View allAll Photos Tagged Circulus

after all, Gatsby too believed in the green light, the orgastic future that year by year recedes before us.

Friday opened the River Sculpture Festival at the French Broad Park off of Amboy Road and like last year there are some fantastic sculptures and constructions in the park.

 

For more information, please go to www.riversculpture.com

 

This is what it looks like just sitting there

Friday opened the River Sculpture Festival at the French Broad Park off of Amboy Road and like last year there are some fantastic sculptures and constructions in the park.

 

For more information, please go to www.riversculpture.com

The day opening night of the Artist In Residence show at the School of Jewellery in Birmingham: everything hidden!

 

Taken with Panasonic 20mm f1.7 lens on Panasonic GX7.

You owe it to yourself to view this large on black.

 

Portland Design Works hosted a fabulous housewarming party last week to celebrate their new location in inner NE Portland. I made a lot of photographs of folks whipping around this little track racing circle, which they call the Circulus Maximus. I hope I managed to capture some of the joy and excitement radiating from the participants; it was a fun evening and PDW really put on a fantastic party. Not present in this photo are the basketball hoop, ping pong table, and halfpipe that also inhabit their big space; nor can you see the kids and their cases of cheap beer, or hear the pounding dance music that accompanied the party. Apparently there was some grilling going on, too, and a couple kegs, but we arrived too late for that. A real good time was had by all.

No Tapestry festival would be complete without Circulus. I adore them.

 

And should probably apologise to them yet again for my apalling behaviour.

this is a pretty rare sighting

The Circulus mini velodrome has arrived in Portland and it now sits fully assembled in the North Portland warehouse headquarters of Portland Designs Works.

Friday opened the River Sculpture Festival at the French Broad Park off of Amboy Road and like last year there are some fantastic sculptures and constructions in the park.

 

For more information, please go to www.riversculpture.com

The last time I saw a solar eclipse I was seven I think. It wasn’t a full but it was enough to mesmerize my young soul. Thirty something years later I got to see another, altho still not a full. In 2024 New England will get the opportunity to see a full solar eclipse. You can bet I’m traveling to Vermont for that one. Even viewing a partial one can imagine why older civilizations believed in magical gods in the sky. Day turns to night for two odd minutes and then light returns. I love science but for some events it strips the magic away. We know why eclipses happen but our ancestors didn’t. They thought it was the sun god, some thought it was a bad omen, some thought the world was ending. These types of celestial events held great mysticism and still do for us today. If you follow a paganism path you know of the importance of sun and moon. They each have there due seasonal times throughout the year. Rarely, do they dance, but once every seventy years or so they collide and the darkness invades day and a beautiful serenade begins. Our eyes turn upward and we are transformed into star struck beings contemplating our place in the world. We are forever looking upward, trapped on this rock hurling through our solar system, always a satellite to our father sun. It reminds us we are but a speck of stardust in our evolution and all this beauty will be here long after we are gone.

The great thing about science is it allows us to plan and weather permitting an idea is born. For three years Solastra has been sitting in a notebook just waiting to breathe.

 

Kate is a wedding photographer who spends her life making everyone’s important day a beautiful memory. She is gifted in the art of capturing love. Like most photographers being constantly behind the lens never gives her the opportunity to shine in front of it. Working with fellow shuddabugs is one of my most favorite types of shoots altho sometimes getting them to relax is challenging. It’s tough when you are used to being in control of a artistic scene and letting that go and allowing another take the reign. You are faced with all the insecurities that would never come into play had you not been a photographer. The anxiety and apprehension are real and you really need to trust the one shooting you. I would never downplay the honor of having her choose me. She shined like the sun!

Friday opened the River Sculpture Festival at the French Broad Park off of Amboy Road and like last year there are some fantastic sculptures and constructions in the park.

 

For more information, please go to www.riversculpture.com

Yes it was.

 

Photos from Interbike 2011, Las Vegas, Nevada

The Monotype Subscription Library offers two versions of Circulus on the basic level. How to decide between the two? Both versions of this typeface are included in the basic subscription level as from 2016-02-15

Zoom into this map at maps.bpl.org.

 

Author: Visscher, Nicolaes

Publisher: Visscher, Nicolaes

Date: 1705

Location: Baden-Württemberg (Germany), Germany

 

Dimensions: 47 x 55 cm.

Scale: [ca. 1:600,000]

Call Number: G1015 .C651 1630

100% guaranteed goblin free . . 1 Porcupine Tree - Mother and Child Divided 2 Spock's Beard - The Ballet of the Impact 3 GPS - Window to the Soul 4 The Flower Kings - Hit Me With a Hit 5 Fish - Incommunicado 6 Lunatica - Out! 7 Circulus - Willow Tree 8 Wolverine - The House of Plague 9 Riverside - Volte-Face 10 Frost - Black Light Machine 11 Whimwise - Innocence 12 Mostly Autumn - Pass the Clock, parts 1, 2 & 3

Star Trail - La Torre Marzo 2015

 

21st July 2019 at Regent Street (Bandstand), London W1.

