolery, something which caused him trouble at school and later made it hard for him to hold down a job. He became a pianist, working mostly as a jazz pianist at Pigalle, the famous red-light district. There he made his customers laugh each time he made a grimace. He studied acting for one year at the Simon acting school. It proved to be a waste of time except for his meeting with actor Daniel Gélin, who would become a close friend. In 1936, he married Germaine Louise Elodie Carroyer with whom he had a son, Daniel (1937). In 1942, they divorced. During the occupation of Paris in the Second World War, he continued his piano studies at a music school, where he fell in love with a secretary, Jeanne Barthelémy de Maupassant, a grandniece of the famous author Guy de Maupassant. They married in 1943 and remained together for forty years until De Funès' death in 1983. The pair had two sons: Patrick (1944) and Olivier (1947). Patrick became a doctor who practiced in Saint-Germain en Laye. Olivier was an actor for a while, known for the son roles in his father's films, including Le Grand Restaurant/The Big Restaurant (Jacques Besnard, 1966), Fantômas se déchaine/Fantomas Strikes Back (André Hunebelle, 1965) starring Jean Marais, Les Grandes Vacances/The Big Vacation (Jean Girault, 1967), and Hibernatus (Edouard Molinaro, 1969) with Claude Gensac as De Funès’ wife, a role she played in many of his films. Olivier later worked as an aviator for Air France Europe.

 

Through the early 1940s, Louis de Funès continued playing piano at clubs, thinking there wasn't much call for a short, balding, skinny actor. His wife and Daniel Gélin encouraged him to overcome his fear of rejection. De Funès began his show business career in the theatre, where he enjoyed moderate success. At the age of 31, thanks to his contact with Daniel Gélin, he made his film debut with an uncredited bit part as a porter in La Tentation de Barbizon/The Temptation of Barbizon (1945, Jean Stelli) starring Simone Renant. For the next ten years, de Funès would appear in fifty films, but always in minor roles, usually as an extra, scarcely noticed by the audience. Sometimes he had a supporting part such as in the Fernandel comedy Boniface somnambule/The Sleepwalker (Maurice Labro, 1951) and the comedy-drama La vie d'un honnête homme/The Virtuous Scoundrel (Sacha Guitry, 1953) starring Michel Simon. In the meanwhile, he pursued a theatrical career. Even after he attained the status of a film star, he continued to play theatre. His stage career culminated in a magnificent performance in the play Oscar, a role which he would later reprise in the film version of 1967. During this period, De Funès developed a pattern of daily activities: in the morning he did dubbing for recognized artists such as Renato Rascel and the Italian comic Totò, during the afternoon he worked in film, and in the theater in the evening. A break came when he appeared as the black-market pork butcher Jambier (another small role) in the well-known WWII comedy, La Traversée de Paris/Four Bags Full (Claude Autant-Lara, 1956) starring Jean Gabin and Bourvil. In his next film, the mediocre comedy Comme un cheveu sur la soupe/Crazy in the Noodle (Maurice Régamey, 1957), De Funès finally played the leading role. More interesting was Ni vu, ni connu/Neither Seen Nor Recognized (Yves Robert, 1958). He achieved stardom with the comedy Pouic-Pouic (Jean Girault, 1963) opposite Mireille Darc. This successful film guaranteed De Funès top billing in all of his subsequent films.

 

Between 1964 and 1979, Louis de Funès topped France's box office of the year's most successful films seven times. At the age of 49, De Funès unexpectedly became a superstar with the international success of two films. Fantômas (André Hunebelle, 1964) was France's own answer to the James Bond frenzy and lead to a trilogy co-starring Jean Marais and Mylène Demongeot. The second success was the crime comedy Le gendarme de Saint-Tropez/The Gendarme of St. Tropez (Jean Girault, 1964) with Michel Galabru. After their first successful collaboration on Pouic-Pouic, director Girault had perceived De Funès as the ideal actor to play the part of the accident-prone gendarme. The film led to a series of six 'Gendarme' films. De Funès's collaboration with director Gérard Oury produced a memorable tandem of de Funès with Bourvil, another great comic actor, in Le Corniaud/The Sucker (Gérard Oury, 1964). The successful partnership was repeated two years later in La Grande Vadrouille/Don't Look Now - We're Being Shot At (Gérard Oury, 1966), one of the most successful and the largest grossing film ever made in France, drawing an audience of 17,27 million. It remains his greatest success. Oury envisaged a further reunion of the two comics in his historical comedy La Folie des grandeurs/Delusions of Grandeur (Gérard Oury, 1970), but Bourvil's death in 1970 led to the unlikely pairing of de Funès with Yves Montand in this film. Very successful, even in the USA, was Les aventures de Rabbi Jacob/The Mad Adventures of Rabbi Jacob (Gérard Oury, 1973) with Suzy Delair. De Funès played a bigoted Frenchman who finds himself forced to impersonate a popular rabbi while on the run from a group of assassins. In 1975, Oury had scheduled to make Le Crocodile/The Crocodile with De Funès as a South American dictator, but in March 1975, the actor was hospitalised for heart problems and was forced to take a rest from acting. The Crocodile project was canceled.

 

After his recovery, Louis de Funès collaborated with Claude Zidi, in a departure from his usual image. Zidi wrote for him L'aile ou la cuisse/The Wing and the Thigh (Claude Zidi, 1976), opposite Coluche as his son. He played a well-known gourmet and publisher of a famous restaurant guide, who is waging a war against a fast-food entrepreneur. It was a new character full of nuances and frankness and arguably the best of his roles. In 1980, De Funès realised a long-standing dream to make a film version of Molière's play, L'Avare/The Miser (Louis de Funès, Jean Girault, 1980). In 1982, De Funès made his final film, Le Gendarme et les gendarmettes/Never Play Clever Again (Tony Aboyantz, Jean Girault, 1982). Unlike the characters he played, de Funès was said to be a very shy person in real life. He became a knight of France's Légion d'honneur in 1973. He resided in the Château de Clermont, a 17th-century monument, located in the commune of Le Cellier, which is situated near Nantes in France. In his later years, he suffered from a heart condition after having suffered a heart attack caused by straining himself too much with his stage antics. Louis de Funès died of a massive stroke in 1983, a few months after making Le Gendarme et les gendarmettes. He was laid to rest in the Cimetière du Cellier, the cemetery situated in the grounds of the château. Films de France: “Although fame was a long time coming, Louis de Funès is regarded today as not just a great comic actor with an unfaltering ability to make his audience laugh, but practically an institution in his own right. His many films bear testimony to the extent of his comic genius and demonstrate the tragedy that he never earned the international recognition that he certainly deserved.”

 

Sources: Steve Shelokhonov (IMDb), Films de France, Wikipedia, and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

French postcard in the 'Les acteurs français vus par Solo' series by Carterie Occitane, Toulouse, no. 9. Illustration: Solo.

