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Making violin for Italian violinist Salvatore Lombardo from Naples, Italy

a pic of my feet.

Textiles created by Corinne Okada Takara and garment by Colleen Quen. TECHstyle SoftWEAR: Surface & Shape, San Jose Museum of Quilts & Textiles, 2010.

Created this cake for a Sweet 16 in Silver, Black and White.

www.create-learning.com - Photos of the Flip-Chart graphics and notes from a 2.5 day training for Lean Six Sigma Master Black Belts. The training covered Change Management, Project Management, and Training Techniques

Students of color, the LGBTQ community and female students convened in Reeve Union Ballroom April 2 to hone their networking skills with professionals at Creating Connections: Empowering through Networking, a Social Justice Week event hosted by University of Wisconsin Oshkosh Career Services.

Uh oh. I've created a monster. Noelle saw me killing time out in my grandma's yard on Easter Sunday, and asked if she could take some pictures with my camera. My 9-yr-old daughter appears to have become very comfortable shooting with a $2000 camera and focusing manually with a 44-yr-old 50/1.4 lens (my Asahi/Pentax Super-Takumar). That camera is almost as big as her head!

 

She's not quite ready to go completely old school yet, but she's pretty good at eyeballing focus through the aftermarket focusing screen (she tends to backfocus, though). She understands that when the numbers on the lens (aperture) get smaller, you have to make the numbers on the LCD (shutter speed) larger to compensate, and she knows which way to turn both dials to make a photo lighter or darker. I had her in full manual mode, of course -- none of this sissy Av nonsense for my princess!

Created by Auro Kumar Sahoo with GIMP and Inkscape under licence CC-by-sa-4.0/ Creative Commons- Attribute-Share Alike

creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/

Created with RNI Films app. Preset 'Kodachrome Generic'

Created with RNI Films app. Preset 'Ilford Delta 100'

The upper limbs for Tigricia have been turned from yellow into neon orange by means of UV acrylic gel. Result is even more bright than lower limbs!!!

We will pull no punches nor silly puns, and put together a poster for a boxing event, for the second tutorial exploring the complete vintage designer’s kit.

 

The process will have us explore the customization abilities of the bundle’s typefaces, layout ideas to accommodate the long swashes and tall capital letters, and weathering tips and tricks.

Created for the 3rd Annual Flickr Military Contest

Largest custom creation to date.

Model: Helicopter

Mini-figure Scale: 145 Studs long

CH-53E: 99.5 Feet long

Ratio: 2 feet : 3 Studs

 

3 turbines: 2 on the Port, 1 Starboard

Main Rotor: 7 Blades

Rear Rotor: 20 degree tilt to left

Completed 5/31/10

Information:

Wikipedia

created by InCollage

Yan Reach, one of the client farmers benefitting from IDE Cambodia's Farm Business Advisors programme.

Got her kind of on my my Momma's insistance. I kinda don't get the bone shoes for her...well i mean in the obvious way i do, but ah, never mind. I will be doing her hair as soon as i figure out which colors to use and order them.

Created with GIMP

kettle dyeing tonal lace and fingering weight yarns.

My business is to create. It doesn't even matter what it is. All I know is if you don't figure out that something, you'll just stay ordinary. And it doesn't matter if its a work of art, or a taco, or a pair of socks. Just create something new and there it is, and it's you, out in the world, outside of you. And you can look at it, or hear it, or read it, or feel it, and you know a little bit more about you. A little more than anyone else does.

-P.S. I love you.

 

All of you flikr users can probably understand why this quote stood out to me. I was watching the movie for the millionth time and I stopped and thought about it, paused the DVD, and went and wrote it down. It inspired me. :)

 

Okay, you know how on the internet you can see those crazy awesome pictures of professionals who do amazing chalk drawings on random streets? Maybe that's just me. I don't know, but lets give those people a round of applause because in my opinion chalk is evil. I don't know, just the feeling of the chalk scraping against the sidewalk is the worst. Plus it is all powdery so the wind kept blowing away my drawings. grr. But after much frustration and a little blood (I sorta scraped my knuckle on the concrete instead of the chalk. ouch), I finally got this shot. I love it. It's probably not even that good but I don't care. You know when you work really hard on something and no matter what it looks like you just love it? I don't know, I guess since I went through so much frustration and chalk to get this, not to mention the fact that I was actually inspired for once, I'm just really happy with it. So don't judge me. =P

 

It is a BEAUTIFUL day!:) I can't stand not being outside right now. I hope all of you have a great day!!

 

A bunch more in comments, btw.

 

p.s. I went to the orthodontist today and got the obnoxious blue off of my braces! Now they are slightly less unattractive. :)

Created for Strobist Sundays assignment "Music".

Details of mandolin strings and custom tailpiece on a Breedlove mandolin (my favorite instrument). Taken with a Canon 580 EX II at 1/2 through a mini lumiquest softbox.

And God Created Woman (French: Et Dieu... créa la femme) is a 1956 French romantic drama film directed by Roger Vadim in his directorial debut and starring Brigitte Bardot. Though not her first film, it is widely recognized as the vehicle that launched Bardot into the public spotlight and immediately created her "sex kitten" persona, making her an overnight sensation.

 

When the film was released in the United States by Kingsley-International Pictures in 1957, it pushed the boundaries of the representation of sexuality in American cinema, and most available prints of the film were heavily edited to conform with the Hays Code censorial standards.[citation needed] Filmmaker Peter Bogdanovich credited it for "breaking French cinema out of U.S. art houses and into the mainstream and thereby inadvertently also paving the way for the takeover in France of the New Wave filmmakers."[5]

 

A poorly-received English-language remake, also titled And God Created Woman, was directed by Vadim and released in 1988.

