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This shot was taken out in the Bisit Badlands of New Mexico. I was out shooting with friends in this very remote area outside of Farmington and was delighted to trek in with 5 friends and emerge with nine. If you are interested in a trip to this and several other locations there, Wayne Pinkston and I will be hosting a couple of workshops to this very location in July 2018.

 

We will be covering all aspects of Nightscape Photography from start to finish, All apps used to calculate Milky Way position and time to shoot, how to confidently make your way through the wilderness in the dark using GPS and everything you need to know to capture the image of a lifetime. Come out and join us on our adventure "Fantasy Themed" Workshop. The will also be hosting a post-processing session after the workshop. If you would like to come and hang out with Wayne and I and learn our LLL process then DM or Flickr Mail me or Wayne for more details. or click the link below to sign up!! looking forward to shooting with you. :)

  

waynepinkstonphoto.com/Fantasy-NightScape-Workshops

 

LLL Info:

 

For more information about the LLL technique(LowLevelLighting) you can visit lowlevellighting.org

 

If you do visit LLL.org check out the panorama at the top, Wayne Pinkston took that shot of me at the Racetrack Playa in Death Valley. Thanks Wayne!!

 

Thanks for taking the time to take a look at my photos, If you like them please feel free to share them with your friends and family or add it to your gallery. As always your views, comments, faves, and support are greatly appreciated!!

Have a great day ahead everyone. :)

 

Always Respect Mother Nature And Your Fellow Man, So:

****TreadLightly>LeaveNoTrace> PackItIn/PackItOut****

 

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Copyright 2018©Eric Gail

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Tilburg, Willem II Straat (NL) 28-07-2016

  

Willem II Straat, ter hoogte van huisnummers 13 en 15

De straat is genoemd naar koning Willem II, die graag in Tilburg verbleef en er een paleis heeft laten bouwen. Het paleis is nu in gebruik als stadhuis en wordt vooral gebruikt voor de raadsvergaderingen, het sluiten van huwelijken en voor representatieve doeleinden.

 

Willem II Straat, near house numbers 13 and 15

The street is named after King Willem II, who liked to stay in Tilburg and had a palace built there. The palace is now used as a town hall and is mainly used for council meetings, marriage ceremonies and for representative purposes.

 

Willem II Straat, in der Nähe der Hausnummern 13 und 15

Die Straße ist nach König Willem II. genannt, der gerne in Tilburg verblieb und dort einen Palast errichten ließ. Der Palast wird heute als Rathaus genutzt und hauptsächlich für Ratssitzungen, Hochzeitszeremonien und zu repräsentativen Zwecken genutzt.

 

Willem I StraatI, près des maisons 13 et 15

La rue doit son nom au roi Willem II, qui aimait rester à Tilburg et y fit construire un palais. Le palais est maintenant utilisé comme hôtel de ville et est principalement utilisé pour les réunions du conseil, les cérémonies de mariage et à des fins représentatives.

 

Willem II Straat, cerca de las casas números 13 y 15

La calle lleva el nombre del rey Willem II, a quien le gustaba quedarse en Tilburg y construir un palacio allí. El palacio ahora se usa como ayuntamiento y se usa principalmente para reuniones del consejo, ceremonias de matrimonio y con fines representativos.

 

Willem II Straat, vicino ai numeri civici 13 e 15

La strada prende il nome dal re Willem II, a cui piaceva rimanere a Tilburg e lì fece costruire un palazzo. Il palazzo è ora utilizzato come municipio ed è utilizzato principalmente per riunioni del consiglio, cerimonie matrimoniali e per scopi rappresentativi.

 

Willem II Straat, perto dos números 13 e 15

A rua tem o nome do rei Willem II, que gostava de ficar em Tilburg e teve um palácio construído lá. O palácio agora é usado como uma prefeitura e é usado principalmente para reuniões do conselho, cerimônias de casamento e para fins representativos.

  

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You may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.

 

This INCLUDES also usage on SOCIAL MEDIA and on websites

except when usage is embedded or made by linking,

but NOT by copying and pasting.

 

This image is protected by Dutch and international copyright laws.

Completed in 1929, Nottingham's Neo-Baroque Council house dominates the UK's largest Market Square. The Ferris wheel is erected annually in November until New Year

IAIS 495 and 601 make a transfer run to the UP Pool Yard passing the former Rock Island depot in Council Bluffs, IA.