 

French actor of Spanish origin Louis de Funès (1914-1983) was one of the giants of French comedy alongside André Bourvil and Fernandel. In many of his over 130 films, he portrayed a humorously excitable, cranky man with a propensity to hyperactivity, bad faith, and uncontrolled fits of anger. Along with his short height (1.63 m) and his facial contortions, this hyperactivity produced a highly comic effect, especially opposite Bourvil, who always played calm, slightly naive, good-humored men.

 

Louis de Funès (French pronunciation: [lwi də fynɛs]) was born Louis Germain David de Funès de Galarza in Courbevoie, France in 1914. His father, Carlos Luis de Funès de Galarza had been a lawyer in Seville, Spain, but became a diamond cutter upon arriving in France. His mother, Leonor Soto Reguera was of Spanish and Portuguese extraction. Since the couple's families opposed their marriage, they settled in France in 1904. Known to friends and intimates as ‘Fufu’, the young De Funès was fond of drawing and piano playing and spoke French, Spanish, and English well. He studied at the prestigious Lycée Condorcet in Paris. He showed a penchant for tomfoolery, something which caused him trouble at school and later made it hard for him to hold down a job. He became a pianist, working mostly as a jazz pianist at Pigalle, the famous red-light district. There he made his customers laugh each time he made a grimace. He studied acting for one year at the Simon acting school. It proved to be a waste of time except for his meeting with actor Daniel Gélin, who would become a close friend. In 1936, he married Germaine Louise Elodie Carroyer with whom he had a son, Daniel (1937). In 1942, they divorced. During the occupation of Paris in the Second World War, he continued his piano studies at a music school, where he fell in love with a secretary, Jeanne Barthelémy de Maupassant, a grandniece of the famous author Guy de Maupassant. They married in 1943 and remained together for forty years until De Funès' death in 1983. The pair had two sons: Patrick (1944) and Olivier (1947). Patrick became a doctor who practiced in Saint-Germain en Laye. Olivier was an actor for a while, known for the son roles in his father's films, including Le Grand Restaurant/The Big Restaurant (Jacques Besnard, 1966), Fantômas se déchaine/Fantomas Strikes Back (André Hunebelle, 1965) starring Jean Marais, Les Grandes Vacances/The Big Vacation (Jean Girault, 1967), and Hibernatus (Edouard Molinaro, 1969) with Claude Gensac as De Funès’ wife, a role she played in many of his films. Olivier later worked as an aviator for Air France Europe.

 

Through the early 1940s, Louis de Funès continued playing piano at clubs, thinking there wasn't much call for a short, balding, skinny actor. His wife and Daniel Gélin encouraged him to overcome his fear of rejection. De Funès began his show business career in the theatre, where he enjoyed moderate success. At the age of 31, thanks to his contact with Daniel Gélin, he made his film debut with an uncredited bit part as a porter in La Tentation de Barbizon/The Temptation of Barbizon (1945, Jean Stelli) starring Simone Renant. For the next ten years, de Funès would appear in fifty films, but always in minor roles, usually as an extra, scarcely noticed by the audience. Sometimes he had a supporting part such as in the Fernandel comedy Boniface somnambule/The Sleepwalker (Maurice Labro, 1951) and the comedy-drama La vie d'un honnête homme/The Virtuous Scoundrel (Sacha Guitry, 1953) starring Michel Simon. In the meanwhile, he pursued a theatrical career. Even after he attained the status of a film star, he continued to play theatre. His stage career culminated in a magnificent performance in the play Oscar, a role which he would later reprise in the film version of 1967. During this period, De Funès developed a pattern of daily activities: in the morning he did dubbing for recognized artists such as Renato Rascel and the Italian comic Totò, during the afternoon he worked in film, and in the theater in the evening. A break came when he appeared as the black-market pork butcher Jambier (another small role) in the well-known WWII comedy, La Traversée de Paris/Four Bags Full (Claude Autant-Lara, 1956) starring Jean Gabin and Bourvil. In his next film, the mediocre comedy Comme un cheveu sur la soupe/Crazy in the Noodle (Maurice Régamey, 1957), De Funès finally played the leading role. More interesting was Ni vu, ni connu/Neither Seen Nor Recognized (Yves Robert, 1958). He achieved stardom with the comedy Pouic-Pouic (Jean Girault, 1963) opposite Mireille Darc. This successful film guaranteed De Funès top billing in all of his subsequent films.

 

Between 1964 and 1979, Louis de Funès topped France's box office of the year's most successful films seven times. At the age of 49, De Funès unexpectedly became a superstar with the international success of two films. Fantômas (André Hunebelle, 1964) was France's own answer to the James Bond frenzy and lead to a trilogy co-starring Jean Marais and Mylène Demongeot. The second success was the crime comedy Le gendarme de Saint-Tropez/The Gendarme of St. Tropez (Jean Girault, 1964) with Michel Galabru. After their first successful collaboration on Pouic-Pouic, director Girault had perceived De Funès as the ideal actor to play the part of the accident-prone gendarme. The film led to a series of six 'Gendarme' films. De Funès's collaboration with director Gérard Oury produced a memorable tandem of de Funès with Bourvil, another great comic actor, in Le Corniaud/The Sucker (Gérard Oury, 1964). The successful partnership was repeated two years later in La Grande Vadrouille/Don't Look Now - We're Being Shot At (Gérard Oury, 1966), one of the most successful and the largest grossing film ever made in France, drawing an audience of 17,27 million. It remains his greatest success. Oury envisaged a further reunion of the two comics in his historical comedy La Folie des grandeurs/Delusions of Grandeur (Gérard Oury, 1970), but Bourvil's death in 1970 led to the unlikely pairing of de Funès with Yves Montand in this film. Very successful, even in the USA, was Les aventures de Rabbi Jacob/The Mad Adventures of Rabbi Jacob (Gérard Oury, 1973) with Suzy Delair. De Funès played a bigoted Frenchman who finds himself forced to impersonate a popular rabbi while on the run from a group of assassins. In 1975, Oury had scheduled to make Le Crocodile/The Crocodile with De Funès as a South American dictator, but in March 1975, the actor was hospitalised for heart problems and was forced to take a rest from acting. The Crocodile project was canceled.