 

Plot

Juliette is an 18-year-old orphan in Saint-Tropez, France,[6][7] with a high level of sexual energy. She makes no effort to restrain her natural sensuality – lying nude in her yard, habitually kicking her shoes off and stalking about barefoot, and disregarding many societal conventions and the opinions of others. This behavior causes a stir and attracts the attention of most of the men around her.

 

Her first suitor is the much older and wealthy Eric Carradine. He wants to build a new casino in Saint-Tropez, but his plans are blocked by a small shipyard on the stretch of land which he needs for the development; the shipyard is owned by the Tardieu family.

 

Antoine, the eldest of the three Tardieu brothers, returns home for the weekend to hear Carradine's proposal and Juliette is waiting for him to take her away with him. His intentions are short-term, and he spurns her by leaving Saint-Tropez without her.

  

U.S theatrical advertisement, 9 April 1958

Tiring of her outrageous behavior, Juliette's guardians threaten to send her back to the orphanage, which will confine her until she is 21. To keep her in town, Carradine pleads unsuccessfully with Antoine to marry her. His infatuated and naive younger brother Michel sees his opportunity and proposes marriage to Juliette. Despite her love for Antoine, she accepts.

 

When Antoine is contracted to return home and work for Carradine, Juliette's behavior becomes increasingly disrespectful of her husband. In a huff, she takes one of the family's boats. When it develops engine trouble, she has to be saved by Antoine. While they are washed up together on a wild beach, she seduces him.

 

Juliette begins acting bizarrely. She takes to her bed, claiming to have a fever. She tells Christian, the youngest Tardieu brother, that she had sex with Antoine on the beach. When Madame Tardieu, mother of the three boys, hears about it, she tells Michel that he has to dump Juliette promptly. Michel goes to their room to talk with Juliette, but she has gone off to the Bar des Amis to drink and dance.

 

Michel tries to go looking for her, but Antoine locks him inside, telling him to forget her. Michel fights his brother for the key and heads out after Juliette.

 

Eric has been alerted that Juliette is making a spectacle of herself and comes to the bar to collect her. Juliette refuses to leave with him. Michel arrives but Juliette refuses to talk with him and continues her improvised and sexually suggestive dancing. When she ignores Michel's order to stop, Michel shoots at her. Eric steps in and is slightly wounded. Antoine offers to drive Eric to a doctor and they leave. Michel angrily slaps Juliette four times. She only smiles at him with satisfaction that she has provoked him to this behavior. En route to the doctor, Eric tells Antoine that he is going to reassign him to work elsewhere to put some distance between him and Michel and Juliette. He says: "That girl was made to destroy men". In the final scene, Michel and Juliette walk home together, hand in hand.

 

Cast

Brigitte Bardot as Juliette Hardy

Curd Jürgens as Éric Carradine

Jean-Louis Trintignant as Michel Tardieu

Marie Glory as Mme. Tardieu

Georges Poujouly as Christian Tardieu

Christian Marquand as Antoine Tardieu

Jane Marken as Madame Morin

Jean Tissier as M. Vigier-Lefranc

Isabelle Corey as Lucienne

Jacqueline Ventura as Mme Vigier-Lefranc

Jacques Ciron as The Secretary of Éric

Paul Faivre as M. Morin

Jany Mourey as The Orphanage Representative

Philippe Grenier as Perri

Jean Lefebvre as The Man who wanted to dance

Leopoldo Francés as The Dancer

Jean Toscano as René

Production

By the mid-1950s Roger Vadim was an established screenwriter and had written several movies starring his then wife Brigitte Bardot. Producer Raoul Levy wanted Vadim to write and direct a film starring Bardot, and suggested he adapt the book The Little Genius by Maurice Garçon. Vadim disliked the book and came up with a new story, one based on a trial of a woman who had been the mistress of three different brothers, and who killed one of them. Vadim was particularly taken with the attitude of the woman towards her lovers, the jury and the police. Levy liked Vadim's idea and obtained finance.[8]

 

Levy succeeded in raising finance from Columbia, who would provide color and CinemaScope provided Curd Jurgens was given a role. The parts of the brothers had already been cast so Vadim rewrote the script in two days to expand the part of an arms dealer so it could be offered to Jurgens.[8]

 

Reception

Box office

The film was a big hit in France, one of the ten most popular films at the British box-office in its year of release[9] and the biggest foreign-language film ever in the United States at the time.[10] The film earned $4 million in the U.S. (grossing $12 million), and a further $21 million around the globe.[2][3]

 

The film was extremely popular in Kansas City, where it played for a year at the Kimo Theatre, grossing over $100,000, a record for Kansas City at the time.[11] In Europe, this movie smashed attendance records from Norway to the Middle East.[12] It earned for France over $8 million, more than France's biggest export — "the Renault Dauphine".[13]

 

In the United States the film was released by Kingsley-International, a subsidiary of Columbia Pictures as Columbia was forbidden to release a film with nudity and adult themes. The Catholic Legion of Decency gave it a "C" for "Condemned" rating. A Columbia spokesman stated that the film would have received twice as many bookings with a less restrictive "B" rating, but would only have done half the business.[14] Variety reported that in spite of the rating, the film broke "local records at the Paris Theatre, N.Y., and at other houses where it has played", and noted that "In Fitchburg, Mass., it actually outgrossed Ten Commandments."[15]

 

Author Peter Lev describes the film's impact in America:

 

And God Created Woman's impact on the film industry was significant. New Bardot films were eagerly snapped up by distributors, and old Bardot films were released or re-released. Prices for distribution rights to foreign films escalated overall.[16]

