View allAll Photos Tagged BOUNDLESS
The New Age with Boundless and AREA 512 Entertainment
Austin, Texas
January 7th, 2012
Nikon D5000
35mm f/1.8
I feel like I should update on something, but really I have nothing to update on. haha
Um, I got all A's and B's this quarter.
I'm looking into HPU because they have the best interior design program in North Carolina and my counselor at school recommended I go there. And I just redecorated my room again so I think I might make another stop motion of that since I haven't done one since last feb. You can view that stop motion right here.
And thats about it.
This is the 1st treehouse - handicapped accessible in the Boundless Playgrounds in the US ... and this is at Darrell's Dream playground in Warriors Path State Park, Kingsport, TN ... I love this place - such a great place for children to learn and play together of ALL abilities
Devil's Punch Bowl-viewpoint near carpark towards Boundless Copse. Devil's Punch Bowl is a topographical wonder and Gibbet Hill is the second highest point in Surrey with views across the Weald. It is an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) & Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI). Devil's Punch Bowl, Surrey GU26 6AB, maintained by The National Trust. Copyright © 2013 by Scott A. McNealy Photographer. See more of my work at www.noboundaryphotography.co.uk or www.flickr.com/photos/scottamcnealy/
Boundless green, soft tones of emerald and bright light green, velvety and snug. Little white clouds jumping and floating, cuddly and soft. It was a gift to see it all, flooded with midday light.
P.S.: taking the opportunity to thank Danny from Israel, who's gift wrap paper was used for this little drawing :)
Created for the Spring Art Show & Sale at the Forestry Farm House group exhibit in Saskatoon, May 29/11.
Framed 11x14 (art 6x8") based on my own photography.
blogged at www.mysweetprairie.blogspot.com
commissioned work by request
Boundless is a physical sandbox, where you can grapple up to inaccessible mountain ledges and slide down ice paths into the deepest caves. Harvest Titan’s mechanical guts and repurpose them to make your own floating airships and ingenious contraptions. Fulfil your lifelong dream of becoming a space pirate! It’s the ultimate sandbox, create whatever you can dream of and share it with the world.
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Boundless, unveiled on the grounds of Cameron Art Museum on November 13, 2021. North Carolina artist Stephen Hayes created the sculpture to highlight the effort of US Colored Troops in the Civil War. The sculpture includes casts made from the decedents of US Colored Troops who participated in the battle of Forks Road. Photo by Alan Cradick, November 17, 2021.
"Photograph Date: October 1, 1980
Photographer: Marion Dean Ross (1913-1991)"
From: boundless.uoregon.edu/cdm4/item_viewer.php?CISOROOT=/arch...
"Boundless Spirit" was unveiled Feb. 18 in its new permanent home at El Camino College’s main entrance to campus, along Crenshaw Boulevard.
One misty evening I hiked the Granite Ridge trail in Killarney. When we got to the top we found these enchanting views of the mist shrouded hills. There was a storm raging far off over Manitoulin Island, and I could hear the waves roaring in the distance on Georgian Bay. The birds and the waves provided the most etherial soundtrack. One of the people who was hiking with me remarked that this was the first time he ever really felt like the birds were singing. That they sounded like a symphony.
This particular image reminds me of a verse from the song "Bound for Northern Ontario" by Andy Lowe.
"A bounless sky above a forest tall
Rolling on far as the eye can see.
Sparkling waters pure and free for all
In the land that holds my destiny."
DATE TAKEN:
July 4th, 2007
LOCATION:
Granite Ridge looking Northeast, Killarney Provincial Park, Killarney, Ontario, Canada
Ariel Diaz '02 Th'04 is founder and CEO of "Boundless," a cloud-based e-textbook platform making customized educational materials available to the masses.
Photograph courtesy boundless.com.
I've studied and collected wolf things ever since I fell in love with wolves after watching the Disney film adaptation of Farley Mowat's Never Cry Wolf (www.imdb.com/title/tt0086005/) as a sophomore in high school. It's the first time I remember seeing a real Biologist at work, and the field study of arctic wolves themselves just fascinated me.
This film is what drew my attention to the great gulf between how the wolf has been historically, incorrectly, perceived as a storybook villian and an environmental menace (to ranchers and early homesteaders) but in reality is a strong, intelligent, familal, loyal, social, vocal, expressive mammal. It's part of the reason why I became a 'dog person' too. I've collected all things 'wolf' ever since. And, coincidentally, Wolf is also my Mom's maiden name.
I also often carry this little fetish in my pocket as a personal touchstone. It reminds me of my Grampa Wolf, my dogs, my friend Ken, and a lot of the pagan / native totem aspects attributed to Wolf that I strongly identify with.