 

After his recovery, Louis de Funès collaborated with Claude Zidi, in a departure from his usual image. Zidi wrote for him L'aile ou la cuisse/The Wing and the Thigh (Claude Zidi, 1976), opposite Coluche as his son. He played a well-known gourmet and publisher of a famous restaurant guide, who is waging a war against a fast-food entrepreneur. It was a new character full of nuances and frankness and arguably the best of his roles. In 1980, De Funès realised a long-standing dream to make a film version of Molière's play, L'Avare/The Miser (Louis de Funès, Jean Girault, 1980). In 1982, De Funès made his final film, Le Gendarme et les gendarmettes/Never Play Clever Again (Tony Aboyantz, Jean Girault, 1982). Unlike the characters he played, de Funès was said to be a very shy person in real life. He became a knight of France's Légion d'honneur in 1973. He resided in the Château de Clermont, a 17th-century monument, located in the commune of Le Cellier, which is situated near Nantes in France. In his later years, he suffered from a heart condition after having suffered a heart attack caused by straining himself too much with his stage antics. Louis de Funès died of a massive stroke in 1983, a few months after making Le Gendarme et les gendarmettes. He was laid to rest in the Cimetière du Cellier, the cemetery situated in the grounds of the château. Films de France: “Although fame was a long time coming, Louis de Funès is regarded today as not just a great comic actor with an unfaltering ability to make his audience laugh, but practically an institution in his own right. His many films bear testimony to the extent of his comic genius and demonstrate the tragedy that he never earned the international recognition that he certainly deserved.”

 

Sources: Steve Shelokhonov (IMDb), Films de France, Wikipedia, and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

French postcard in the 'Les geants du cinema' series, by Editions et Impression Combier, Mâcon (Cim), no. 2. Illustration: Jean-Pierre Gillot.

 

French actor of Spanish origin Louis de Funès (1914-1983) was one of the giants of French comedy alongside André Bourvil and Fernandel. In many of his over 130 films, he portrayed a humorously excitable, cranky man with a propensity to hyperactivity, bad faith, and uncontrolled fits of anger. Along with his short height (1.63 m) and his facial contortions, this hyperactivity produced a highly comic effect, especially opposite Bourvil, who always played calm, slightly naive, good-humored men.

 

Louis de Funès (French pronunciation: [lwi də fynɛs]) was born Louis Germain David de Funès de Galarza in Courbevoie, France in 1914. His father, Carlos Luis de Funès de Galarza had been a lawyer in Seville, Spain, but became a diamond cutter upon arriving in France. His mother, Leonor Soto Reguera was of Spanish and Portuguese extraction. Since the couple's families opposed their marriage, they settled in France in 1904. Known to friends and intimates as ‘Fufu’, the young De Funès was fond of drawing and piano playing and spoke French, Spanish, and English well. He studied at the prestigious Lycée Condorcet in Paris. He showed a penchant for tomfoolery, something which caused him trouble at school and later made it hard for him to hold down a job. He became a pianist, working mostly as a jazz pianist at Pigalle, the famous red-light district. There he made his customers laugh each time he made a grimace. He studied acting for one year at the Simon acting school. It proved to be a waste of time except for his meeting with actor Daniel Gélin, who would become a close friend. In 1936, he married Germaine Louise Elodie Carroyer with whom he had a son, Daniel (1937). In 1942, they divorced. During the occupation of Paris in the Second World War, he continued his piano studies at a music school, where he fell in love with a secretary, Jeanne Barthelémy de Maupassant, a grandniece of the famous author Guy de Maupassant. They married in 1943 and remained together for forty years until De Funès' death in 1983. The pair had two sons: Patrick (1944) and Olivier (1947). Patrick became a doctor who practiced in Saint-Germain en Laye. Olivier was an actor for a while, known for the son roles in his father's films, including Le Grand Restaurant/The Big Restaurant (Jacques Besnard, 1966), Fantômas se déchaine/Fantomas Strikes Back (André Hunebelle, 1965) starring Jean Marais, Les Grandes Vacances/The Big Vacation (Jean Girault, 1967), and Hibernatus (Edouard Molinaro, 1969) with Claude Gensac as De Funès’ wife, a role she played in many of his films. Olivier later worked as an aviator for Air France Europe.

 

Through the early 1940s, Louis de Funès continued playing piano at clubs, thinking there wasn't much call for a short, balding, skinny actor. His wife and Daniel Gélin encouraged him to overcome his fear of rejection. De Funès began his show business career in the theatre, where he enjoyed moderate success. At the age of 31, thanks to his contact with Daniel Gélin, he made his film debut with an uncredited bit part as a porter in La Tentation de Barbizon/The Temptation of Barbizon (1945, Jean Stelli) starring Simone Renant. For the next ten years, de Funès would appear in fifty films, but always in minor roles, usually as an extra, scarcely noticed by the audience. Sometimes he had a supporting part such as in the Fernandel comedy Boniface somnambule/The Sleepwalker (Maurice Labro, 1951) and the comedy-drama La vie d'un honnête homme/The Virtuous Scoundrel (Sacha Guitry, 1953) starring Michel Simon. In the meanwhile, he pursued a theatrical career. Even after he attained the status of a film star, he continued to play theatre. His stage career culminated in a magnificent performance in the play Oscar, a role which he would later reprise in the film version of 1967. During this period, De Funès developed a pattern of daily activities: in the morning he did dubbing for recognized artists such as Renato Rascel and the Italian comic Totò, during the afternoon he worked in film, and in the theater in the evening. A break came when he appeared as the black-market pork butcher Jambier (another small role) in the well-known WWII comedy, La Traversée de Paris/Four Bags Full (Claude Autant-Lara, 1956) starring Jean Gabin and Bourvil. In his next film, the mediocre comedy Comme un cheveu sur la soupe/Crazy in the Noodle (Maurice Régamey, 1957), De Funès finally played the leading role. More interesting was Ni vu, ni connu/Neither Seen Nor Recognized (Yves Robert, 1958). He achieved stardom with the comedy Pouic-Pouic (Jean Girault, 1963) opposite Mireille Darc. This successful film guaranteed De Funès top billing in all of his subsequent films.

 

Between 1964 and 1979, Louis de Funès topped France's box office of the year's most successful films seven times. At the age of 49, De Funès unexpectedly became a superstar with the international success of two films. Fantômas (André Hunebelle, 1964) was France's own answer to the James Bond frenzy and lead to a trilogy co-starring Jean Marais and Mylène Demongeot. The second success was the crime comedy Le gendarme de Saint-Tropez/The Gendarme of St. Tropez (Jean Girault, 1964) with Michel Galabru. After their first successful collaboration on Pouic-Pouic, director Girault had perceived De Funès as the ideal actor to play the part of the accident-prone gendarme. The film led to a series of six 'Gendarme' films. De Funès's collaboration with director Gérard Oury produced a memorable tandem of de Funès with Bourvil, another great comic actor, in Le Corniaud/The Sucker (Gérard Oury, 1964). The successful partnership was repeated two years later in La Grande Vadrouille/Don't Look Now - We're Being Shot At (Gérard Oury, 1966), one of the most successful and the largest grossing film ever made in France, drawing an audience of 17,27 million. It remains his greatest success. Oury envisaged a further reunion of the two comics in his historical comedy La Folie des grandeurs/Delusions of Grandeur (Gérard Oury, 1970), but Bourvil's death in 1970 led to the unlikely pairing of de Funès with Yves Montand in this film. Very successful, even in the USA, was Les aventures de Rabbi Jacob/The Mad Adventures of Rabbi Jacob (Gérard Oury, 1973) with Suzy Delair. De Funès played a bigoted Frenchman who finds himself forced to impersonate a popular rabbi while on the run from a group of assassins. In 1975, Oury had scheduled to make Le Crocodile/The Crocodile with De Funès as a South American dictator, but in March 1975, the actor was hospitalised for heart problems and was forced to take a rest from acting. The Crocodile project was canceled.