 

Critical response

When the film was released in the United States, Bosley Crowther, the film critic for The New York Times, found Brigitte Bardot attractive but the film lacking and was not able to recommend it. He wrote: "Bardot moves herself in a fashion that fully accentuates her charms. She is undeniably a creation of superlative craftsmanship. But that's the extent of the transcendence, for there is nothing sublime about the script of this completely single-minded little picture. ...We can't recommend this little item as a sample of the best in Gallic films. It is clumsily put together and rather bizarrely played. There is nothing more than sultry fervor in the performance of Mlle. Bardot, and Christian Marquand and Jean-Louis Trintignant are mainly heavy-breathers as her men".[17]

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/And_God_Created_Woman_(1956_film)

 

Film critic Dennis Schwartz wrote: "The breezy erotic drama was laced with some thinly textured sad moments that hardly resonated as serious drama. But as slight as the story was it was always lively and easy to take on the eyes, adding up to hardly anything more than a bunch of snapshots of Bardot posturing as a sex kitten in various stages of undress. The public loved it and it became a big box-office smash, and paved the way for a spate of sexy films to follow. What was more disturbing than its dullish dialogue and flaunting of Bardot as a sex object, was that underneath its call for liberation was a reactionary and sexist view of sex."[18]

 

Rotten Tomatoes reports a 69% approval rating based on 13 reviews, with an average rating of 6.4/10.[19]

 

Censorship

When released in the United States, the film was condemned by the National Legion of Decency.[20]

 

Police made attempts to suppress its screening in the U.S.[21][22]

 

Saint-Tropez (/ˌsæn troʊˈpeɪ, - trəˈ-/ SAN troh-PAY, - trə-,[4][5] French: [sɛ̃ tʁɔpe]; Provençal: Sant Tropetz [san(t) tʀuˈpes]) is a commune in the Var department and the region of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, Southern France. It is 68 kilometres (42 miles) west of Nice and 100 kilometres (62 miles) east of Marseille, on the French Riviera, of which it is one of the best-known towns. In 2018, Saint-Tropez had a population of 4,103. The adjacent narrow body of water is the Gulf of Saint-Tropez (French: Golfe de Saint-Tropez), stretching to Sainte-Maxime to the north under the Massif des Maures.

 

Saint-Tropez was a military stronghold and fishing village until the beginning of the 20th century. It was the first town on its coast to be liberated during World War II as part of Operation Dragoon. After the war, it became an internationally known seaside resort, renowned principally because of the influx of artists of the French New Wave in cinema and the Yé-yé movement in music. It later became a resort for the European and American jet set and tourists.

 

History

 

Aerial view of Saint-Tropez, with Pampelonne beach in background and the citadel and the port in the foreground

 

Citadel of Saint-Tropez

 

Map of Saint-Tropez (c. 1680)

In 599 BC, the Phocaeans from Ionia founded Massilia (present-day Marseille) and established other coastal mooring sites in the area. Through the writings of Roman historian and military commander Pliny the Elder, it was found that Saint-Tropez was known in ancient times as Athenopolis and that it belonged to the Massilians.[6] In 31 BC, the Romans invaded the region. Their citizens built many opulent villas in the area, including one known as the "Villa des Platanes" (Villa of the Plane Trees). The closest settlement to Saint-Tropez in antiquity is attested as Heraclea-Caccabaria, today Cavalaire-sur-Mer, situated on the southern end of the peninsula, while the gulf of Saint-Tropez was called sinus Sambracitanus, which likely survives in the settlement name of Les Issambres.[7]

 

The town owes its current name to the early Christian martyr Saint Torpes. Legend tells of his decapitation at Pisa during Nero's reign, with his body placed in a rotten boat along with a rooster and a dog. The body purportedly landed at the present-day location of the town of Saint-Tropez.[8][9][10]

 

Toward the end of the ninth century, long after the fall of the Roman Empire in the West, pirates and privateers began a hundred years of attacks and sackings. In the tenth century, the village of La Garde-Freinet was founded 15 km (9 mi) to the north of Saint-Tropez. From 890 to 972, Saint-Tropez and its surroundings became an Arab Muslim colony dominated by the nearby Saracenic settlement of Fraxinet;[11][12] in 940, Saint-Tropez was controlled by Nasr ibn Ahmad.[12] From 961 to 963, Adalbert, son of Berengar, the pretender to the throne of Lombardy who was pursued by Otto I, hid at Saint-Tropez.[12] In 972, the Muslims of Saint-Tropez held Maïeul, the abbot of Cluny, for ransom.[12]

 

In 976, William I, Count of Provence, Lord of Grimaud, began attacking the Muslims, and in 980 he built a tower where the Suffren tower now stands. In 1079 and 1218, Papal bulls mentioned the existence of a manor at Saint-Tropez.

  

Saint-Tropez "le vieux port" (the old port)

From 1436, Count René I (the "good King René") tried to repopulate Provence. He created the Barony of Grimaud and appealed to the Genoan Raphael de Garezzio, a wealthy gentleman who had sent a fleet of caravels carrying 60 Genoese families to the area. In return, Count René promised to exempt the citizens from taxation. On 14 February 1470, Jean de Cossa, Baron of Grimaud and Grand Seneschal of Provence, agreed that the Genoan could build city walls and two large towers, which still stand: one tower is at the end of the Grand Môle and the other is at the entrance to the Ponche.

 

The city became a small republic with its own fleet and army and was administered by two consuls and 12 elected councillors. In 1558, the city's captain Honorat Coste was empowered to protect the city. The captain led a militia and mercenaries who successfully resisted attacks by the Turks and Spanish, succored Fréjus and Antibes and helped the Archbishop of Bordeaux regain control of the Lérins Islands.

