View allAll Photos Tagged Continuity

For continuity purposes, here's another version of 37419 'Carl Haviland' + 37423 passing Cart Lane with 1Q47 - 10.55 - Derby RTC to Carlisle Test Train.

Taken on 1/9/20 using pole.

The onset of spring in Melbourne is my favourite time of year. Blossoms, and the general hubbub of bees, and the mating calls and activity of birds, remind us of the continuity and beauty of life.

None of my work is Ai assisted and is copyright Rg Sanders aka Ronald George Sanders.

I am grateful this week for continuity. I like a routine and I like to be organized so I know things will run smoothly.

The window, that dark or bright opening, is the frame that frames our gaze; a peephole that shapes and conditions the way we observe the world and, consequently, how we inhabit it. Likewise, the window is the slit through which the unknown and unforeseen flows into; an opening that makes visible the otherness and the fears confined behind the walls that we build. Each window is continuity and is a border, it is the limit of our world and also what links us to others.

 

Ciclos CCCB

Nikon D750 + Nikkor 50mm 1.8

Some of the stones at Stanton Drew ( tinyurl.com/nmmn2 ).

Worcester, MA

In a pitiful pastiche of a BBC Breakfast presenter, I will now try to link my commentary to the image. “As a new day dawns, we reflect on the past.” Does that work? No? I didn’t think so. Naga M, your job is safe.

 

Reflecting on my week, it seems to be a long list mini-frustrations:

Work deadlines – not met due to others not delivering on time

George Ezra concert – cancelled when I was 10 mins from the venue after a 2.5 hour drive

Photo club visit – cancelled due to working late to recover lost time

Weekend photo shoot with buddies – cancelled when I got sinusitis

 

But all is good. These are only minor inconveniences and I can move on. At least I’m not stuck in the mud like this A34 Comet tank. Oh! Wait! Is that a better continuity link? Naga – budge up… I’m joining you on the sofa.

 

"That's just something!" said the Stormtrooper on the left.

"Ooh, yes, it is!" replied the Stormtrooper on the right.

"I feel lucky kinda we've got out from that trash compactor and finally see the the galaxy a bit more"

"Eeh, kinda, you say?"

"Heh, you know what i mean. I'm so glad we've finally got out from there and discover the things we've never thought even exists!"

"Yeah, I heard rumors of other planets, but i've never thought there we're real..."

 

Adventures of our beloved Stormtroopers continues!

 

They've finally had a chance to ditch the Death Star behind and try to have a new life... on Tatooine! Here, they have ended up on Tatooine hills looking for a cloudy stratus moonlight.

 

This is a continuation to an old story, which idea came up pretty much out of the blue. I was struggling to decide, which color balance to use this scene, cold or warm. Here's the cold one, which suits the nighty theme. Maybe I'll just do both of them and post the other version on some other day! Problem solved!

Here's a bounty hunters Bossk and Boba Fett caught on the film with the cinema camera. Is this a frame from a new series featuring this dynamic duo or is it just a simple frame found on the floor...

 

It would actually be awesome to have a some kind of continuity for this frame, who knows what happens. Maybe a some other cinematographer will find the rest of the film and will show you the rest?

 

As I was writing the description for this shot, I've got thinking the continuity for this particular frame. I have a few frames almost ready to go, but in a meantime, if you dare to have a little imagination and open a box of your Lego's, I'll command you to make the next frame. I would love to see you trying this out. I know, we have a serious problem here, if you don't have these exact figs, but did I mentioned the word 'imagination'? Yes. Yes I did! Just post a link to your own creation here, using the 'Add a comment' -box below.

 

Don't take my offer as a challenge. Take it as a being a kid again with a camera. And yes, we all can skip this part without questions asked later. I'd just wanna try to explore some new things here. That is all.

For Inuit, a sea people, the boat launch remains a ritual of continuity. Though fiberglass and stainless steel hulls and high‑velocity rifles mark the hunt in the 21st century, each departure carries echoes of ancestral journeys.

 

Harvesting from the wild affirms identity, resilience, and belonging—transforming a practical act into a culturally significant gesture of survival and meaning.

Variety is the spice of life and the key to health and continuity in the Natural World. Today is International Biodiversity Day and I was hoping to feature an unusual insect in my gallery for this important date. Unfortunately because of our unseasonal cool and windy weather, clearly taking place as a result of Climate Change, there are no insects around at present. So instead, I've uploaded a stranger in the garden. This species of poppy is new to me and I didn't plant it, it just came up in one of my containers. These flowers had predecessors yesterday whose petals came out first thing in the morning only to be completely battered and destroyed by the relentless wind which howled all day long. This morning's flowers are the lucky ones. The wind has died down so hopefully they can have two or three days of peace and calm.

Who is the man in the shadows, approaching Bossk and Boba? Is he come to a negotiate a deal of lifetime with the bounty hunters?