 

After his recovery, Louis de Funès collaborated with Claude Zidi, in a departure from his usual image. Zidi wrote for him L'aile ou la cuisse/The Wing and the Thigh (Claude Zidi, 1976), opposite Coluche as his son. He played a well-known gourmet and publisher of a famous restaurant guide, who is waging a war against a fast-food entrepreneur. It was a new character full of nuances and frankness and arguably the best of his roles. In 1980, De Funès realised a long-standing dream to make a film version of Molière's play, L'Avare/The Miser (Louis de Funès, Jean Girault, 1980). In 1982, De Funès made his final film, Le Gendarme et les gendarmettes/Never Play Clever Again (Tony Aboyantz, Jean Girault, 1982). Unlike the characters he played, de Funès was said to be a very shy person in real life. He became a knight of France's Légion d'honneur in 1973. He resided in the Château de Clermont, a 17th-century monument, located in the commune of Le Cellier, which is situated near Nantes in France. In his later years, he suffered from a heart condition after having suffered a heart attack caused by straining himself too much with his stage antics. Louis de Funès died of a massive stroke in 1983, a few months after making Le Gendarme et les gendarmettes. He was laid to rest in the Cimetière du Cellier, the cemetery situated in the grounds of the château. Films de France: “Although fame was a long time coming, Louis de Funès is regarded today as not just a great comic actor with an unfaltering ability to make his audience laugh, but practically an institution in his own right. His many films bear testimony to the extent of his comic genius and demonstrate the tragedy that he never earned the international recognition that he certainly deserved.”

 

Sources: Steve Shelokhonov (IMDb), Films de France, Wikipedia, and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Romanian postcard by Casa Filmului Acin.

 

French actor of Spanish origin Louis de Funès (1914-1983) was one of the giants of French comedy alongside André Bourvil and Fernandel. In many of his over 130 films, he portrayed a humorously excitable, cranky man with a propensity to hyperactivity, bad faith, and uncontrolled fits of anger. Along with his short height (1.63 m) and his facial contortions, this hyperactivity produced a highly comic effect, especially opposite Bourvil, who always played calm, slightly naive, good-humored men.

 

Louis de Funès (French pronunciation: [lwi də fynɛs]) was born Louis Germain David de Funès de Galarza in Courbevoie, France in 1914. His father, Carlos Luis de Funès de Galarza had been a lawyer in Seville, Spain, but became a diamond cutter upon arriving in France. His mother, Leonor Soto Reguera was of Spanish and Portuguese extraction. Since the couple's families opposed their marriage, they settled in France in 1904. Known to friends and intimates as ‘Fufu’, the young De Funès was fond of drawing and piano playing and spoke French, Spanish, and English well. He studied at the prestigious Lycée Condorcet in Paris. He showed a penchant for tomfoolery, something which caused him trouble at school and later made it hard for him to hold down a job. He became a pianist, working mostly as a jazz pianist at Pigalle, the famous red-light district. There he made his customers laugh each time he made a grimace. He studied acting for one year at the Simon acting school. It proved to be a waste of time except for his meeting with actor Daniel Gélin, who would become a close friend. In 1936, he married Germaine Louise Elodie Carroyer with whom he had a son, Daniel (1937). In 1942, they divorced. During the occupation of Paris in the Second World War, he continued his piano studies at a music school, where he fell in love with a secretary, Jeanne Barthelémy de Maupassant, a grandniece of the famous author Guy de Maupassant. They married in 1943 and remained together for forty years until De Funès' death in 1983. The pair had two sons: Patrick (1944) and Olivier (1947). Patrick became a doctor who practiced in Saint-Germain en Laye. Olivier was an actor for a while, known for the son roles in his father's films, including Le Grand Restaurant/The Big Restaurant (Jacques Besnard, 1966), Fantômas se déchaine/Fantomas Strikes Back (André Hunebelle, 1965) starring Jean Marais, Les Grandes Vacances/The Big Vacation (Jean Girault, 1967), and Hibernatus (Edouard Molinaro, 1969) with Claude Gensac as De Funès’ wife, a role she played in many of his films. Olivier later worked as an aviator for Air France Europe.

 

Through the early 1940s, Louis de Funès continued playing piano at clubs, thinking there wasn't much call for a short, balding, skinny actor. His wife and Daniel Gélin encouraged him to overcome his fear of rejection. De Funès began his show business career in the theatre, where he enjoyed moderate success. At the age of 31, thanks to his contact with Daniel Gélin, he made his film debut with an uncredited bit part as a porter in La Tentation de Barbizon/The Temptation of Barbizon (1945, Jean Stelli) starring Simone Renant. For the next ten years, de Funès would appear in fifty films, but always in minor roles, usually as an extra, scarcely noticed by the audience. Sometimes he had a supporting part such as in the Fernandel comedy Boniface somnambule/The Sleepwalker (Maurice Labro, 1951) and the comedy-drama La vie d'un honnête homme/The Virtuous Scoundrel (Sacha Guitry, 1953) starring Michel Simon. In the meanwhile, he pursued a theatrical career. Even after he attained the status of a film star, he continued to play theatre. His stage career culminated in a magnificent performance in the play Oscar, a role which he would later reprise in the film version of 1967. During this period, De Funès developed a pattern of daily activities: in the morning he did dubbing for recognized artists such as Renato Rascel and the Italian comic Totò, during the afternoon he worked in film, and in the theater in the evening. A break came when he appeared as the black-market pork butcher Jambier (another small role) in the well-known WWII comedy, La Traversée de Paris/Four Bags Full (Claude Autant-Lara, 1956) starring Jean Gabin and Bourvil. In his next film, the mediocre comedy Comme un cheveu sur la soupe/Crazy in the Noodle (Maurice Régamey, 1957), De Funès finally played the leading role. More interesting was Ni vu, ni connu/Neither Seen Nor Recognized (Yves Robert, 1958). He achieved stardom with the comedy Pouic-Pouic (Jean Girault, 1963) opposite Mireille Darc. This successful film guaranteed De Funès top billing in all of his subsequent films.

