View allAll Photos Tagged BECOMING
Understand and enjoy the fact that photography is a unique medium. Respect and work within photography’s limitations, you will go much further.
Donovan Wylie
What advice would you give young photographers?
No one is above the law! Indict Trump!
cosmos, little theater garden, raleigh, north carolina
Another shot of what's becoming a little bit of a star.
Still hopping around in the hedgerow on Barton Lane, Never keeps still, been around there for over three weeks.
Another dull day.
Attenborough NR
3rd Winter Herring Gull sounding off. Already quite grey on the mantle, a lot of the coverts are also grey but lots of juvenile-type feathers still remain. The bill is becoming paler but still retains dark on the tip
Fjärilshuset
Hagaparken, Sweden
From the Gallery: Sweden 2009
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my mind is
a big hunk of irrevocable nothing which touch and
taste and smell and hearing and sight keep hitting and
chipping with sharp fatal tools
in an agony of sensual chisels i perform squirms of
chrome and execute strides of cobalt
nevertheless i
feel that i cleverly am being altered that i slightly am
becoming something a little different, in fact
myself
hereupon helpless i utter lilac shrieks and scarlet
bellowings
| e. e. cummings
.
A star magnolia, that is :)
I posted this one as a bud just over a week ago, and here it's bursting and ready to open totally. Once they bloom, they seem to turn brown within a day and are gone. Luckily, this bush is in my neighbour's yard, so I didn't have to go far to shoot it.
HBW😊😊😍
With heartfelt and genuine thanks for your kind visit. Have a wonderful and beautiful day, be well, keep your eyes open, appreciate the beauty surrounding you, enjoy creating, stay safe and laugh often! ❤️❤️❤️
James Lionel Dugdale (1862-1941) laid the foundation stone of Crathorne Hall in December 1903 and the house was completed in June 1906, becoming the largest country houses built during the reign of Edward VII.
It was built with 115 rooms, 41 of which were bedrooms. There were 26 live-in servants who occupied the servants’ wing
Crathorne Hall in Yarm was badly damaged by the blaze on 1 October 2014 which started in the roof space of the east wing. All of the guests and staff were evacuated safely from the site, but the east wing on the rightside of the picture was totally destroyed, but as you can see it has been rebuilt exactly as it once was.
I found this stunning 1946 Buick Model 41 Special outside of Waukon, Washington during a pretty spectacular sunset. I couldn't have asked for a better location or timing!
Prints available here: joshuasnyder.darkroom.tech
Follow me on Facebook: www.facebook.com/PNW.Photography1/
Old windows, old doors of Hudson, NY
Formerly Claverack Landing, Hudson was once a hub for the whaling industry — and it very nearly became New York’s capital city.
Of all the many cities and towns in our region, only one was named after Henry Hudson, the Valley’s first European visitor. How the designation came to be is, well, a whale of a tale.
Until 1784, the city of Hudson was known as Claverack Landing. It was a farming community of 10 or so families—around 150 people. But that was about to change.
In the years during and right after the Revolutionary War, the Royal Navy clamped down on American whaling— one of the biggest industries of the 18th century (especially in New England). In 1783, brothers Seth and Thomas Jenkins from Nantucket set sail for a new beginning. They found a home base in this unlikely locale—100 miles from the ocean— on a deep and safe harbor with plenty of land. Claverack Landing presented an opportunity to build a company town from scratch… which they did.
The Jenkins brothers and 28 other whalers, who became known as the Proprietors, formed a company and bought the land from Dutch families (who had previously purchased it from the native Mohicans). They laid out a city grid and put into place everything a whaling enterprise would need: ship builders, rope and sail makers, coopers, and more than a few saloons. Within three years, the city had several wharves, four warehouses, plus “a covered rope-walk, spermaceti-works, one hundred and fifty dwelling-houses, shops, barns, one of the best distilleries in America, and fifteen hundred souls,” according to the New York Journal.
On November 14, 1784, Claverack Landing became the first city to be incorporated in the brand-new United States of America. However, according to an 1862 chronicle, Historical Sketches of Hudson, the Proprietors wanted a new name. They unanimously agreed that “it should be called by the name of Hudson.” There is no record as to why they insisted on the name change, but according to the book, at least one person wasn’t happy: New York’s first governor George Clinton. He wanted Hudson named after himself.
In 1797, Hudson was one vote short of becoming the capital of New York State. Nevertheless, the city has survived and thrived, and today represents a true gem of the Hudson Valley.
trust the wait
embrace the uncertainty
enjoy the beauty of becoming
when nothing is certain,
everything is possible.
What a bossy, bossy birdie. Dunbar (Northern Mockingbird) has a lovely voice and sings beautiful songs. However, as February approaches he is predictably becoming bossier and bossier towards the other birds. Still, I do love him.
There is plenty of food for all, I wish he would just relax. I know, it's not in his nature. But wow, he wouldn't have to spend near the energy he does if he would relax.