 

In 1577, the daughter of the Marquis Lord of Castellane, Genevieve de Castilla, married Jean-Baptiste de Suffren, Marquis de Saint-Cannet, Baron de La Môle, and advisor to the parliament of Provence. The lordship of Saint-Tropez became the prerogative of the De Suffren family. One of the most notable members of this family was the later vice-admiral Pierre André de Suffren de Saint-Tropez (1729–1788), veteran of the War of the Austrian Succession, the Seven Years' War and the American Revolutionary War.

 

In September 1615, Saint-Tropez was visited by a delegation led by the Japanese samurai Hasekura Tsunenaga that was on its way to Rome but was forced by weather to stop in the town. This may have been the first contact between the French and the Japanese.

  

Bust of Saint-Tropez during the Bravades

The local noblemen were responsible for raising an army that repulsed a fleet of Spanish galleons on 15 June 1637; Les Bravades des Espagnols, a local religious and military celebration, commemorates this victory of the Tropezian militia.[13] Count René's promise in 1436 to not tax the citizens of Saint-Tropez was honored until 1672, when Louis XIV abrogated it as he imposed French control.

 

The Gulf of Saint-Tropez was known as the Gulf of Grimaud until the end of the 19th century.

 

During the 1920s, Saint-Tropez attracted famous figures from the fashion world such as Coco Chanel and Elsa Schiaparelli. During World War II, the landing on 15 August 1944 began the Allied invasion of southern France, Operation Dragoon. In the 1950s, Saint-Tropez became internationally renowned as the setting for such films as And God Created Woman, which starred French actress Brigitte Bardot.

 

In May 1965, an Aérospatiale Super Frelon pre-production aircraft crashed in the gulf, killing its pilot.

 

On 4 March 1970, the French submarine Eurydice, with its home port as Saint-Tropez, disappeared in the Mediterranean with 57 crew aboard after a mysterious explosion.

 

The motto of Saint-Tropez is Ad usque fidelis, Latin for "faithful to the end". After the Dark Age of plundering the French Riviera, Raphaël de Garesio landed in Saint-Tropez on 14 February 1470, with 22 men, simple peasants or sailors who had left the overcrowded Italian Riviera. They rebuilt and repopulated the area, and in exchange were granted by a representative of the "good king", Jean de Cossa, Baron of Grimaud and Seneschal of Provence, various privileges, including some previously reserved exclusively for lords, such as exemptions from taxes status and the right to bear arms. About ten years later, a great wall with towers stood watch to protect the new houses from sea and land attack; some 60 families formed the new community. On 19 July 1479, the new Home Act was signed, "the rebirth charter of Saint-Tropez".[14]

 

Climate

Saint-Tropez has a hot-summer mediterranean climate with mild winters and hot summers, although daytime temperatures are somewhat moderated by its coastal position.

 

Climate data for Saint-Tropez

MonthJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecYear

Mean daily maximum °C (°F)12.1

(53.8)12.6

(54.7)14.3

(57.7)16.5

(61.7)19.7

(67.5)23.4

(74.1)27.0

(80.6)27.3

(81.1)24.3

(75.7)20.2

(68.4)15.6

(60.1)13.0

(55.4)18.8

(65.8)

Daily mean °C (°F)9.3

(48.7)9.6

(49.3)11.0

(51.8)13.2

(55.8)16.3

(61.3)20.0

(68.0)23.3

(73.9)23.4

(74.1)20.8

(69.4)17.1

(62.8)12.8

(55.0)10.3

(50.5)15.6

(60.1)

Mean daily minimum °C (°F)6.5

(43.7)6.6

(43.9)7.8

(46.0)9.8

(49.6)13.0

(55.4)16.5

(61.7)19.5

(67.1)17.3

(63.1)14.1

(57.4)9.9

(49.8)7.5

(45.5)6.0

(42.8)12.3

(54.1)

Average precipitation mm (inches)82.4

(3.24)82.8

(3.26)64.7

(2.55)53.2

(2.09)40.1

(1.58)25.7

(1.01)15.5

(0.61)27.8

(1.09)57.0

(2.24)104.9

(4.13)85.7

(3.37)72.2

(2.84)711.8

(28.02)

Mean monthly sunshine hours147.8148.9203.2252.1234.9280.6310.3355.5319.5247.0201.5145.52,748.1

Source: Climatologie mensuelle à la station de Cap Camarat.[15]

Economy

 

The Hôtel Byblos is a Grand Hotel built in the mid-1960s.

The main economic resource of Saint-Tropez is tourism. The city is well known for the Hôtel Byblos and for Les Caves du Roy, a member of the Leading Hotels of the World; its 1967 inauguration featuring Brigitte Bardot and Gunter Sachs was an international event.

 

Beaches

 

Tropezian Tahiti beach in 2011

Tropezian beaches are located along the coast in the Baie de Pampelonne, which lies south of Saint-Tropez and east of Ramatuelle. Pampelonne offers a collection of beaches along its five-kilometre shore. Each beach is around 30 metres wide with its own beach hut and private or public tanning area.

 

Many of the beaches offer windsurfing, sailing and canoeing equipment for rent, while others offer motorized water sports, such as power boats, jet bikes, water skiing and scuba diving. Some of the beaches are naturist beaches. There are also many exclusive beach clubs that are popular among wealthy people from around the world.