 

Between 1964 and 1979, Louis de Funès topped France's box office of the year's most successful films seven times. At the age of 49, De Funès unexpectedly became a superstar with the international success of two films. Fantômas (André Hunebelle, 1964) was France's own answer to the James Bond frenzy and lead to a trilogy co-starring Jean Marais and Mylène Demongeot. The second success was the crime comedy Le gendarme de Saint-Tropez/The Gendarme of St. Tropez (Jean Girault, 1964) with Michel Galabru. After their first successful collaboration on Pouic-Pouic, director Girault had perceived De Funès as the ideal actor to play the part of the accident-prone gendarme. The film led to a series of six 'Gendarme' films. De Funès's collaboration with director Gérard Oury produced a memorable tandem of de Funès with Bourvil, another great comic actor, in Le Corniaud/The Sucker (Gérard Oury, 1964). The successful partnership was repeated two years later in La Grande Vadrouille/Don't Look Now - We're Being Shot At (Gérard Oury, 1966), one of the most successful and the largest grossing film ever made in France, drawing an audience of 17,27 million. It remains his greatest success. Oury envisaged a further reunion of the two comics in his historical comedy La Folie des grandeurs/Delusions of Grandeur (Gérard Oury, 1970), but Bourvil's death in 1970 led to the unlikely pairing of de Funès with Yves Montand in this film. Very successful, even in the USA, was Les aventures de Rabbi Jacob/The Mad Adventures of Rabbi Jacob (Gérard Oury, 1973) with Suzy Delair. De Funès played a bigoted Frenchman who finds himself forced to impersonate a popular rabbi while on the run from a group of assassins. In 1975, Oury had scheduled to make Le Crocodile/The Crocodile with De Funès as a South American dictator, but in March 1975, the actor was hospitalised for heart problems and was forced to take a rest from acting. The Crocodile project was canceled.

 

After his recovery, Louis de Funès collaborated with Claude Zidi, in a departure from his usual image. Zidi wrote for him L'aile ou la cuisse/The Wing and the Thigh (Claude Zidi, 1976), opposite Coluche as his son. He played a well-known gourmet and publisher of a famous restaurant guide, who is waging a war against a fast-food entrepreneur. It was a new character full of nuances and frankness and arguably the best of his roles. In 1980, De Funès realised a long-standing dream to make a film version of Molière's play, L'Avare/The Miser (Louis de Funès, Jean Girault, 1980). In 1982, De Funès made his final film, Le Gendarme et les gendarmettes/Never Play Clever Again (Tony Aboyantz, Jean Girault, 1982). Unlike the characters he played, de Funès was said to be a very shy person in real life. He became a knight of France's Légion d'honneur in 1973. He resided in the Château de Clermont, a 17th-century monument, located in the commune of Le Cellier, which is situated near Nantes in France. In his later years, he suffered from a heart condition after having suffered a heart attack caused by straining himself too much with his stage antics. Louis de Funès died of a massive stroke in 1983, a few months after making Le Gendarme et les gendarmettes. He was laid to rest in the Cimetière du Cellier, the cemetery situated in the grounds of the château. Films de France: “Although fame was a long time coming, Louis de Funès is regarded today as not just a great comic actor with an unfaltering ability to make his audience laugh, but practically an institution in his own right. His many films bear testimony to the extent of his comic genius and demonstrate the tragedy that he never earned the international recognition that he certainly deserved.”

 

Sources: Steve Shelokhonov (IMDb), Films de France, Wikipedia, and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Happy New Year to you and your family,all my Flickr friends!!! May God Give you all the blessings.

It's 2 hours left that China go to 2008,the Olympic year,welcome to China~

© All rights reserved

Reached #171 in interestingness (on 2007-12-31),thanks,my friends~

Sanford Fire Department Ambulance Rescue 31

 

Thanks for viewing my photos on Flickr. I can also be found on Twitter and You Tube

=======

Settings

=======

Camera : Nikon D3000

Lens : Nikkor AF-S 55-300 mm f/4.0-5.6G IF-ED DX VR*

Focal Length : 300 mm

Aperture : f/5.6

Shutter Speed : 1/200 (0.005 sec)

ISO : 100

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

Ref : 6416

Dec 7, 2012. (7/31)

*Thanks Farhana Jabin for the lens.

ZSSK 263 004 in Bratislava Nove Mesto with a passenger train to Břeclav on April 11, 2011, 14:31. Thanks to vagonweb.cz it is possible to ID the train, even 14 years later, as R 370 ZÁHORIE (Bratislava Nové Mesto - Břeclav).

#470 Explore July 31 (Thanks everyone!)

One more flower from Longwood Garden, located in 30miles from Philly.

 

Please note I love flowers but unfortunatly I don't know them, so feel free to let me know the name in a comment-)

 

www.flickr.com/groups/everythingaboutzebra/

 

French postcard by La Roue Tourne, Paris.

 

French actor of Spanish origin Louis de Funès (1914-1983) was one of the giants of French comedy alongside André Bourvil and Fernandel. In many of his over 130 films, he portrayed a humorously excitable, cranky man with a propensity to hyperactivity, bad faith, and uncontrolled fits of anger. Along with his short height (1.63 m) and his facial contortions, this hyperactivity produced a highly comic effect, especially opposite Bourvil, who always played calm, slightly naive, good-humored men.

 

Louis de Funès (French pronunciation: [lwi də fynɛs]) was born Louis Germain David de Funès de Galarza in Courbevoie, France in 1914. His father, Carlos Luis de Funès de Galarza had been a lawyer in Seville, Spain, but became a diamond cutter upon arriving in France. His mother, Leonor Soto Reguera was of Spanish and Portuguese extraction. Since the couple's families opposed their marriage, they settled in France in 1904. Known to friends and intimates as ‘Fufu’, the young De Funès was fond of drawing and piano playing and spoke French, Spanish, and English well. He studied at the prestigious Lycée Condorcet in Paris. He showed a penchant for tomfoolery, something which caused him trouble at school and later made it hard for him to hold down a job. He became a pianist, working mostly as a jazz pianist at Pigalle, the famous red-light district. There he made his customers laugh each time he made a grimace. He studied acting for one year at the Simon acting school. It proved to be a waste of time except for his meeting with actor Daniel Gélin, who would become a close friend. In 1936, he married Germaine Louise Elodie Carroyer with whom he had a son, Daniel (1937). In 1942, they divorced. During the occupation of Paris in the Second World War, he continued his piano studies at a music school, where he fell in love with a secretary, Jeanne Barthelémy de Maupassant, a grandniece of the famous author Guy de Maupassant. They married in 1943 and remained together for forty years until De Funès' death in 1983. The pair had two sons: Patrick (1944) and Olivier (1947). Patrick became a doctor who practiced in Saint-Germain en Laye. Olivier was an actor for a while, known for the son roles in his father's films, including Le Grand Restaurant/The Big Restaurant (Jacques Besnard, 1966), Fantômas se déchaine/Fantomas Strikes Back (André Hunebelle, 1965) starring Jean Marais, Les Grandes Vacances/The Big Vacation (Jean Girault, 1967), and Hibernatus (Edouard Molinaro, 1969) with Claude Gensac as De Funès’ wife, a role she played in many of his films. Olivier later worked as an aviator for Air France Europe.

