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Room Lift is an interior design business that specializes in re-designing one room, while utilizing as much of their client's furnishings and decor as possible.
Caught this medium size anole in the midst of a color change, from brown to green. I have always liked these little creatures!
VÁY CƯỚI PHỐI ÁO CHOÀNG CAPE THANH LỊCH SANG TRỌNG
Chiếc váy cưới cape đính hoa ren 3D là biểu tượng của sự quý phái, thanh lịch và lãng mạn. Lấy cảm hứng từ hình ảnh Nữ thần quyền quý, thiết kế được chế tác thủ công tinh xảo với các chi tiết ren lấp lánh và hoa 3D, tôn vinh vẻ đẹp lộng lẫy, kiêu sa của cô dâu hiện đại.
Áo choàng cape có thể tháo rời, mang lại sự dịu dàng và huyền bí, là lựa chọn lý tưởng cho cô dâu muốn tỏa sáng như một Nữ thần trong ngày cưới, ghi dấu ấn khó quên trong lòng mọi người.
CAPE WEDDING DRESS FEATURES SPARKLY EMBELLISHED LACE AND HANDCRAFTED 3D FLORAL
This 3D floral lace cape wedding dress embodies elegance, romance, and nobility. Inspired by a divine Goddess, its intricate lace and handcrafted floral details highlight the bride's beauty and poise.
The detachable cape adds graceful charm and mystery, making it the perfect choice for brides seeking a radiant, unforgettable presence on their special day.
Meera Meera Fashion Concept là Xưởng may áo cưới cao cấp TP HCM - Sài Gòn.
Chuyên tư vấn và thiết kế theo ý thích riêng của từng khách hàng, mang đến nét riêng độc đáo nhất cho bạn với giá thành vô cùng hợp lý cùng chất lượng xưởng may đạt tiêu chuẩn Quốc tế.
Không may sẵn, cho thuê.
"It starts with a dream - Make your dreams come true with us"
Unique quality custom wedding dresses. Ship worldwide. Each of the dress is created based on each of our client’s exact requirements and measurements.
If you want a wedding dress which truly reflect who you are with sotiphicated and luxury details, please send us a message.
Chi tiết/ Details: meerameera.net/pages/may-ao-cuoi
meerameera.net/collections/may-ao-cuoi-dep-tp-hcm
Liên hệ để đặt lịch tư vấn với nhà thiết kế và giải đáp mọi thắc mắc của khách hàng:
Hotline 093 271 18 31
Email: meerameerafashion@gmail.com
Instagram: www.instagram.com/fmeerameera/
Facebook: www.facebook.com/MeeraMeeraFashionConcept/
YouTube: www.youtube.com/user/MeeraMeerafsconcept
Pinterest: www.pinterest.com/meerameerafashionconcept/
Random image from phone during rainy day
IMG_0080 taken from the corner of our client's office building
Vianaar is Goa's leading real estate development company, Building beautiful holiday homes in the serene villages of north Goa.
Vianaar has a in house design team lead by team of over 20 years of industry experience which handles the interior design and also works in sync with renowned architects to ensure all Vianaar developments are in harmony with the Goa culture and architecture ensuring that the local ecosystem is not disturbed.
The team at Vianaar makes sure that all our projects are eco friendly and the company takes a number of green initiatives to ensure that. Vianaar not only provides adequate green cover within its project premises
The company values its relationship with its customers and endeavours to delight them and exceed their expectations.
Vianaar's projects are affordable and quality is consistent, the company has set up its own in house construction team to carry out the execution of all its projects. Vianaar partners with leading industry professionals to create outstanding projects which are creditworthy of design and quality appreciation.
The company also runs a 'Vianaar Foundation' that focuses on various social issues and works to provide help to numerous sections of the society such as: Education, Food, Shelter and Human Rights.
Vianaar is growing at a rapid pace and along the journey helping realize dreams of various individuals to own a beautiful and luxurious home in Goa at affordable prices.
Key Description of Vianaar
•Vianaar is a real estate company and best real estate developers in Goa.
•Vianaar has established itself as a pioneer in developing beautiful holiday homes in Goa.