 

This is a continuity to a Bossk + Boba frame I did a few weeks ago. I'm seeing this as a cinematic frame from a movie we've never saw, hopefully I can bring the rest of the frames for you to check up, soon! Also, I would like to let you know, that' I'm more than aware of that cliche title here. It just fits in this frame perfectly! :)

Archaeological excavations demonstrate a continuity of life in Calnic (judet Alba), starting with the Neolithic and Bronze Age settlements, the Dacian and Roman remains, or from the period of migration to the Middle Ages.

The name of the city, mentioned for the first time in 1269 (villa Kelnuk) is of Slavic-Romanian origin. The name of the place was taken over by the Saxons (Kelling) and the Hungarians (Kelnek).

The Romanesque fortress of Calnic is an old noble residence, which by its small size cannot compete with those of the big cities, but which is considered as very representative of a local civilization, transylvaine and a particular time.

The fortress consists of two rows of walls (enclosures) with an oval path, arranged concentric and reinforced with flanking elements: two towers and a bastion. The front door is defended by a fortified corridor. The belts protect the interior courtyard, at the heart of the fortress, where the chapel, the fountain and the dungeon are located. The latter dominates by its height (27m) and its massiveness (walls of 1m) the whole complex. During the romantic era, this impressive medieval vestige was nicknamed the Siegfried Tower.

The outer enclosure or zwinger has a maximum diameter of around 70 m with a height of 3 m. The inner enclosure is the most imposing with its 7m height. On the small diameter, it is fortified by two towers: the portal tower (NW) and a defense tower (SE). 24 m high, the portal tower is one of the vertical domes of the complex. There are four bells here, which is why the building is also called the bell tower.

Due to its preservation in good condition, in the middle of a locality bearing until now the imprint of the civilization of the German colonists established in Transylvania, the edifice was inscribed in the UNESCO World Heritage List (1999).

View to Blackfellow creek valley with mount Philip on the right, mounts Edgar and Arthur further on the middle of the photo.

Glen Rock State forest in Queensland

Altitude is 818m ASL

 

Land formerly known as the Glen Rock State Forest has been converted to Main Range Conservation Park (in 2023), allowing continuity of conservation for two key protected areas across the Scenic Rim. Casuarina camping area has been renamed the Glen Rock camping area.

 

3 shots stitch for this pano.

Recently I'm exploring a lot the possibilities to reach pictorial results with photography and it's really interesting to see how these results can be achieved just experimenting and using your imagination.

Here I shot some people crossing the street, while moving the camera keeping a long exposure: the result reminds me some of the artistic expressions of the Futurism and in particular, the sculpture of Umberto Boccioni "Unique forms of continuity in space".

browsing the archives today | candid in Dublin University Library

Referencing the half-century old photo taken by my granduncle in his numerous travels. He was a passionate photography enthusiast and left quite a substantial legacy of paysages and portraits. I'm thinking about doing more stuff like that...

continuity, recognition, timelessness, diversity....

.

.

.

'General Continuity'

 

Camera: Mamiya RB67

Film: AeroColor

Process: DIY ECN-2

 

Washington

March 2024

FPP Sun Color film, ISO 1

Decor on Abandoned Filling Station

Griffin, Georgia

Canon IV camera with Jupiter 12 35mm f/2.8 lens.

 

Umberto Boccioni - Unique Forms of Continuity in Space

"it is continuous from me to the world, or are there some gaps ?"

  

"私と世界の間にある距離, 連続性, あるいは非連続性について"

        

Camera: Canon EOS 5D Mark II + EF16-35mm F2.8L USM

[Eng. / Esp.]

 

Rowing without break of continuity from the finish line of the 2xJF final to the start line of the 1xJF final.

Remando sin solución de continuidad desde la llegada de la final de 2xJF a la salida de la final de 1xJF.

 

Esther Briz, double Gold Medal in 1xJF and 2xJF (with Chloe Palma) at the Spanish Rowing Chamionship 2017, Sevilla. Both finals were just 20' apart, so she had a bare 10' to change boat at the finish line, row the 2 Km up once again towards the start line, and row the skiff final, wining by 17" over the second. His brother Pablo Briz got Bronze medal in 1xSBM once again. so it was a great championship for our family. Behind the scenes, 20-35 hours per week of training, Mon-Sun, and an outstanding academic record. Needless to say, we are well over the moon as their parents.

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

Esther Briz, doble Medalla de Oro en 1xJF y 2xJF (with Chloe Palma) en el Campeonato de España de Remo 2017, Sevilla. Ambas finales estaban separadas 20', por lo que apenas tuvo 10' para cambiar de bote en la línea de llegada, remontar los 2 Km hacia la línea de salida de nuevo, y remar la final de skiff, que ganó por 17" sobre la segunda. Su hermano Pablo Briz repitió Medalla de Bronce en 1xSBM de nuevo, por lo que ha sido un gran campeonato para la familia. Entre bambalinas, entre 20 y 35 h semanales de entrenamiento, Lu-Dom, y unos resultados académicos sobresalientes. Huelga decir lo que sentimos como padres.

...continuity of light. Enjoying Rue d'Auteuil.

