View allAll Photos Tagged ARM
A long abandoned section of track and switch arm for switching the train onto a different track out in the middle of the California desert.
Night, near full moon, 180 second exposure, protomachines flashlight set to gold.
Click on the image because its best BIG ON BLACK!!!!
An arm from behind a door in Okayama, Japan. Silver gelatin print.
Leica M3, Ilford FP4, Kodak Tmax developer, Ilford Multigrade RC Deluxe Satin paper.
à OBERNAI -Alsace-
Une mitre, une crosse, une abeille.
"Il avait pris pour armes parlantes, lors
de son élévation à l'épiscopat, une abeille
avec cette devise « Sponte favos oegri spicula" qu'on peut traduire ainsi « Pour les amis : le miel, pour les ennemis :
l'aiguillon, »
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A beautiful winter evening at Place d'Armes in Québec City.
All rights reserved. Protected with PIXSY
On day 4 of my eagle photo workshop, we headed out in a covered boat in the rain hoping to find orcas or whales. We pulled into Frederick Arm as the rain paused and took this opportunity to stop and enjoy the views. There were lots of low lying clouds obscuring the mountains creating a mysterious mood. Not much colour so I converted this shot to black and white.
This is the original version of a previously lost photo from one of our first "studio" sessions from 1971. We were experimenting with abstract nude images and this photo was taken after I had climbed up onto a desk to try a different viewpoint.
After taking a shot of her lying on the carpet, her spontaneous position as she sat up made a nicer composition than any I could have thought out – I asked her to stop mid-movement to take this photo. I intended it as a semi-abstract composition of limbs, without her face visible but I wasn't sure how to arrange it so I included all of her in the frame – it is the unintended portrait part of the photo that I posted yesterday.
Tech. note: this session was in daytime with window light allowing the the use of finer grain film (Ilford FP4) than the earlier one with "studio" lighting – just a single bulb! – which required the grainier uprated Ilford HP4.
This stone pier is known as the harbour arm and was built between 1812 and 1815. The lighthouse at the end of the pier was rebuilt in 1955. The Harbour Arm has a bar, cafés and galleries which are open daily during the summer months. At the end of the pier looking out to the Margate seafront is a brass sculpture of a shell lady named ‘Mrs Booth’.
Margate's first Lighthouse was built in 1828 to mark the town's newly built breakwater. The original lighthouse was a round Doric column, similar to the old west pier light at Whitby. It had a square gallery and cylindrical lantern, but this tower became a victim of the Great Storm of 1953. Strong seas pushed the old tower over, leaving it leaning at a precarious angle for several hours, prior to it collapsing, along with a large section at the end of the pier. The storm also destroyed the local pleasure pier.
In 1955, the current octagonal concrete tower was built, topped by a copper lantern housing a fixed red LED light. Unlike the original tower, this new structure was of a much simpler and less grand design. The new lighthouse, which has become one of Margate's most recognizable landmarks is accessible by walking the harbour arm, which is open to the public and free of charge.
Margate is a seaside town in Thanet, Kent, South East England, 15 miles (24.1 km) north-east of Canterbury, which includes Cliftonville, Garlinge, Palm Bay and Westbrook.
www.thanet.gov.uk/locations/harbour-arm/
www.worldwidelighthouses.com/Lighthouses/English-Lighthou...
And another Kaliphlin Civil War build for GoH... hope you guys aren't tired of looking at these, we still got two months of this to go!
Thanks for looking!
I've been loitering around the studio at Inspirations where Mitch has been hard at work adding some more colour to my arm. So stoked on how it's coming together.
Sailing training vessel of the Mexican Navy near the entrance of the San Juan Bay,on his visit to the Island for the celebration of the 500 years of the Capital City of San Juan,Puerto Rico.
I love Banyan trees! I saw them on a trip to Florida several years ago, and think they are just awesome looking how the reach out and DOWN with their exposed "roots" SO when back in FL. for the weekend I couldn't pass up a Banyan Fence combo shot!!!
To me it looks like he has his arm out for the fence, what a gentlemen!!
Happy Fence Friday everyone!!!
Il programma prevedeva il passaggio per il più famoso fiordo dell'Alaska, Tracy Arm, ma le condizioni non ottime e la presenza di molti iceberg ci hanno costretto a virare verso Endicott Arm, qualche miglio più a sud. Sullo sfondo si intravede il Dawes Glacier.