•We pride ourselves in delivering projects on time and also surpassing our client's expectations.
•All Vianaar's projects are affordable and quality is consistent, the company has set up its own in house construction team to carry out the execution of all its projects.
Highly customized iPad screen mimicking client's actual iPad, including his favourite apps. Too bad the picture doesn't show the calendar app with client's b-day date...
©2012 Berliosca Cake Boutique | Vancouver BC
Here's the last image in my Still Life series, a photography project for a client's website.....certainly a departure from my usual landscapes and Old World scenes, but I thought I'd share them with you anyway. This set of Still Lifes with flowers was a collaborative effort. The owner of the business and I worked together to create these little scenes that I photographed and which now appear as a slide show on the home page of her website: www.letuberose.com .
I added a touch of Diffuse Glow to this one as well as to "Queen of Hearts" to soften the tones.
I shot this photo for a client's Web site's wine list. I have a Vivitar 285HV on the right with an umbrella covered in a white sheet (to cover the spokes) flagged to just a vertical strip. A 430EX points in on the left—flagged with black foam to keep its light off the glass—to light the red paper. The glass sits on a sheet of clear polycarb with a black sheet under it. I triggered the strobes with the Radio Popper JrX system.
my client's deco-den.
She decorated it herself before, but 60% of stones were missing.
So I glued the same colored stones ^^
The site is located near the center of Tokyo. It is a small 44m2 corner plot bounded by two streets. Conforming to legal conditions and in response to the client’s wish for a ‘roofed garage’ the volume was trimmed from various directions. Using the words ‘Mineral’ and ‘reflection’ as guiding concepts, Atelier Tekuto proceeded to use subtraction as a positive tool for design.
MINERAL
Minerals are phenomena that combine abstract properties (conceptual objects) with nonfigurative properties (objects whose presence of matter is more tangible). Changes from transparent to translucent to opaque occur according to light intensity and angle. The mineral body cannot be regarded as a simple element.
REFLECTION
Reflection is a recent concept pertaining to the perception of space. Vision is an important factor in the recognition of space. By controlling geometries (facets with three factors: transparent, translucent and opaque) and entangling them in a three-dimensional way inside the internal space, visual reflection is induced. This results in a deviation from the restrictiveness of space.
As people move inside the space, or as light enters from changing angles, the facet’s presence changes, creating a dynamic space. In contrast to the abstractness of the polyhedron are the kitchen, counter shelf, stairs, floors and toilet box equipped with functionality that exist as nonfigurative objects. The third floor bathroom unit features a mirror finish in stainless steel, which combines both concepts of object and reflection, and presents itself as a substitution of both ‘minerals’ and ‘reflection’.
The Relationship with the surrounding environment is expressed in the small plaza open to the street, a piloti like space that emerged after placing the garage on ground floor. Its liberating feeling might trigger some change in the surrounding streetscape.
Source: Archdaily
Mando entering the Client's base on Navarro. The Mandalorian Season 2 project was released first, but we definitely made this one first.
The broker asked me to come shoot this place which is essentially an art gallery in their client's home. A lot of Haring and Basquiat (Don't really know anything about them though).
They already had several photos and the needed a few that didn't make it look so dark and scary. The main direction I had was to take "Wow" photos. I'm not sure if I succeeded but I'm fairly happy with this one.
The living area here was surrounded by these big black velvety curtains so it was just sucking up the light. I took out my AD-360 and which decided to just quit on me right at that moment. So all I had left was my tiny little Yongnuo which barely reached the 16 foot ceilings. It was just useable in the living area but over in the background the ambient light was too strong for my poor little Yongnuo to overpower.
I combined a stack in Enfuse and used flash shots to brighten up a little bit in the living area and used ambient shots as best I could to bring back some detail in the background.
Let me know what you think. I'd love to know how you might approach it or make it better.
The one thing that goes everywhere when getting a hair cut is hair. These hair aprons are not only cute, but they protect client's clothes from getting hair all over them.
Commissioned mosaic sign done as a birthday gift for the client's husband. She requested the words that mean "home sweet home and love" in India and wanted paisleys and their names discreetly put into the piece.