 

Toplessness and nudity

Saint-Tropez's Tahiti Beach, which had been popularised in the film And God Created Woman featuring Brigitte Bardot, emerged as a clothing-optional destination,[16] but the mayor of Saint-Tropez ordered police to ban toplessness and to watch over the beach via helicopter.[17] The "clothing fights" between the gendarmerie and nudists become the main topic of a famous French comedy film series, Le gendarme de Saint-Tropez (The Troops of St. Tropez) featuring Louis de Funès. In the end, the nudist side prevailed.[18] Topless sunbathing is now the norm for both men and women from Pampelonne beaches to yachts in the centre of Saint-Tropez port.[19] The Tahiti beach is now clothing-optional, but nudists often head to private nudist beaches, such as that in Cap d'Agde.[20]

 

Port

 

Saint Tropez Port view

 

Aerial view of Saint-Tropez

The port was widely used during the 18th century; in 1789 it was visited by 80 ships. Saint-Tropez's shipyards built tartanes and three-masted ships that could carry 1,000 to 12,200 barrels. The town was the site of various associated trades, including fishing, cork, wine and wood. The town had a school of hydrography. In 1860, the flagship of the merchant navy, named The Queen of the Angels (La Reine des Anges, a three-masted ship of 740 barrels capacity), was built at Saint-Tropez.

 

Its role as a commercial port declined, and it is now primarily a tourist spot and a base for many well-known sail regattas. There is fast boat transportation with Les Bateaux Verts to Sainte-Maxime on the other side of the bay and to Port Grimaud, Marines de Cogolin, Les Issambres and St-Aygulf.

 

Events

Les Bravades de Saint-Tropez

Les Bravades de Saint-Tropez is an annual celebration held in the middle of May when people of the town celebrate their patron saint, Torpes of Pisa, and their military achievements. One of the oldest traditions of Provence, it has been held for more than 450 years since the citizens of Saint-Tropez were first given special permission to form a militia to protect the town from the Barbary pirates. During the three-day celebration, the various militias in costumes of the time fire their muskets into the air at traditional stops, march to the sound of bands and parade St. Torpes's bust. The townspeople also attend a mass wearing traditional Provençal costume.

 

Les Voiles de Saint-Tropez

 

Les Voiles de Saint-Tropez

Each year, at the end of September, a regatta is held in the bay of Saint-Tropez (Les Voiles de Saint-Tropez). Many yachts are entered, some as long as 50 metres. Many tourists come to the location for this event, or as a stop on their trip to Cannes, Marseille or Nice.

 

Traditional dishes

The Tarte tropézienne is a traditional cake invented by a Polish confectioner who had set up shop in Saint-Tropez in the mid-1950s, and made famous by actress Brigitte Bardot.[21]

 

Demographics

Historical population

YearPop.±% p.a.

17933,629—

18003,156−1.98%

18063,319+0.84%

18213,360+0.08%

18313,736+1.07%

18363,637−0.54%

18413,538−0.55%

18463,647+0.61%

18513,595−0.29%

18563,640+0.25%

18613,558−0.45%

18663,739+1.00%

18723,532−0.94%

18763,531−0.01%

18813,545+0.08%

18863,636+0.51%

18913,533−0.57%

18963,599+0.37%

YearPop.±% p.a.

19013,704+0.58%

19063,708+0.02%

19113,704−0.02%

19213,842+0.37%

19264,324+2.39%

19314,589+1.20%

19364,102−2.22%

19464,161+0.14%

19544,925+2.13%

19625,668+1.77%

19686,130+1.31%

19755,427−1.73%

19826,213+1.95%

19905,754−0.95%

19995,444−0.61%

20075,640+0.44%

20124,452−4.62%

20174,352−0.45%

 

Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. Updates on reimplementing the Graph extension, which will be known as the Chart extension, can be found on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org.

Source: EHESS[22] and INSEE[23]

Infrastructure

Transport to and from Saint-Tropez

By sea

  

Saint-Tropez marina

The 800-berth port with two marinas hosts boats, including ferries. In the summer season, there is a ferry service between St-Tropez and Nice, Sainte-Maxime, Cannes, Saint-Raphaël.[24] Private yachts may also be chartered.

 

By air

 

There is no airport in Saint-Tropez, but there is a charter service to and from clubs, the town and Tropezian beaches by helicopter.[25] The nearest airport is La Môle – Saint-Tropez Airport located in La Môle, 15 km (9 mi) (8 NM) southwest of Saint-Tropez.[26] Other main airports are Nice Côte d'Azur Airport located approximately 95 kilometers and Toulon–Hyères Airport located approximately 52 kilomters from Saint-Tropez.[27] Marseille Provence Airport is located approximately 158 kilometres from Saint-Tropez.[28]

 

By land

 

There is no rail station in Saint-Tropez. The nearest station is Saint-Raphaël-Valescure, located in Saint-Raphaël (39 km (24 mi) from Saint-Tropez), which also offers a boat service to Saint-Tropez.[29] There is also direct bus service to Saint-Tropez, and the rail station is connected with bus station.[30][31]

 

There is a bus station in Saint-Tropez called the Gare routière de Saint-Tropez, located in Place Blanqui.[32] It is operated by Var department transport division Varlib [fr], which employs other transport companies to operate routes.

 

There are taxi services, including from Nice airport to Saint-Tropez, but they are expensive because of the long distances and the area's wealth.[31]

 

In the tourist season, traffic problems may be expected on roads to Saint-Tropez,[33] so the fastest way to travel is by scooter or bike. There is no direct highway to the village. There are three main roads to Saint-Tropez:

 

Via the A8 (E80) with the sign "Draguignan, Le Muy-Golfe de Saint-Tropez" – RD 25 Sainte-Maxime, 19 km (12 mi) -> on the former RN 98 – 12 km (7 mi).

