View allAll Photos Tagged 6ix
Toronto’s CN Tower was grappled by a bolt of lightning during a thunderstorm during August, 2021. I wanted to catch a lighting blot for most of my life and this took three hours of pouring over weather maps before I captured the shot.
My first attempt with double exposure. Urban space tends to be arranged and structured in a way that affects how a city functions. Using previous photos from my cityscape archive, I wanted to illustrate the abstract and multiple layers that are associated with the realm of urban space. I wished I could used a cityscape photo and write about it for class. It would have made my semester more fun haha :P
In light of the Gardiner East debate on the solution to the existing expressway :P The city council has voted for a hybrid plan which will leave most of the elevated Gardiner East in place instead of a full teardown and construct a boulevard in the Don Lands waterfront. The inner city wants the boulevard, the suburbs and commuters wanted the hybrid. It was a classic city vs the suburbs.
I framed this scene of Gardiner East as it was visually 'busy' here as well. The CN Tower is hardly visible. The Keaton Channel is cluttered with floating debris and garbage. There are some abandoned looking boats and ships. The skeleton of Gardiner East stands momentarily to the right (it had lost a few pounds due to the fall pieces of it over the years) :P
Have a nice Sunday guys :)
Facebook Page | Instagram | ViewBug | 500px
Facebook ♦ Twitter ♦ Pinterest ♦ Instagram ♦ 500px ♦ Website
Hart House is a student activity centre at the University of Toronto. Established in 1919, it is one of the earliest North American student centres. Hart House was initiated and financed by Vincent Massey, an alumnus and benefactor of the university, and was named in honour of his grandfather, Hart Massey. The Collegiate Gothic-revival complex was the work of architect Henry Sproatt, who worked alongside decorator Alexander Scott Carter, and engineer Ernest Rolph, and subsequently designed the campanile at its southwestern corner, Soldiers' Tower. -Wikipedia
-FREE shipping to anywhere in the 48 states on high quality framed canvas for any photograph.
Paper prints 8" X 10" & 12" X 18"
5 Canvas sizes from 12" X 18" ($100) up to 32" X 48" ($250)
www.facebook.com/HisAndHerPhotographs
www.instagram.com/hisandherphotographs
Thank you: Jonathan & Marlene
Photograph ID: 201904021.11.24-30
GO Transit 603 leads a Toronto bound service on the Barrie Line as it passes through the tree tunnel under Dundas St. in Brockton Village
I don’t think there will ever be as many fireworks in downtown Toronto as there were on Canada Day 2017. There were fireworks at Harbourfront, the CN Tower, and Nathan Phillips Square.
This is the view from Yonge and St. Clair. My lovely wife and I had a great time at our friend’s condominium. We ended up there when it was just too crazy busy at Harbourfront to set up a tripod and shoot the fireworks from the festival.
I have a timelapse of the sun setting on Canada's 150th birthday and a time-lapse of the fireworks at Ashbridges Bay Park on my blog; bit.ly/Richard-Adams. Please stop by and have a look.
You are free to:
Share — copy and redistribute this photo in any medium or format
Adapt — remix, transform, and build upon the photo
for any purpose, even commercially.
Please give credit and link back to massivekontent.com/
Its 10:35AM, a full 12.5 hours later than the advertised departure for VIA's flagship passenger train, "The Canadian". Though delays for the Canadian are not unusual, it rare to have it depart Toronto in daylight. However, on April 25, 2018, this was the case.
Cameron and I went down to Bathurst St. for the usual skyline shot. We were lucky enough to J U S T catch the deadhead into Toronto Union Station. That alone would've sufficed, but we stuck it out for the main event. We waited, drenched in rain, and shivering from the Lake Ontario winds for this guy to depart. Finally, at 10:35, VIA's #2 departed the 6ix, bound for the wilderness of Canada.
Sure, the low clouds and rain kinda sucked, but I'm thrilled to finally see this train for myself!
Toronto, CANADÀ 2024
College Street is one of Toronto's major east-west arteries, stretching from near the downtown core out to its west end. It is known for its eclectic character and for being home to important institutions.
Key East End: In the eastern section, the avenue runs through the university and medical district. Here you find College Park (a historic shopping and residential complex) and the campuses of the University of Toronto (U of T) and Toronto Metropolitan University (TMU).
Little Italy: The most famous stretch of College Street is west of Bathurst Street. This area is the heart of Toronto's historic Italian neighbourhood. The street here is packed with traditional restaurants and trattorias, cafés, and sports bars, making it a major nightlife hub.
General Character: College Street is heavily serviced by the TTC Streetcars and is known for its vitality, mixing foot traffic from students, medical professionals, and nightlife patrons.
Follow: tumblr. | vimeo. | 500px. | twitter. | Google+. |
Reviews: urbantoronto. | blogTO. | buzzbuzzhome. |
flight.
NYC is Home Trailer can be found here.
check out: my website.