 

June 6, 2006.

An enormous pile of house sized boulders near the western entrance to the Cochise Stronghold in the Dragoon Mountains is known as Council Rocks. It is thought that Cochise surrendered near these rocks in 1872 in exchange for a reservation for his people.

 

These rocks show evidence of being used as shelter for people for many hundreds of years. The pictographs seen here are thought to have been painted by the Mogollon people over a thousand years ago. There are also many metates in the rocks in the area which were used to grind corn, nuts and seeds. If you zoom in, you can see some of them at the base of this boulder.

Laugardagr

 

From left to right - Alessa, her brothers Henry (Afi) and Lash, Mina, Heidr and Friend.

 

Image by Heidr Ragnarok

CN 2379, 2999, and 5469 are working together to muscle a 98 car U704 up the grade through the rolling landscape of Northwestern Illinois on a clear and calm Saturday morning. The ethanol loads are rolling through the "western edge" of the relatively off-the-beaten-path spot of Council Hill Station, Illinois nestled in the valley of the East Fork of the Galena River. The 1850s-era Council Hill Station general store still exists just a little out of frame to the right of this spot, which also served as the depot for the small community of Council Hill located about 2 miles to the north on the top of the ridge but at an elevation that no doubt wasn't possible for the railroad to reach when it was first surveyed through the area.

 

The whole climb of the former Illinois Central through this part of Jo Daviess County is full of character in it's twists and turns, clinging to the edge of the river valley as it finds it's way from the Mississippi River level to the top of the hill that is not far from near the highest elevation in Illinois at Scales Mound. It's a character I've always found hard to capture well from a ground-level view, but the drone starts to open up some possibilities of at least sort of conveying the feel and the beauty of this area.

Nottingham’s Council House taken on this morning’s photowalk.

In early September UP's Marketing Team ran a business train on the IAIS in the interest to run grain trains on the west end of the IAIS. The train dubbed that weekend as "The CyHawk Express" also ran UP and IAIS officials plus invited guests to the annual CyHawk Showdown between Iowa State and Iowa at Kinnick Stadium in Iowa City. UP 4533 and 4404 bring the OCS east out of Council Bluffs headed for South Amana Yard with IAIS officials and UPs marketing team on board.

The great glass dome Nottingham council building UK

Beautiful Autumn colours in Cabinteely Park, Dublin, Ireland

Turnul Sfatului, also known as the Council Tower, is a historic tower in Sibiu, Romania. Built in the 13th century, it served as a fortification and watchtower. Now a tourist attraction, it offers panoramic views of the city.

Sheringham Starlings discuss at the round table.

Making a splash at Monkstown, Dublin, Ireland

 

A little post sunset fun at near high tide.

 

I had my camera mounted on my Manfrotto 190 tripod and set to trigger remotely using my Hahnel wireless Remote trigger. I first threw the stone into the water with my right hand. I triggered the camera remotely with my Hahnel trigger in my left hand.

Outside the City of Perth Council house.

Sterling Gardens, St Georges Terrace, Perth, Western Australia.

A gleaming blue, 7-metre-tall astronaut has been unveiled in Perth's CBD, taking pride of place outside Council House.

Designed by US artist Brendan Murphy, the sculpture called Boonji Spaceman was a donation by the artist but City of Perth took on costs of transportation and installation, believed to be between $150,000–$250,000.

The acquisition was championed by former Perth Lord Mayor Basil Zempilas who stepped down from the council in March after being elected to state parliament.

Mr Zempilas has long championed branding Perth as the City of Light — as it was dubbed by astronaut John Glenn in 1962 when the people of Perth turned on their lights to acknowledge his mission to become the first American to orbit the earth.

It was that story and meeting Mr Zempilas that persuaded Murphy to donate one of his spacemen to Perth after the pair were introduced by gallery owner Paul Gullotti.

Hume City Council building designed by Lyons Architecture

Council House at New Echota in Gordon County, Georgia

In most parts of the Highlands there is a very great demand for Council houses, but very few become available for relet each year. This means that, although there are thousands of households on our waiting lists (currently over 9,000) only a small number can be housed each year. There is a much greater demand for accommodation than we are able to meet and it will not be possible to house everyone who applies. Our first priority is to give houses to people in the most housing need - to families with children or to other people who may be vulnerable in some way, because of age or health, who are homeless or who live in insecure, overcrowded or substandard accommodation.