A57 with the sign "The Cannet des Maures" -> DR 558, 24 km (15 mi) Grimaud until then by the RD 61 – 9 km (6 mi) through the famous intersection of La Foux.

Near the sea, the former RN 98 connects to Toulon-La Valette-du-Var, Saint-Raphaël, Cannes, Nice, Monaco, DR 93, called "Beach Road", with destinations to Pampelonne, Ramatuelle and La Croix – Valmer.

Town transport

Public transport in Saint-Tropez includes minibuses, providing shuttle service between town and Pampelonne beaches.[27]

 

Other means of transport include scooters, cars, bicycles and taxis.[34] There are also helicopter services[35] and boat trips.[36]

 

Because of traffic and short distances, walking is an obvious choice for trips around town and to the Tropezian beaches.[37]

 

Culture, education and sport

 

Paul Signac, Leaving the port of Saint-Tropez, 1901

 

A panoramic view of Saint-Tropez by Paul Leduc [fr] (1876–1943)

 

Paintings Galerie Ivan

The town has health facilities, a cinema, a library, an outdoor center and a recreation center for youth.[38]

 

Schools include: École maternelle (kindergarten – preschool) – l'Escouleto, écoles primaires (primary schools – primary education): Louis Blanc and Les Lauriers, collège d'enseignement secondaire (secondary school, high school – secondary education) – Moulin Blanc.[39][40]

 

There are more than 1,000 students distributed among kindergartens, primary schools and one high school.[41] In 2011, there were 275 students in high school and 51 people employed there, of whom 23 were teachers.[42]

 

Art

Saint-Tropez plays a major role in the history of modern art. Paul Signac discovered this light-filled place that inspired painters such as Matisse, Pierre Bonnard and Albert Marquet to come to Saint-Tropez. The painting styles of pointillism and fauvism emerged in Saint-Tropez. Saint-Tropez was also attractive for the next generation of painters: Bernard Buffet, David Hockney, Massimo Campigli and Donald Sultan lived and worked there. Today, Stefan Szczesny continues this tradition.

 

The contemporary artist Philippe Shangti imagined the design of Le Quai and L'Opera, restaurants located on the port of Saint-Tropez where he also exhibits his art collections. Centered on a specific theme, he always denounces different problems affecting society with provocative artworks.[43]

 

International relations

See also: List of twin towns and sister cities in France

Saint-Tropez is twinned with:

 

Vittoriosa, Malta[44][45]

Famous persons connected with Saint-Tropez

Saint Torpes of Pisa

Saint Torpes of Pisa

 

Portrait of Hasekura Tsunenaga

Portrait of Hasekura Tsunenaga

 

Statue of Admiral de Suffren de Saint-Tropez

Statue of Admiral de Suffren de Saint-Tropez

 

Brigitte Bardot at Saint-Tropez, 1963

Brigitte Bardot at Saint-Tropez, 1963

 

Louis de Funès during filming

Louis de Funès during filming

The most famous persons connected with Saint-Tropez include the semi-legendary martyr who gave his name to the town, Saint Torpes of Pisa; Hasekura Tsunenaga, probably the first Japanese in Europe, who landed in Saint-Tropez in 1615; a hero of the American Revolutionary War, Admiral Pierre André de Suffren de Saint-Tropez; the icon of modern Saint-Tropez, Brigitte Bardot, who started the clothes-optional revolution and still lives in the Saint-Tropez area;[46] Louis de Funès, who played the character of the gendarme (police officer) in the French comedy film series Le Gendarme de Saint-Tropez and also helped establish the international image of Saint-Tropez as both a quiet town and a modern jet-set holiday target.[47]

 

In popular culture

The English rock band Pink Floyd wrote a song "San Tropez" after the town. Saint-Tropez was also mentioned in David Gates's 1978 hit "Took the Last Train", Kraftwerk's "Tour de France", Aerosmith's "Permanent Vacation", Taylor Swift's "The Man", and Beyoncé's "Energy". Rappers including Diddy, Jay-Z, 50 Cent, J. Cole, and Post Malone refer to the city in some of their songs as a favorite vacation destination, usually reached by yacht. DJ Antoine wrote a song "Welcome to St. Tropez". The Tony Award-winning Broadway musical La Cage aux Folles is set in a drag night club in St. Tropez. Furthermore, Bulgarian singer azis wrote a song named "Сен Тропе"(Sen Trope). Also, Romanian singer Florin Salam wrote the song (Saint Tropez). Saint Tropez was also mentioned in Army of Lovers' song "My Army of Lovers." Their song "La Plage De Saint Tropez" was also dedicated to this town.

 

Gallery

Aerial view of the Cital of Saint-Tropez, France

Aerial view of the Cital of Saint-Tropez, France

 

Cannons of the Citadel

Cannons of the Citadel

 

Tour Jarlier

Tour Jarlier

 

Aerial view of the old town and the old port of Saint-Tropez, France

Aerial view of the old town and the old port of Saint-Tropez, France

 

Luxury boats

Luxury boats

 

Sailboats

Sailboats

 

Aerial view of Pampelonne Beach, Saint-Tropez

Aerial view of Pampelonne Beach, Saint-Tropez

 

Harbour promenade with cafes

Harbour promenade with cafes

 

Aerial view of vineyards in Saint-Tropez, France

Aerial view of vineyards in Saint-Tropez, France

 

Old gendarmerie station; popular spot for photographs[48] (cf. Le Gendarme de Saint-Tropez)

Old gendarmerie station; popular spot for photographs[48] (cf. Le Gendarme de Saint-Tropez)

 