 

Closer.

 

(New holga)

 

Tthe left side of this image was taken miles away from the right side. The continuity of the clouds made me think I had shot a straight pan, but I'm remembering now that that road is not there - this is an imaginary landscape.

 

Tri-X 100

Archaeological excavations demonstrate a continuity of life in Calnic (judet Alba), starting with the Neolithic and Bronze Age settlements, the Dacian and Roman remains, or from the period of migration to the Middle Ages.

The name of the city, mentioned for the first time in 1269 (villa Kelnuk) is of Slavic-Romanian origin. The name of the place was taken over by the Saxons (Kelling) and the Hungarians (Kelnek).

The Romanesque fortress of Calnic is an old noble residence, which by its small size cannot compete with those of the big cities, but which is considered as very representative of a local civilization, transylvaine and a particular time.

The fortress consists of two rows of walls (enclosures) with an oval path, arranged concentric and reinforced with flanking elements: two towers and a bastion. The front door is defended by a fortified corridor. The belts protect the interior courtyard, at the heart of the fortress, where the chapel, the fountain and the dungeon are located. The latter dominates by its height (27m) and its massiveness (walls of 1m) the whole complex. During the romantic era, this impressive medieval vestige was nicknamed the Siegfried Tower.

The outer enclosure or zwinger has a maximum diameter of around 70 m with a height of 3 m. The inner enclosure is the most imposing with its 7m height. On the small diameter, it is fortified by two towers: the portal tower (NW) and a defense tower (SE). 24 m high, the portal tower is one of the vertical domes of the complex. There are four bells here, which is why the building is also called the bell tower.

Due to its preservation in good condition, in the middle of a locality bearing until now the imprint of the civilization of the German colonists established in Transylvania, the edifice was inscribed in the UNESCO World Heritage List (1999).

In order to maintain some continuity, this will be the fourth and last in the series of eucalypts, the yellow Eucalyptus sideroxylon, commonly known as mugga ironbark, or red ironbark.

 

It is a small to medium-sized tree (82-115 feet!) that is endemic to eastern Australia. It has dark, deeply furrowed ironbark, lance-shaped adult leaves, flower buds in groups of seven, white, red, pink or creamy yellow flowers and cup-shaped to shortened spherical fruit. I did the best I could finding fruit but nature mandates that first comes the flowers, then the fruits, then the seeds and, with any luck, more gum trees like Wrigley, Juicy Fruit, and Blackjack.

 

Oh, gees! It's a joke, son! (I'm trying to wean us all off the following two emoji: wink, wink, nod nod, and laughing with tears. We'll work on the other 12,550 later in the year.

 

I have mentioned the bark of the gum tree (I just can't spell 'eucalyptyus' any more, and that's no joke, son), one of the more interesting of the characteristics of gums. Some are smooth, some are gnarly (original meaning - see photo below). The bark continuously falls off: I don't know if that's seasonal or just because, but when it does peel, it can leave some interesting knots and other formations that were underneath. Unlike my Japanese Maple which is tooth stripped by Sydney, the gum trees need no help. They fall apart all by themselves.

 

A personal note: I think that eucalyptuses are among the "messiest" trees in the world. Their leaves seem to be magnets for dust and grit. In that respect, they are very much like Bottlebrush which I would never have in my yard ... if I had a yard. Another thing they have in common is that bees love the flowers of both gum and bottlebrush, right along side the Grevillea I posted last week. There'are positive and negative aspects to growing any tree: I have made the same mistakes over and over and over, e.g., planted a two foot lemon tree 15 years ago. The aroma of any citrus is heavenly. The flowers are pretty but plain. They attract all manner of bees ... and wasps and ants and... But, the worst thing has been that it grows at the rate of 6-8 inches a week, and trimming it to keep the tree under 7 feet is almost impossible. It's like having bread dough rise ... and not stop. And, the bees don't like you trying to prune their tree. I've never been stung, and now I wish I hadn't said that.

 

I love the flowers of the gum, some bottlebrushes, and the grevillea. Not much scent, but wonderful structure. But these are mostly "deep-seated" and difficult to photograph. On the other hand, it was as easy as getting a masterpiece from taking a snapshot, half the fun would be gone.

 

More later in the year. I'm looking for a series on seeds. I would never have thought that I'd become enamoured of flowers, but it started with wildflowers, and they are usually a challenge. There's nothing like getting home, downloading tyhe day's effort and finding just one or two gems. And, I have discovered six endemic flowers on or near Mt. Diablo. That's - at times - as exciting as a lifer bird. Of course, every bird and flower was at one time a lifer. Robins and dandelions, both favorites for vey different reasons. Merlins and Globe Lilies because of the rarity. AIn't nature photography grand!

For continuity purposes here's another view of 37407 "Blackpool Tower" + 47593 "Galloway Princess" approaching Ais Gill summit on 3/8/20 with RCS 'Staycation Express' 1Z45 - 16.12 - Skipton to Appleby.

2 4 5 6 7 ••• 79 80