  

Mango is ready and waiting

Birmingham, West Midlands, England.

Amidst the hush of twilight's calm,

Where shadows weave their ancient psalm,

A council of birds, in a setting bare,

Gathers quietly, their wisdom to share.

 

Their eyes aglow, like stars they gleam,

In this ephemeral realm, they scheme,

Discussing secrets of the skies,

Where wisdom soars and truth defies.

 

With feathered robes, they don their guise,

A symphony of hushed replies,

Their murmurs soft, a cosmic code,

As time's river ceaselessly flowed.

 

They whisper tales of distant lands,

Of shifting sands and endless strands,

Their council held 'neath moonlit wing,

Where dreams and destinies take wing.

 

In silence deep, they find their sway,

A council of birds, night's grand ballet,

They guide the earth with ageless art,

As shadows lengthen, they depart.

Abstracted architecture in Perth

east Lothian council at north berwick

My entry to the Castle Collaboration category of the Summer Joust 2017. I built this in June, and it was originally posted by Micah because I ran out of time and had to leave on a choir tour. Micah also gets the credit for the edit, which is better than anything I could have managed. The other members of team Juggler were Hacim Bricks, Michael the Juggler and Reese EH.

 

The build is supposed to represent a council room carved out of a giant tree stump. Due to me running out of time, the intended bark wall turned into more of a bark border, and half of the floor is just sections of loose brick. I figured it was still worth posting though.

Sometimes when you go out on a shoot of an evening, strange things catch your eye and you end up coming home with something completely unexpected. You head down to a treasured spot as sunset approaches to take photographs of a calm summer sea and end up being distracted by a small gathering on the nearby clifftop.

 

I'll admit this is one of the more unusual images I've shared with you. For me it's also one of the bravest. I'm always impressed at photographers who have the confidence to stand in the middle of busy thoroughfares and point their cameras into the faces of strangers. Even with 100 yards, a sizeable ocean drop in between us and my car stationed within five seconds of brisk running I don't feel entirely comfortable at tracing a 200mm lens on them. I'm generally much more comfortable dangling over a vertical cliff edge, safe in the knowledge that the subject of my photo isn't likely to stride towards me with a menacing stance and a challenging expression in their eyes.

 

But there was something appealing in the story of three young people sitting on top of a lonely cliff at Portreath on a peaceful evening, just chatting away about whatever was on their minds that grabbed my attention and I decided it was an opportunity not to be missed. I was able to conceal myself behind a wall as I set my tripod up and made ready to grab a hasty shot. I know this makes me sound even weirder than I already did. In the event two hasty shots were needed, as first the figure on the right leaned forward, and then the figure on the left did the same. "Even I can work out how to blend two images like that in Photoshop," I reasoned. Lastly, a darkening of shadows to turn the subjects into silhouette, and there you have it. A happy little council on a clifftop enjoying each other's company as the dusk settles in around them.

 

Happy Wednesday folks.

Taken from the Gordon Memorial Gardens in Gravesend.

IC 8104 awaits her next assignment at Council Bluffs, IA in June of 85.

I love the foggy weather so much...I spend a lot of time walking around down here enjoying it too! The water is quite high...we've had a lot of moisture this past month and I think that's why....normally this time of year what little bit of water is out there is frozen and you can walk on it and go to the other side....but not yet!! Have a nice evening everyone...:)

Yes, say what you like but a good old glass of cold tap water is the best way to quench a thirst/nurse hangover. for the theme 'refreshments' HMM.

If I were to chose a city from Romania where I would love to live, Brasov would be the one.

It is located in the central part of the country and it is surrounded by the Southern Carpathians Mountains in Transylvania region, being the largest city in a mountain resorts area. There is a hill in the middle of the city (900m above sea level)

If you watch the Golden Stag international music festival that it's hosted every year by Brasov, you should see this building, as this is the exact place where the festival is being held.

 

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Created by steady erosion of the softer lower layers of sandstone, by an ancient stream, archaeology suggests that Native Americans regularly used this space as a meeting place.

The inverted bowl shape gives it excellent acoustics.

Home to the Cambridgeshire County Council from 1932 to 2021.

A council house located in Dunholm. Worker and the simply folk life in those house. You can find many of them in the towns of the northland.

 

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