 

Through the early 1940s, Louis de Funès continued playing piano at clubs, thinking there wasn't much call for a short, balding, skinny actor. His wife and Daniel Gélin encouraged him to overcome his fear of rejection. De Funès began his show business career in the theatre, where he enjoyed moderate success. At the age of 31, thanks to his contact with Daniel Gélin, he made his film debut with an uncredited bit part as a porter in La Tentation de Barbizon/The Temptation of Barbizon (1945, Jean Stelli) starring Simone Renant. For the next ten years, de Funès would appear in fifty films, but always in minor roles, usually as an extra, scarcely noticed by the audience. Sometimes he had a supporting part such as in the Fernandel comedy Boniface somnambule/The Sleepwalker (Maurice Labro, 1951) and the comedy-drama La vie d'un honnête homme/The Virtuous Scoundrel (Sacha Guitry, 1953) starring Michel Simon. In the meanwhile, he pursued a theatrical career. Even after he attained the status of a film star, he continued to play theatre. His stage career culminated in a magnificent performance in the play Oscar, a role which he would later reprise in the film version of 1967. During this period, De Funès developed a pattern of daily activities: in the morning he did dubbing for recognized artists such as Renato Rascel and the Italian comic Totò, during the afternoon he worked in film, and in the theater in the evening. A break came when he appeared as the black-market pork butcher Jambier (another small role) in the well-known WWII comedy, La Traversée de Paris/Four Bags Full (Claude Autant-Lara, 1956) starring Jean Gabin and Bourvil. In his next film, the mediocre comedy Comme un cheveu sur la soupe/Crazy in the Noodle (Maurice Régamey, 1957), De Funès finally played the leading role. More interesting was Ni vu, ni connu/Neither Seen Nor Recognized (Yves Robert, 1958). He achieved stardom with the comedy Pouic-Pouic (Jean Girault, 1963) opposite Mireille Darc. This successful film guaranteed De Funès top billing in all of his subsequent films.

 

Between 1964 and 1979, Louis de Funès topped France's box office of the year's most successful films seven times. At the age of 49, De Funès unexpectedly became a superstar with the international success of two films. Fantômas (André Hunebelle, 1964) was France's own answer to the James Bond frenzy and lead to a trilogy co-starring Jean Marais and Mylène Demongeot. The second success was the crime comedy Le gendarme de Saint-Tropez/The Gendarme of St. Tropez (Jean Girault, 1964) with Michel Galabru. After their first successful collaboration on Pouic-Pouic, director Girault had perceived De Funès as the ideal actor to play the part of the accident-prone gendarme. The film led to a series of six 'Gendarme' films. De Funès's collaboration with director Gérard Oury produced a memorable tandem of de Funès with Bourvil, another great comic actor, in Le Corniaud/The Sucker (Gérard Oury, 1964). The successful partnership was repeated two years later in La Grande Vadrouille/Don't Look Now - We're Being Shot At (Gérard Oury, 1966), one of the most successful and the largest grossing film ever made in France, drawing an audience of 17,27 million. It remains his greatest success. Oury envisaged a further reunion of the two comics in his historical comedy La Folie des grandeurs/Delusions of Grandeur (Gérard Oury, 1970), but Bourvil's death in 1970 led to the unlikely pairing of de Funès with Yves Montand in this film. Very successful, even in the USA, was Les aventures de Rabbi Jacob/The Mad Adventures of Rabbi Jacob (Gérard Oury, 1973) with Suzy Delair. De Funès played a bigoted Frenchman who finds himself forced to impersonate a popular rabbi while on the run from a group of assassins. In 1975, Oury had scheduled to make Le Crocodile/The Crocodile with De Funès as a South American dictator, but in March 1975, the actor was hospitalised for heart problems and was forced to take a rest from acting. The Crocodile project was canceled.

 

After his recovery, Louis de Funès collaborated with Claude Zidi, in a departure from his usual image. Zidi wrote for him L'aile ou la cuisse/The Wing and the Thigh (Claude Zidi, 1976), opposite Coluche as his son. He played a well-known gourmet and publisher of a famous restaurant guide, who is waging a war against a fast-food entrepreneur. It was a new character full of nuances and frankness and arguably the best of his roles. In 1980, De Funès realised a long-standing dream to make a film version of Molière's play, L'Avare/The Miser (Louis de Funès, Jean Girault, 1980). In 1982, De Funès made his final film, Le Gendarme et les gendarmettes/Never Play Clever Again (Tony Aboyantz, Jean Girault, 1982). Unlike the characters he played, de Funès was said to be a very shy person in real life. He became a knight of France's Légion d'honneur in 1973. He resided in the Château de Clermont, a 17th-century monument, located in the commune of Le Cellier, which is situated near Nantes in France. In his later years, he suffered from a heart condition after having suffered a heart attack caused by straining himself too much with his stage antics. Louis de Funès died of a massive stroke in 1983, a few months after making Le Gendarme et les gendarmettes. He was laid to rest in the Cimetière du Cellier, the cemetery situated in the grounds of the château. Films de France: “Although fame was a long time coming, Louis de Funès is regarded today as not just a great comic actor with an unfaltering ability to make his audience laugh, but practically an institution in his own right. His many films bear testimony to the extent of his comic genius and demonstrate the tragedy that he never earned the international recognition that he certainly deserved.”

 

Sources: Steve Shelokhonov (IMDb), Films de France, Wikipedia, and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Daimler DR450 Limousine (1961-68) Engine 4561cc V8 OHV Production 864

 

Registration Number 777 UMM

 

DAIMLER SET

 

www.flickr.com

 

The Daimler DR450 is a limousine variant of the Majestic Major DQ450 saloon. Produced from 1961[, and the last vehicle to be designed by Daimler.

 

The chassis was 24.0 in (609.6 mm) longer than for the Majestic Major of massive box-section and cross-braced frame, separate from the all-steel body for a total weight of 2.25 tons, Power came from a 4561cc hemi head V8 engine and was priced at £ 3995 including taxes in 1961. At the time there were three British made limousines on the market, the Rolls Royce Phantom V at approx £ 10700, the Daimler DR450 at £ 3995 or £ 1899 for a bare chassis, and the Austin Princess at £ 31

 

Thanks for 19.4 million views

 

Shot at Shugborough Hall Car Show, Milford, Staffordshire 13:08:2013 Ref 96-048

 

#443 Explore August 31 (Thanks all for your interest)

 

www.flickr.com/groups/everythingaboutzebra/

 

@Lisboa, 2010.October.31

 

Thanks to the italian couple I met at Lisbon, that "posed" for this photo... Hope they see this ;-)

 

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© All rights reserved. Use without permission is illegal.

