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"Domki Budnicze" are narrow houses of poorer buyers from the 16th century, in contrast to the tenement houses of rich patricians in the market square.
In their early Renaissance arcades, fish, candles, torches and salt were traded, hence their former name - herring huts. This is one of the few examples of terraced market construction.
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"Domki Budnicze" to pochodzące z XVI wieku wąskie kamienice biedniejszych kupców, w przeciwieństwie do kamienic bogatych patrycjuszy w pierzejach rynku.
W ich wczesnorenesansowych podcieniach handlowano rybami, świecami, pochodniami i solą, stąd ich dawna nazwa – budy śledziowe. Jest to jeden z nielicznych przykładów szeregowej zabudowy targowej.
Location: Eliyot Bridge Road, Sirajgang, B A N G L A D E S H.
I've made some may flowers
with my finger and thumb,
So you will have these
Memories
For all the years
to come!
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Highly reflective ceramic plant pots, stacked and waiting for buyers. Love the way they are reflecting the greenhouse curtains above.
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Pescheria (fish market) - Chioggia
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Happy Truck Thursday! Found this old beauty waiting for a bed and a buyer in front of a local garden shop.
Taken in Sherwood, Oregon, and processed in Smart Photo Editor, PSE14, and Topaz. Old postcard effect by Vivienne Li,
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PRIVATE GROUPS
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Yes, Yolanda, we all do it sooner or later. And if you've been in photography longer than most, then you've done it more than most. Buyer's remorse. It's called GAS. Gear Acquisition Syndrome.
From left to right.......
A Tokina POS from 1988. I picked this lens up while in the Navy from a fellow sailor. After this mistake, I made myself a hard rule. I would only purchase name brand lenses. This Tonika was a super telephoto macro disappointment. A disappointment so horrendous that it made me swear off third party lenses with the exception of the Vivitar Series 1.
Beside it is a Holga lens with a Nikon F mount. A $50 POS lens to make my expensive digital camera purposefully take crappy photographs. Brilliant. Yeah, I did that. I am so ashamed....
Behind that is a 300mm Nikon telephoto. A 300mm prime. To shoot lions in Africa. What was I thinking?
Next up, a Sigma lens. Did I say I swore off third party lenses? Well I must have been drunk when I bought that one. At least it was used and cheap.
Next is the wide angle lens for my Yashica 124G. Damn it would have been nice to have the corresponding viewing lens as well. Duh.........
Then there's the Tamaron telephoto. Wait...... I bought another third party lens? It was only $20 used. I should have put the money on a horse at the track. I never used the lens.
Finally, the last one, I don't even know what it fits. I bought it at a garage sale. Five bucks. I could have purchased a burger and fries instead.
And these are only a few of the lenses. Then there's the camera bodies..... All used and inexpensive film bodies. I can afford them now! Just in case film should ever make a huge comeback or an Electromagnetic 'Scalar' war should scatter all our pixels into oblivion.
Tripods....... What about the tripods? The crap on three legs I bought before I realized the need for a good tripod. And then the extra tripods I bought to hold cameras until I'm ready to use them.
All that being said, I bought and use a Pro-Optic (Korean) 8mm lens. There's nothing offered by Nikon like it that is even close in price.
So yes, you're not alone. Those lenses that you think you need an adapter for? Nah...... Free lens them. Or purchase the corresponding body. Problem solved.
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One of the core reasons that I was so eager to visit the Montana Rail Link was the impending buyout that would see the BNSF take full control over the railroad, which had been announced a few months prior but was supposed to take effect sometime between March and April. While that thought was certainly in the back of my mind, I guess some executives had another idea as the BNSF top brass ran a special executive train to tour the eastern end of the MRL. After hitting territory at Laurel, the train ran up to Helena before climbing Mullan Pass and turning the train at Blossburg for the return trip back east towards Laurel. If this trip was for the top brass to inspect their new trackage, then it’s convenient they turned around instead of continuing west of Missoula where the signals still date back to the Northern Pacific for now.
Ghosts included...?? Actually, my childhood home for a few years, so I spent some happy Halloweens here. Not haunted or scary at all. Buy with confidence! Sale ends at midnight. Happy Halloween!
After leaving the Soo late, CN L550 made decent time across the U.P. until Port Inland, where the train just after 3 am went into emergency. The train was limped to Gulliver where a bad order car had to be set out. 3 1/2 hours after going into emergency, the car was set out at Gulliver and the train was put back together and continued west. This gave us ample time to get ahead of the train and find a spot. We got lucky and found a home for sale on the seldom shot south side of the bridge over the Whitefish River that had no occupants, so we became "prospective home buyers" for a little bit, and then decided it just wasn't for us.
This is what fungus looks like in a lens - bummer! That's e-bay for you - you pays your money and takes your chance. It's buried inside on one of the optics rather than on the surface, so no getting at it without costly professional intervention or a DIY hatchet job which would probably only make it worse or cause some other terminal problem.
Luckily the guy turned out to be a very conscientious seller and was mortified that he hadn't spotted it (the rest of the lens was absolutely mint and to be fair it is surprisingly easy to miss if you don't look carefully and at the right angle - took a lot of attempts to get this photo to show it). So I ended up with a refund, a new - albeit worthless - lens to play with and a lesson learned.
The good news is that it still works okay for now (today's other photos were taken with it - I can't see any real affect as yet) - the bad news is its days are probably numbered and sooner rather than later. Hey ho.
It's a Canon 24-85 f3.5 USM if anyone's interested, which is supposed to be a pretty good lens under normal circumstances, at least for those of us who can't afford shiny new ones or L series!
I was so excited to find simply dozens of the hottest toy of the Christmas season. Shhhhh, no one can find them because they are looking in the toy aisle, but low and behold, they are in the egg section. Anyway.....I bought a DOZEN of the hatch-animals eggs, all in one carton!!! I was sooooo thrilled, but when I got home, I discovered that my hatchimal is obviously defective. Hope you have an easier time hatching yours.
Buyer beware.....