Project built in SL for a Real Life client's build. I was allowed to sell the bar building in SL, unfurnished!
Available on Marketplace:
marketplace.secondlife.com/p/AH-The-Mario-Cellar-Bar-Boxe...
An Olympic pool and two gyms, arranged as a single long bar (refusing the client’s preferred, smaller site). The building thus closes off the northern edge of the campus; a gap cut through makes it a gateway, and shows off the structural trusses. On the campus side, the gap becomes a courtyard. Referring to the hill-like profile, Viñoly proclaimed the project “more geography than architecture.” To my eyes, it's your basic 80s/90s campus gymnasium addition, but not a bad one - and the closure to the northern edge of the campus is a logical continuation of the efforts of builders since Breuer to give spatial focus to a somewhat loose set of buildings. Kind of impressively, this arrangement is able to make a proper quad out of the long approach from the south, which is enough in my mind to justify what must have seemed an odd decision to place the building at the exact opposite end of the campus from the baseball field. Hmm.
Bead Making. Prep for colour blending polymer clay to match a client's outfit ( for the benefit of Bill - so he doesn't have a hard time guessing again ;-) )
I had a business meeting in mid-town Manhattan a couple of weeks ago -- and, as usual, I arrived at the appointed location quite early (I schedule things this way just in case there are traffic delays enroute).
So, with half an hour to kill, I found a quiet spot on the plaza of my client's office building, and pulled out my little pocket camera to photograph anyone interesting who happened to wander by. (By contrast, I had been using my iPhone to photograph random pedestrians on the street while I was traveling from home to my appointment.)
I thought this scene was somewhat intriguing, mostly because I couldn't figure out what the strange conical structure was all about. I don't think it was a spaceship at rest ... but hey, who knows? This is New York, where all kinds of things happen -- and if aliens ever did decide to visit the U.S., of course they would come to New York first. And they would probably be so intrigued that they would decide to stay forever, and they would leave their spaceship behind while they went shopping on Fifth Avenue ....
As for the flag in the background: I have to admit that I didn't recognize it right away. In fact, it took a fair amount of searching on the Internet (why do I even bother with these things?) to learn that it's the flag of Togo. But I'm sure you've been wondering, too, and you may well be interested to learn, as I did, that "the flag of Togo was officially adopted on April 27, 1960. It features a white 'Star of Hope' on a field of red, and the red of that field is said to represent the blood shed by countrymen during the internal struggle for independence. Green is symbolic of the country's agricultural wealth, while yellow is symbolic of mineral wealth. the five horizontal stripes represent the five regions of Togo."
Naturally, this raises the question: what the heck is the flag of Togo doing there in the background? I thought you might ask, so I looked that up too: it turns out that the Permanent Mission of Togo to the United Nations is located at 112 East 40th Street in New York City, which is indeed the cross-street in the background of this picture. I could give you the phone number and fax number of the "permanent mission," too, but then the place would be swamped with phone calls from people with oddball questions ... and they would somehow trace it back to me, and then I would be in all kinds of trouble. So you'll have to get that information on your own ...
A client's pinwheel quilt . It is all custom quilted with feathers and pebbles. I used a layer of Hobbs 80/20 and a layer of wool for lotsa loft.
quiltsoflove.blogspot.com/2010/09/pinwheel-party.html
I can quilt for you too!... just email me msolomo1@maine.rr.com
8 days old baby girl from a client's session
I used my new baby bed here
Texture: palace wall texture from Adaae-stock (original was a green wall of the baby's room)
Welcome to AOS Landscapes. A landscaping and garden design specialist who has been improving client’s gardens and outdoor spaces for over 10 years after being established since 2004 by Jade Barlow.
Elsa always tries to give her clients what they want (take more from your wallet or she will stall it).
From my archives: sculpture in a client's house ... .. . I just always liked it: both the sentiment and the way the shadow repeats.
Some moments are so extra-special. When this lovely client's grandmother with alzheimers recognized her and experienced joy in that moment, I got teary-eyed. This is why photography matters so much. Because I got to capture that moment, to preserve it, to make it tangible.