Unauthorized Use, copy, editing, reproduction, publication, duplication and distribution of the digital photos, or any portion of them, is not allowed.

Permission is Required for copying, printing and downloading.

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Orange County Fire Rescue Ladder 31

 

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Czech Republic - Singer Mr.Pavel Batěk with North Czech Philharmonic Teplice

Spring 1978, the western end of central station with its famous gantry.

 

In view are the 2H55 17.42 Salisbury to Portsmouth & Southsea Low Level (Southampton @ 18.20-18.24) and the 4B21 16.53 Eastleigh to Bournemouth parcels booked to recess at Southampton station to load from 17.04 to 19.31.

 

Thanks to 'Marra Man' for the WTT info.

 

January 31. Thanks goes to my mother on this one; she waited patiently to model while I less than patiently struggled with the lighting.

EXPLORE for 8/31...thanks to all of you!

Sunday 10th November 2013

 

If you would like a full size download of an image with no watermark, please contact me on either tpphippsphotography@yahoo.co.uk, Flickr or PistonHeads!

 

Photo 31

 

Thanks,

Tom :D

Dartry Depot 1930-31. Left (Standing) "Big Jem" Byrne. Sitting front row - Mattie King, Mick O'Reilly, 7th from left front row Jackie Keogh, 9th from left Joe Curran

 

Jackie is Bob Keoghs Father

  

see link to enlarge this Photo

www.flickr.com/photos/ballyfermot/14924360406/sizes/l

 

Explore 2008-12-31. Thanks for the comments & faves!!

 

HBW.

At home, with camera, on the hunt for available light. =)

Equipment:

Nikon D80 + Nikkor 105 + Extension Tube 36 + Reverse 50 mm f1.8

Editted in Zerene Stacker (PMax)

Total # of photo 31

  

Thanks

Shop X-31 Make It A Safe Place To Work

 

NYC from A to Zed: NYC from A to Zed: X is for X-31

 

Thanks Gothamist!

Week 31/52 -

 

*Hit "L" to make it big!*

 

Week 31 is my oldest model to date. Actually, lets just say she is my most experienced! This is my Nanna-Nanna as we call her. Still going strong at 87. We were lucky enough to have her around again this Thanksgiving.

 

And that's what Thanksgiving is really all about - its about family, friends and having a good time. No matter what you are thankful for, just be thankful! So that's why I titled this week - Thanks Giving. Happy Thanks Giving everyone!

 

Camera:

Canon 7d

Canon 50 (1.4)

1/60@F2.0

ISO 200

 

Strobist:

1 - Canon 430EXII, 1/64power, zoomed @24mm inside white shoot-thru umbrella, hand held by my wife,~ 2' from subject

*triggered with Meike MK-7*

 

Objective: (Jeremy speak)

This was a very simple setup. But when dealing with a person who is not very mobile you have to take some things into consideration. That really goes for all different ages. I wanted a nice tight portrait but I needed to isolate some background objects that I didn't necessarily want in the picture. So Nanna - Nanna was still sitting in her seat from dinner and I didn't want to make her move. So I noticed my Aunt had her tree up already - BAM! Christmas lights!!! Christmas lights are without a doubt my favorite light source in the background. They create such great bokeh (the out of focus background).

 

Now in order to create nice bokeh, you have to use a low aperature. In this case I shot at 2.0 (this lens goes down to 1.4) So I went up a few stops to make sure I kept the picture sharp and that meant I didn't need a ton of light with the flash unit. So I powered the flash all the way down as far as it could go, 1/64. Ashley held the flash and umbrella in her hand just out of frame, to my right just above Nanna's head.

 

Older subjects give off such emotion in their portraits, I just love it. Nanna did a great job and the awesome lights in the background really add in some more mood. Over the next few weeks you will see lots of lights in my bokeh! If you got em, shoot em this time of year folks!

 

Thanks Nanna!

Mamiya C330f

80/2.8

Tri-X 400 @ 1600

Kodak HC110 1+31

 

Thanks to the leaf shutter and no mirror slap in the C330 I was happily hand holding at 1/15th.

Orange County Fire Rescue Ladder 31

 

Thanks for viewing my photos on Flickr. I can also be found on Twitter and You Tube new videos uploaded Wednesday and Sunday please subscribe to see the latest videos

Orange County Fire Rescue Ladder 31

 

Thanks for viewing my photos on Flickr. I can also be found on Twitter and You Tube please subscribe to see the latest videos

5335. The brief early 1960s flirtation with HMAS MELBOURNE [II]as a helicopter carrier is over. This is the year in which her new generation of A4G Skyhawks and Grumman Trackers were ordered. We understand that MELBOURNE went to San Diego bare of any aircraft, fixed wing or rotary, when she went to pick the new planes and associated stores and ammunition, a voyage that took her to Vancouver, Seal Beach, San Francisco and San Diego from October 27 to 31.

 

Thanks to Kim Dunstan and his RANFAAA pals for checking on this voyage, the question of whether or not MELBOURNE had carried any aircraft on the outward voyage. It seems all her hangar space was needed for the new planes and stores.

 

In answer to Kim's question, Jock a member of the RANFAAA replied:

 

“The question did arise should MELBOURNE embark a Wessex for the trip; this was rejected because of space. We were pushed to take the Skyhawks and Trackers as well as the available spares for the aircraft plus one car for the Captain.

 

Did I ever tell you that the first shipment of spares ended up in Austria at a US Army Base. The consignment was addressed to: NAS Nowra Aust. need I say any more. I did the first sea deployment with the aircraft and we had to buy spares at Subic Bay to get us through the embarkation.”

  

So interesting, and so unsuprising, somehow. Thanks all.

 

This photo comes to us from John Lyall of Sydney, whose late Dad Jack Lyall was a stoker on the corvette HMAS PIRIE .during WWII. John sent us the rare battle damage photos of PIRIE after her severe air attack in Oro Bay, New Guinea on April 11, 1943, incredible photographs accompanied by an even more incredible story, the beginnings of Australia's WWII 'Caine Mutiny.' The images and story are at and around pic. 3801 here:

 

www.flickr.com/photos/41311545@N05/5402411282/in/photostr...

 

This photo: RAN, courtesy John Lyall.