 

Summer Streets (one of four days with free events).

 

Country: France (British resident). Style: Songs from 60s and 70s French Cinema & Yé-Yé.

 

Lineup: Lo Polidoro (v/recorder), Nigel Broderick (accordion).

 

Lo Polidoro was born in Burgundy of French and Italian parents. Since moving to the UK she has performed with Circulus (a psychedelic folk/progressive rock band) and Fleur De Paris (French café and music-hall styles from 1890s to 1950s).

In this photo: Broderick plays a Weltmeister Accordion.

More information: encoremusicians.com/Lo-Polidoro, www.facebook.com/pg/Fleur-De-Paris-120588714660798/.

 

Circulus play at the All Services club in Moseley, 16 December 2011.

Make sure you see all my photos from this event here...

www.circulus.org

www.moseleyfolk.co.uk

 

Photos for Gig Junkies with review by Daron of The Hearing Aid.

www.gigjunkies.com

www.thehearingaid.blogspot.com

 

© 2011 www.waynefoxphotography.com, please email me for the original images.

info [AT] waynefoxphotography [DOT] com

Downloading, reproducing, blogging, copying or using my images in any way without my prior permission is illegal.

Thank you.

The last time I saw a solar eclipse I was seven I think. It wasn’t a full but it was enough to mesmerize my young soul. Thirty something years later I got to see another, altho still not a full. In 2024 New England will get the opportunity to see a full solar eclipse. You can bet I’m traveling to Vermont for that one. Even viewing a partial one can imagine why older civilizations believed in magical gods in the sky. Day turns to night for two odd minutes and then light returns. I love science but for some events it strips the magic away. We know why eclipses happen but our ancestors didn’t. They thought it was the sun god, some thought it was a bad omen, some thought the world was ending. These types of celestial events held great mysticism and still do for us today. If you follow a paganism path you know of the importance of sun and moon. They each have there due seasonal times throughout the year. Rarely, do they dance, but once every seventy years or so they collide and the darkness invades day and a beautiful serenade begins. Our eyes turn upward and we are transformed into star struck beings contemplating our place in the world. We are forever looking upward, trapped on this rock hurling through our solar system, always a satellite to our father sun. It reminds us we are but a speck of stardust in our evolution and all this beauty will be here long after we are gone.

The great thing about science is it allows us to plan and weather permitting an idea is born. For three years Solastra has been sitting in a notebook just waiting to breathe.

 

Kate is a wedding photographer who spends her life making everyone’s important day a beautiful memory. She is gifted in the art of capturing love. Like most photographers being constantly behind the lens never gives her the opportunity to shine in front of it. Working with fellow shuddabugs is one of my most favorite types of shoots altho sometimes getting them to relax is challenging. It’s tough when you are used to being in control of a artistic scene and letting that go and allowing another take the reign. You are faced with all the insecurities that would never come into play had you not been a photographer. The anxiety and apprehension are real and you really need to trust the one shooting you. I would never downplay the honor of having her choose me. She shined like the sun!

21st July 2019 at Regent Street (Bandstand), London W1.

 

Summer Streets (one of four days with free events).

 

Country: France (British resident). Style: Songs from 60s and 70s French Cinema & Yé-Yé.

 

Lineup: Lo Polidoro (v/recorder), Nigel Broderick (accordion).

 

Lo Polidoro was born in Burgundy of French and Italian parents. Since moving to the UK she has performed with Circulus (a psychedelic folk/progressive rock band) and Fleur De Paris (French café and music-hall styles from 1890s to 1950s).

More information: encoremusicians.com/Lo-Polidoro, www.facebook.com/pg/Fleur-De-Paris-120588714660798/.

 

Zoom into this map at maps.bpl.org.

 

Author: Wit, Frederik de

Publisher: Wit, Frederick de

Date: 1688

Location: Germany, North Rhine-Westphalia (Germany), Rhineland-Palatinate (Germany)

 

Dimensions: 56 x 49 cm.

Scale: [ca. 1:1,100,000]

Call Number: G1015 .C651 1630

Concept: It's the mundane circulus vitiosus that keeps us reminding what really is important (and everlasting): memories.

One team on the Central Portland Joyride posing infront of Circulus at PDW.

Gene-O of One on One Bike Shop pulls thru with the win in the finals of the Portland Design Works / Paved Magazine Circulus Pursuit championships.

 

www.bikemag.com/videos/portland-design-works-paved-magazi...

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