Aerial view of the old town of Saint-Tropez, France

Aerial view of the old town of Saint-Tropez, France

 

Tarte tropézienne (tropezian pie)

Tarte tropézienne (tropezian pie)

 

The main gate to Citadel

The main gate to Citadel

 

Top-down aerial of the old town of Saint-Tropez, France

Top-down aerial of the old town of Saint-Tropez, France

 

Aerial view of the cemetery of Saint-Tropez, France

Aerial view of the cemetery of Saint-Tropez, France

List of media connected with Saint-Tropez

Non-exhaustive filmography

 

Saint-Tropez, devoir de vacances [fr] (short film, 1952)

Et Dieu... créa la femme (1956)

Bonjour Tristesse (1958)

Une fille pour l'été [fr] (1960)

Saint-Tropez Blues [fr] (1960)

Le Gendarme de Saint-Tropez (1964) and its sequels Le Gendarme à New York (1965), Le Gendarme se marie (1968), Le Gendarme en balade (1970), Le Gendarme et les Extra-terrestres (1979) and finally Le Gendarme et les Gendarmettes (1982)[49][50]

La Collectionneuse (1967)

La Chamade (1968)

Les Biches (1968)

La Piscine (1969)

Le Viager (1972)

La Cage aux Folles (1978)

Le Coup du parapluie (1980)

Le Beau Monde [fr] (1981)

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint-Tropez

While creating violin scroll...

Created by me.

A collateral effect of playing with hexagons...

   

The Simply Consistent team creates, develops and/ or expands concierge medical services, addiction services, spa's, operations and offices that reflect our doctors individual and/or business needs, their personal and/or practice style and overall patient care.

323-653-1205

 

www.simplyconsistent.com/services/medical%20spa%20and%20p...

 

The goal of this Beverly Hills Medical office design project was to create an office environment that allowed the customer to have a place to exhale and relax. The waiting room designed by Simply Consistent exhibits that feeling.

lastheplace.com/2007/08/06/peak-wellness-beverly-hills-ce...

I wrote a tutorial for the good peeps at Go Media!

 

Jeff Finley released a super cool collection of hand drawn occult symbols and other esoteric assets a little while back.

 

They asked me to explore ways to use the set of vectors, and to write about the result of the said exploration. So I did!

 

The result is a record sleeve for the fictional band Fiat Lux, which just worked on their Æterna record.

 

You should go read the tutorial.

 

I hope you enjoy it as much as I enjoyed writing it. Cheers!

The iRobot Create robot is very similar structurally to a Roomba. It uses the same framework as a Roomba but omits the vacuum parts (to give you more battery power for your own projects). It also improves on the Roomba from a robotics perspective, by having a swivel front caster and an optional back caster.

 

Of course, almost all Roomba accessories work with the iRobot Create. For instance, here I've plugged in a normal Roomba battery instead of the green AA battery holder the Create ships with.

Veiled and covered with a lot of finest silk fabric

Elaine Nesbitt works with clay

Photographer | Reynald Geonson

Created in the mid-to-late Nineteenth Century by Melbourne stained glass manufacturer Ferguson and Urie, the Saint Bartholomew stained glass window may be found in Lady Chapel in the eastern transept of Christ Church Brunswick.

 

Saint Bartholomew was one of the twelve apostles of Jesus. He is purported too have taken two missions; one to India and the other to Armenia. It was in the latter that Saint Bartholomew was executed. According to popular hagiography, the apostle was flayed alive and beheaded. According to other accounts he was crucified upside down with his head downward like Saint Peter. He is often depicted holding a knife, however it seems that Victorian middle-class morals stepped in when the window as made, and rather than holding something so gruesome, he is shown simply holding a partially opened book.

 

This window was erected by James Grice, eldest son of pastoralist, businessman, philanthropist and churchman Richard Grice. Richard was born on October the 30th 1813 in Cumberland, England. The son of William Grice and his wife Sarah, née Parke. he was born into a family who ran a private family bank in Cumberland, built on generations of his family who had begun as farmers in the area before becoming successful businessmen in Cumberland. Richard attended Walker's School in Whitehaven, and gained farming experience on one of his family's properties. However, in his mid twenties, Richard felt that his future did not lie in England, so he set sail to Australia in 1839. He arrived at Adelaide in September 1839 with shepherds and a business partner named Benjamin Heape. They did not stay in Adelaide, and journeyed east to Melbourne where Richard and Benjamin set up an importing and exporting business. Richard decided to explore the idea of pastoral opportunities in the Western District where he successfully raised and bred sheep, going on to become one of the most successful pastoralists in Australia. He expanded his pastoral holdings into Queensland. In 1844 Richard married the daughter of James Hibberson, Anne Lavinia. In 1847 they did a Grand Tour of Europe and then settled in the affluent Melbourne suburb of Fitzroy. They had twelve children. Benjamin returned to England in 1852, so Richard entered into a partnership with Mr. T. J. Sumner, who had worked as a clerk within the original firm. Mr. Sumner's eldest daughter married Richard's son James, and the firm became known as Grice, Sumner & Co. The business flourished and by the mid 1870s the firm held vast grazing properties in Victoria, New South Wales, South Australia and Queensland. Richard died at his home in Fitzroy on November the 4th 1882, survived by his wife and by three sons and four daughters.

 

Christ Church, built almost on the corner of Glenlyon Road and Brunswick Street in Brunswick, is a picturesque slice of Italy in inner city Melbourne. With its elegant proportions, warm yellow stuccoed facade and stylish Romanesque campanile, the church would not look out of place sitting atop a rise in Tuscany, or being the centre of an old walled town. This idea is further enhanced when the single bell rings from the campanile, calling worshipers to prayer.