 

A COMPENDIUM of links to some 350 images of HMAS MELBOURNE [II] on this Photostream begins at Pic 5444 and extends over seven entries. It starts here:

 

www.flickr.com/photos/41311545@N05/6707592179/in/photostream

 

Thanksgiving Day . Dinner on the AMTRAK Auto Train . From Sanford FL en route to Lorton VA . Thursday evening, 24 November 2005

 

Bread and butter

 

snow.prohosting.com/usarail/sanfordauto.htm

______________________

Usually there are two sittings for dinner, 6 and 7 PM, but since it was Thanksgiving Day and only about 75 passengers were on the train which can carry up to 300 dinner was served at 7 PM. Which is when this series of pictures was taken.

 

www.amtrak.com/servlet/ContentServer?pagename=Amtrak/am2R...

 

Elvert Xavier Barnes Photography

This Sikorsky S-64 Skycrane helped fight the Highway 8 Complex Fire. The Skycrane drew 2,000 gallons of water at a time from the Columbia River through the white snorkel tube, seen in this photo.

 

In total, the fire was fought by 16 crews, four helicopters, 35 fire engines, six bulldozers and six water tenders. The fire started on Aug. 26, and WSDOT closed SR 142 for two days while crews fought the flames. The fire was fully contained by Aug. 31 thanks to the coordination and efforts of statewide fire fighters and crews.

A Bell AH-1 Cobra firefighting helicopter waits to take off to fight the Highway 8 Complex Fire in Klickitat County.

 

In total, the fire was fought by 712 firefighters, four helicopters, 35 fire engines, six bulldozers and six water tenders. The fire started on Aug. 26, and WSDOT closed SR 142 for two days while crews fought the flames. The fire was fully contained by Aug. 31 thanks to the coordination and efforts of statewide fire fighters and crews.

With the news of Picnik going away, I've downloaded Picasa per the suggestions of some Flickr folks. Right now Picasa is uploading a ton of photos. I hate learning new things. I reallllllllllly like Picnik!!!!

Although I try to post most of my pics untouched, it is always nice to be able to edit them when I want to. I'll be experimenting with Picasa so I can get the hang of it before Picnik goes bye-bye in April. I'll also be waiting for my refund...... I had just renewed on 12/31 :-(

 

Thanks to tv writer for the link to the "Don't Close Picnik" petition.

Please sign if you would like to see Picnik stick around.

 

DON'T CLOSE PICNIK

Day 349 of 365

"Image 349"

 

Floundering to find something to shoot this evening, I came across a pile of my kids' arts and crafts supplies. While there was a plethora of different colored feathers, I went with red. I thought it might look cool against the black background (and knew I would try something similar to yesterday's lighting of the orange), the image still lacked interest. I then spotted my old misting bottle, and thought that would help. Sometimes your equipment just happens to be on the correct settings, and the first image looked pretty good. I then spent several exposures trying to capture the "right" amount of mist and bokeh. Spraying from different heights and angles, and deciding when to snap the shutter, all contributed to the image. The light source is a snooted speedlight, behind and above the feather, at 1/128th power. This was Image 31. Thanks for flocking by!!

 

#feather #redfeather #bird #mist #aviary #canon5dmarkIII #canon100macro #pocketwizard #canon580exII #bokeh

metalformonsters.com/momvote.htm

 

The winner is made into a jewelry pendant.

Proceeds go to UNICEF. Vote for 32 or 31. Thanks.

 

Here's a work up of what we're doing for Oct 31. Thanks for the input. I've changed it to a night scene and reworked the text.

 

Previous version here

 

This will be used on posters, postcards and flyers.

High Wycombe, Eden Bus Station

 

Wright on its way to Downley as a route 31.

 

Thanks driver ;)

A Bell UH-1H helicopter flies over the Highway 8 Complex Fire near Lyle in Klickitat County.

 

In total, the fire was fought by 16 crews, four helicopters, 35 fire engines, six bulldozers and six water tenders. The fire started on Aug. 26, and was fully contained by Aug. 31 thanks to the coordination and efforts of statewide fire fighters and crews.

Firestone Pale 31 - thanks to the yellow glass window, it looks instagrammed, but it isn't

Here is a card I made for MFT Creative Construction with Blueprints: Mix It Up. More details on my my blog.

 

Products I used:

MFT Geometric Greenery

MFT Essential Sentiments

MFT Blueprints 20 & 31

 

Thanks for looking!

Beautiful stretch of golden sand as seen from

the fishing pier, located on the Atlantic Ocean

at Lauderdale by Sea in Florida.

Publisher unknown.

Postmarked April 1, 1970, at Fort Lauderdale; addressed to Miss Nancy Smith at 505 Greenwood Avenue in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.

Message:

3/31

Thanks for Easter Card. It was so nice to receive it.

We flew don Good Friday. Will be driving a car (Frank's boss) up approx. 4/5. Will stop a few places on way north.

[signed] Nancy & Frank

Portugal - Air Force (Forca Aerea Portuguesa)

C/N: S-055

Malta Int'l Airport (LMML)

On 1 of its touch & goes while on base training. This particular 1 was done on runway 31. Thanks for choosing our airport for your training!

Taken during the The Ilocandia Photographic Society's 1st members' workshop last Oct. 31.

 

Thanks to my fellow members Kabsat Andie for lending me his D40, Bryan for his lens, manong Michael Ong and manong Ronald Macatulad for the very helpful strobist lecture, to manong Michael again for his remote flash trigger thingamajig, and to Anthony and Ferina for holding the flash on this shot.

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Nikon D40

Nikon Series E 50mm f/1.8, manual focus

film not needed :-P

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Model: Charmaine

Stylist: Joel Dul-Loog

MUA: Alvin Pascual

 

Location: Barangay Pangil, Currimao, Ilocos Norte

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Copyright 2009 © ALARIC YANOS. Unauthorized use is punishable by law.

Day 2 being "homeless". Mom called me and left a voicemail while I was in class. It was weird. She sounded fake happy. She didn't ask me to come home she just wished me well and thanked me for picking up my sister from school. I think it was mind games though. I'm not looking into it too much. It's just weird.

 

I enjoyed spaghettios at Michael's house after class then went on my own to the bank followed by a delicous choccocino and some much needed writing.

 

I want to document my days away from home like a book. I think it would be really neat! I need to study for my Psychology midterm. I basically know nothing.

 

I went to Goodwill and I tried on the pictured piece of clothing. I got several other items (not the ugly shit behind me). My balance came to $0.31....thanks to my good(will) friend Samantha.

  

........Now I really feel like a bum. HAhahaha. :D

Here is my card for the current My Favorite Things challenges: MFT Wednesday Sketch Challenge 397 and MFT Color Challenge 99.

 

Products I used:

 

MFT Pinstripe BG

MFT Beautiful Butterflies

MFT LJD Geometric Greenery

MFT Beautiful Butterflies die

MFT Blueprints 31

 

Thanks for looking!

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