A blind man massages a client's back at Unión Nacional de Ciegos del Perú, a social club for the visually impaired in Lima, Peru. Unión Nacional de Ciegos del Perú, one of the first societies for disabled in Latin America, was established in 1931 to provide a daily service for blind and partially sighted people from the capital city. The range of activities includes reading books in a large Braille library, playing chess or using a computer adapted for visually impaired individuals. As the majority of the blind does not have a regular job, the UNCP club offers them an opportunity to learn and lately, to provide massages to the club visitors and thus generate some income. © Jan Sochor Photography
I thought this was one of the prettiest roses I have observed in this client's rose garden. It had a nice blend of shape and pink color - taken in evening sun light.
FREE FIRST USE
First Glasgow box clever with the launch of a new fleet of 75 eco friendly buses at George Square, Glasgow.
Lenny Warren / Warren Media
07860 830050 0141 255 1605
lenny@warrenmedia.co.uk
All images © Warren Media 2018. Free first use only for editorial in connection with the commissioning client's press-released story. All other rights are reserved. Use in any other context is expressly prohibited without prior permission.
(more details later, as time permits)
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I’ve been to Venice once or twice for brief business trips during my life, which had the same characteristics as the business trips I described in a separate Flickr album about Paris — i.e., they basically involve flying into a busy airport at night, taking a taxi to a generic business-traveler’s hotel (a Hilton in Venice looks just like a Hilton in Cairo,except perhaps for the canal outside the main entrance), and then spending several days working in the hotel (if the purpose of the trip was a seminar or computer conference), or at a client’s office (also “generic” in most cases — you can’t even tell what floor you’re on when you get off the elevator, because every floor of “open office” layouts is the same). The trip usually ends in the late afternoon or evening of the final day, with a mad dash back to the airport to catch the last plane home to NYC. Thus, a business trip to Venice is almost indistinguishable from a business trip to Omaha. Or Albany. Or Tokyo.
But Venice is different from almost any other place in the world, and I’ve had a couple of vacation trips to experience that side of the city. But it’s been a long, long time: the first such visit was back in 1976 (which you can see here on Flickr), and the second visit was in 1983 (pictures of which do exist on Flickr, but have been restricted to family-only access, since they consist mostly of boring pictures of drooling babies and kids sticking their collective tongues out at me).
Thirty years is a long time between visits … but for a city like Venice, I doubt that very much has changed. Well, perhaps there wasn’t a McDonald’s outlet in Venice when I first came here (and I did photograph one such outlet on this current visit, which you’ll find in this album), and you can certainly guarantee that people weren’t walking around with cellphones and smartphones the way they are today. And while the tourists typically did have cameras back in the good-old-days, they were typically modest little “Instamatic” film-based gadgets, rather than the big, garish, DSLR cameras that everyone now seems to carry around with them, complete with advertising logos all over the camera-straps and bodies to remind you that they, too, can afford to buy an expensive Canon or Nikon gadget that they really don’t know how to use properly. (Sorry, I got carried away there …)
But the buildings, and the people, and the canals, and the gondolas … all of that is the same. And that’s what I’ve tried to capture in this set of photos. The tourist crowds are now so thick (even in May!) that I didn’t even bother going to the square at San Marco, and I didn’t bother taking any photos from the Rialto bridge over the Grand Canal; but you will see some photos of tourists in this album, along with photos of the local people who are still here …
I don’t expect to come back to Venice again in the next year or two … but if it turns out to be 20 or 30 years before my next return, I suspect it will all look pretty much exactly the same as it did on this trip, and in 1983, and when I first saw it in 1976.
Architect designed castle anyone? I will work cheap. You just come up with the site... no honest...please someone...anyone?
And forgive me Andy for putting it in the Archi-photographical Oasis pool ;-)
I had been planning this shot all week, and I couldn't wait to finally get it. I was at the client's house, going over clothing selections and such, and just before I left, I noticed some old boots she had, and I asked her to bring them. Well, she thought I was joking, so she left them at home. Since we were shooting at her friend's house, though, I asked if she might go to her friend's room (she was gone) and ransack it in search of some leather boots. Out she came with these, and I brought a belt. This was also one of the last shots of the evening!