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With the added lower lobe-thingy, I couldn't just do the freckles that were there before even if I wanted to (which I didn't particularly) so I experimented with a more dainty alternative.
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I hadn't posted any kind of dyp lately so I thought I'd toss something together tonight. Couldn't really get in the mood to do anything at home. I had to shoot here because Alya's out of town on an interview and I didn't want to deal with the dog...lol
Anyway. Its the last night (2 more hours) to register for the print giveaway if you were interested.
Two shots
Canon 50D | EF 50mm f/1.8 II
ISO 400 | f/1.8 | 1/100
Light from the display
The group grows. Now we have John Kowalinski, Joe Maurer, Tim Kowalinski, Kayla Walters, Zipporah Caspers, John Klaves, Faith Caspers, Joshua Anumolu, Caleb Schaber, and Rebecca Dickman.
Following a run round at Chavornay, where traffic from the Orbe branch was collected, SBB Cargo Class Re 6/6 11653 was recorded returning south near Bavois with Regional Freight 61572, the 17:44 Chavornay to Lausanne Triage Yard.
All images on this site are exclusive property and may not be copied, downloaded, reproduced, transmitted, manipulated or used in any way without expressed written permission of the photographer. All rights reserved – Copyright Don Gatehouse
Cobi Jones com os integrantes do projeto "Galera Nota 10" que fizeram uma apresentação de dança típica da região. / Cobi Jones and members of the poject "Galera Nota 10", who presented a typical dance of the region. (Photo: U.S. Embassy)
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Color added to this Black-and-White Pattern:
www.flickr.com/photos/merripat/5202103496/in/ set-72157623...
I dont relly like this shot but its my first pic with a tripod .
Thanks to Stefan Sobot for giving it to me . :)
Tomorrow i will hopefully catch a Gallardo Se and post some pics of it :)
"Footdee is a particularly interesting example of a planned housing development purpose-built to re-house Aberdeen's local fishing community. Laid out in 1809 by John Smith, then Superintendent Of The Town's Public Works. Smith went on to establish himself as one of Aberdeen's key architects. Occupying an isolated spit of land to the SE of Aberdeen's city centre, its regimented squares have been described as `a cross between the neo-classical aspirations of Aberdeen and the close-knit fishing communities of the north-east'.
The two squares of Footdee originally contained 28 single-storey thatched houses although this increased when the later Middle Row (circa 1837) and Pilot Square (circa 1855) were added. The entrances on each of the North and South squares were filled in the 1870's by William Smith (son of John and architect of Balmoral Castle). He also added additional storeys to the East and West sides of South Square creating a tenement feel. This was an attempt to ease crowding resulting from an influx of fishing families from other less prosperous areas and to help try to enforce the `one-house-one-family' rule.
The Town Council decided to start selling the dwellings to occupiers in 1880, beginning a period of incremental development and reconstruction. Additional storeys and dormers were added piecemeal by the new owners as funds allowed. The result is one of individuality expressed within the constraints of a strictly formal plan and is a contributing factor to the special architectural and historical interest of Footdee as a whole.
Throughout the 19th century, `tarry sheds' were added to the communal land within the squares opposite each dwelling and now every dwelling has its own shed. Originally constructed from drift wood and other found materials, the sheds have been built and rebuilt in an idiosyncratic manner over the years in a variety of materials with rendered brick now predominating slightly (2006). Some timber built sheds remain, predominantly on the North side of North Square.
Referred to locally and historically as `Fittie', the derivation of which remains uncertain although a number of suggestions have been put forward. The Church of St Fittick is situated half a mile away to the south. `Footdee' is a more recent and literal Anglicisation, derived from its proximity to the mouth of the River Dee."
The above description is taken from Historic Scotland's Listed building supplementary information.
Founded in 1889 by Charles Reed Bishop (1822–1915) as a memorial to his late wife Princess Bernice Pauahi Bishop (1831–1884), the Bishop Museum houses the largest collection of Polynesian cultural and historical artifacts in the world, as well as holding the status of being the largest museum in Hawaii. The initial building, Pauahi Hall, was begun in 1889, was completed in 1891, with an addition onto the rear of the original structure, known as Polynesian Hall, being completed in 1894, and an addition known as Hawaiian Hall added to the west of the original building in 1902-03. Adjacent to Hawaiian Hall, Bishop Hall was constructed in 1891 as the home of the Kamehameha School for Boys, which educated Native Hawaiian children until a new school campus was constructed on a nearby mountainside in the 1930s. This building has since been converted into employee-only space housing artifacts and parts of the collection not on display, as well as service areas. The initial buildings of the complex were constructed in the Richardsonian Romanesque Revival style with heavy use of rusticated stone, roman arches, hipped roofs, gables, and Victorian interior elements in the Eastlake and Queen Anne styles. The interiors of Pauahi Hall and Polynesian Hall feature grand Eastlake-style staircases with ornate railings and beautiful tile floors, with the upper levels of Polynesian Hall being home to a cavernous space with a beautiful wood frame roof and column structure, as well as a wooden inlay in the floor that displays a map of Polynesia. The interior of Hawaiian Hall is a massive three-story space ringed with balconies, columns, and arches, with exhibits on every level and large displays hanging from the ceiling. To the rear, linking the three buildings, is a modern atrium added in 2007. Behind the museum exhibit buildings are a series of Classical Revival and Modern buildings that house additional service areas, artifact storage areas, and collection storage areas for the museum. Between the original museum buildings and Bishop Hall stands the Castle Memorial Building, home to rotating special exhibits, built in the Postmodern style between 1988 and 1990. To the west of the museum stands the Jhamandas Watumull Planetarium, which opened in 1961 and was later expanded with the addition of a restaurant and gift shop. The south side of the museum complex is the site of the Richard T. Mamiya Science Adventure Center, a contemporary museum which was completed in 2005, and features exhibits meant to teach visitors about various scientific studies underway or carried out in Hawaii. The museum complex serves as a major cultural institution in Hawaii and Polynesia as a whole, and serves to curate and preserve important artifacts and records of the unique cultural and geographic region’s history and people.