I hope everyone has a lovely weekend. As for me, I will be covering plants today. Winter is here, and we are going to get freezing temps in the area. You can probably see that I have already begun covering plants. The green backdrop in this image is frost cloth.
I will be putting out extra feeders for all of my little feathered friends and furry ones like Robbie (gray squirrels). With the plants being covered, they won't really have access to the insects they are accustomed to.
Stay warm and happy snapping.
Photograph taken High Street, Sheffield
I wasn't sure about this shot, too much blur on the hand. However, she does have the nicest smile and I liked the taxi in the background
the sea was very rough and it was getting to close for comfort but it was difficult to give up on this light , thankfully I found a place behind that Africa shaped rock which was taking all the splashes making possible snapping the "Becoming of light"
have a great weekend all of you !
Press L for better view.
Forest created by Meilo Minotaur and CapCat Ragu (work in progress).
A few objects were derendered.
Second Life: Delicatessen (at Porto)
Un solo disparo .
El Mar se va Convirtiendo en Sombras, mientras el Cielo y la Orilla mojada se Iluminan y saturan el Ambiente de Color.!!
A single shot.
Sea Shadow is going Becoming while Heaven and Shore is wet and saturated illuminate the Environment Color. !!
Yellow leaf of Acer platanoides within the birch stand with the maple understory near Pushchino, Moscow region
After becoming one of the richest towns in Africa during a diamond boom in 1910, Kolmanskop, Namibia was abandoned by all the inhabitants. Kolmanskop became a ghost town in the desert.
Playing in the paint once again. This one started out as a bottom bottle pour but I really didn't like it. I proceeded to work with the paint, blowing it around with a straw. I started to see wings and then a figure....I thought...hmmm...I can work with that!
Yet another daylight long exposure landscape shoot - I am quickly becoming addicted to daylight long exposure! Manual mode same as last to get more experience. I chose f/16 to allow for the exposure time I wanted (15-20 secs)
Thanks again to Adam and his Landscape Masterclass at First Man Photography - without that I really wouldn't have considered going manual and not even gotten the shot because going through that masterclass has made me rethink how I shoot landscapes. I am still learning; I still struggle when looking for interesting subjects and also the composition. Also, ISO, aperture and shutterspeed is something I still need to incorporate into my workflow for each shot because I tend to forget checking and setting them. Heh.
In moments without rain perhaps something for you:
A German Nature Foundation is looking specially to insects this year, cause they are becoming more less year by year. So count them in an hour and sent them your results
Nabu
www.nabu.de/tiere-und-pflanzen/aktionen-und-projekte/inse...
*Working Towards a Better World
Global Issues
www.globalissues.org/issue/168/environmental-issues
A wealth of important information can be found on the link above, one can really understand better our predicament and how important it is for the WHOLE WORLD to pay attention and MAKE THE DIFFERENCE!!!
Thank you for your kind visit. Have a wonderful and beautiful day! xo💜💜
How happily and tenderly your voice speaks to me! We do not question each other, we do not complain to each other, we often walk together through open doors. For where you are, things are open and bright; and the hours too walk on lighter feet here. For in darkness, time weighs more heavily on us than in the light. Here the words and word-shrines of all being open up before me: here all being wishes to become word, all becoming wishes to learn from me how to speak
This Red Tailed Hawk is becoming more photogenic every day and I feel some day soon is going to allow me to pose beside it and take a selfie of ourselves
Early April leaves get their start, and orange lichen, mistletoe and a yellow-rumped warbler continue life at the San Louis National Wildlife Refuge.
The tsar's speeches are becoming more and more idiotic. He pretends normality, meets with other kleptocrats and pretends that there is no war. Most ridiculous are his extremely strange tirades against the West, in which he simply turns around all the outrages he commits and blames them on the West. This is so bizarre...does he believe this himself or is this his kind of humour?
I am holding an online photo exhibition. For details, check the Photo exhibition venue. I was planning to actually exhibit it at a gallery in Tokyo in April, but it was postponed at the request of the government.
Photo exhibition venue → kyoto-muse.jp/web-exhibit/110790
playlist→ music.apple.com/jp/playlist/%E5%80%8B%E5%B1%95/pl.u-38oWZ...
COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2 is attacking all over the world. Japan is no exception, and everyday is becoming more difficult. As a photographer, I also thought about life and postponed the exhibition according to the government's request. The Japanese government does not support artists. So I decided to hold an online photo exhibition. This is free to watch.
The photo exhibition should be in the dark in the room at night, preferably with the playlist. Look at the brightness of mobile terminals at 1/3.
*My planet, My Life.*
*Simple reason, Simple stories, Planet is circulate and “Life” is a season. *
* SONY ILCE‑7M2 / Lomography New Jupiter 3+ 1.5/50 L39/M *
・Link: Official photo gallery.
・Work - `work`
・Street - `Street wark`
Official Photo gallery, Art/snap works Updates every Monday.