 

Christ Church has been constructed in a cruciform plan with a detached campanile. Although not originally intended as such, at its completion, the church became an excellent example of "Villa Rustica" architecture in Australia. Like other churches around the inner city during the boom and bust eras of the mid Nineteenth Century as Melbourne became an established city, the building was built in stages between 1857 and 1875 as money became available to extend and better what was already in existence. Christ Church was dedicated in 1857 when the nave, designed by architects Purchas and Swyer, was completed. The transepts, chancel and vestry were completed between 1863 and 1864 to the designs created by the architects' firm Smith and Watts. The Romanesque style campanile was also designed by Smith and Watts and it completed between 1870 and 1871. A third architect, Frederick Wyatt, was employed to design the apse which was completed in 1875.

 

Built in Italianate style with overture characteristics of classical Italian country house designs, Christ Church is one of the few examples of what has been coined "Villa Rustica" architecture in Victoria.

 

Slipping through the front door at the bottom of the campanile, the rich smell of incense from mass envelops visitors. As soon as the double doors which lead into the church proper close behind you, the church provides a quiet refuge from the busy intersection of Glenlyon Road and Brunswick Street outside, and it is quite easy to forget that cars and trams pass by just a few metres away. Walking up the aisle of the nave of Christ Church, light pours over the original wooden pews with their hand embroidered cushions through sets of luminescent stained glass windows by Melbourne manufacturers, Ferguson and Urie, Mathieson and Gibson and Brooks Robinson and Company. A set of fourteen windows from the mid-to-late Nineteenth Century by Ferguson and Urie depicting different saints are especially beautiful, filled with painted glass panes which are as vivid now as when they were created more than one hundred years ago. The floors are still the original dark, richly polished boards that generations of worshipers have walked over since they were first laid. The east transept houses the Lady Chapel, whilst the west transept is consumed by the magnificent 1972 Roger H. Pogson organ built of cedar with tin piping. This replaced the original 1889 Alfred Fuller organ. Beautifully executed carved rood figures watch over the chancel from high, perhaps admiring the marble altar.

 

Albert Purchas, born in 1825 in Chepstow, Monmouthshire, Wales, was a prominent Nineteenth Century architect who achieved great success for himself in Melbourne. Born to parents Robert Whittlesey Purchas and Marianne Guyon, he migrated to Australia in 1851 to establish himself in the then quickly expanding city of Melbourne, where he set up a small architect's firm in Little Collins Street. He also offered surveying services. His first major building was constructing the mansion "Berkeley Hall" in St Kilda on Princes Street in 1854. The house still exists today. Two years after migrating, Albert designed the layout of the Melbourne General Cemetery in Carlton. It was the first "garden cemetery" in Victoria, and his curvilinear design is still in existence, unaltered, today. In 1854, Albert married Eliza Anne Sawyer (1825 - 1869) in St Kilda. The couple had ten children over their marriage, including a son, Robert, who followed in his father's footsteps as an architect. Albert's brother-in-law, Charles Sawyer joined him in the partnership of Purchas and Sawyer, which existed from 1856 until 1862 in Queens Street. The firm produced more than 140 houses, churches, offices and cemetery buildings including: the nave and transepts of Christ Church St Kilda between 1854 and 1857, "Glenara Homestead"in Bulla in 1857, the Melbourne Savings Bank on the corner of Flinders Lane and Market Street (now demolished) between 1857 and 1858, the Geelong branch of the Bank of Australasia in Malop Street between 1859 and 1860, and Beck's Imperial Hotel in Castlemaine in 1861. When the firm broke up, Albert returned to Little Collins Street, and the best known building he designed during this period was St. George's Presbyterian Church in East St Kilda between 1877 and 1880. The church's tall polychomatic brick bell tower is still a local landmark, even in the times of high rise architecture and development, and St, George's itself is said to be one of his most striking church designs. Socially, Albert was vice president of the Royal Victorian Institute of Architects for many years, before becoming president in 1887. He was also an inventor and philanthropist. Albert died in 1909 at his home in Kew, a wealthy widower and much loved father.

 

The stained glass firm of Ferguson and Urie was established by Scots James Ferguson (1818 – 1894), James Urie (1828 – 1890) and John Lamb Lyon (1836 – 1916). They were the first known makers of stained glass in Australia. Until the early 1860s, window glass in Melbourne had been clear or plain coloured, and nearly all was imported, but new churches and elaborate buildings created a demand for pictorial windows. The three Scotsmen set up Ferguson and Urie in 1862 and the business thrived until 1899, when it ceased operation, with only John Lamb Lyon left alive. Ferguson and Urie was the most successful Nineteenth Century Australian stained glass window making company. Among their earliest works were a Shakespeare window for the Haymarket Theatre in Bourke Street, a memorial window to Prince Albert in Holy Trinity, Kew, and a set of Apostles for the West Melbourne Presbyterian Church. Their palatial Gothic Revival office building stood at 283 Collins Street from 1875. Ironically, their last major commission, a window depicting “labour”, was installed in the old Melbourne Stock Exchange in Collins Street in 1893 on the eve of the bank crash. Their windows can be found throughout the older suburbs of Melbourne and across provincial Victoria.

  

Stunning lab created opal and white sapphire ring in sterling silver. The ring is inlaid with 3 pieces of bright blue-green lab created opal The synthetic opal is mostly blue with big bold flashes of greens and lighter blues. The trillion (triangle) cut white sapphire is nice and bright and weighs 1 carat.

A session on how virtual reality has opened the door to new mediums of creating and experiencing stories in the media and entertainment industry.

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