View allAll Photos Tagged Destroy!
Created for Its An Addiction group using tutorial: www.photoshoptutorials.ws/photoshop-tutorials/photo-manip...
This place is certified WTF weird, but to each his own. Look them up and rejoice in the diversity of life.
Eine Fotoausstellung zum Thema häusliche Gewalt am Wiener Burgring wurde mutwillig zerstört – das Motiv vermutlich Misogynie – die Displays wurden wieder zusammengeklebt – ein trauriger Anblick ... | A photo exhibition on the subject of domestic violence at Vienna's Burgring was deliberately destroyed – the motive was probably misogyny – the displays were glued back together – a sad sight ...
Và xin lỗi 1 sự thật rất phũ phàng là
Lúc quen em .. a với e chỉ dừng lại ở cái "nắm tay" ???
Và cứ cho là a thương em và giữ gìn cho em ???
Thì 1 ngày nào đó .. e bỏ anh .. e có nhớ những j a đã làm =))
Rồi khi e nằm kế bên thằng bf mới of e ... e cớ nhớ lúc a và e nắm tay :-j ... F...=]]
Hay trước mặt tất cả mọi ng .. e cứ luôn cho họ thấy vẻ mặt rất ư là Ngây thơ vô số tội của e =]]
Hay trước mặt tât cả mọi ng .. e cứ luôn cho họ thấy e là gái ngoan .. hiền lành
Hay ... Lành chành bồng =]]
Haizz haizz haizz ...em thiệt tình :))
Và 1 sự thật nữa là ... cho dù a và e có thương yêu cách mấy thì kết quả ... đâu ai bik trước e nhỉ O_O
Và cho dù a có giữ gìn cho em thế nào đi nữa ... thì đến lúc em đưa anh thiệp cưới.. liệu em có biết ơn anh =]]
Và cuối cùng a chỉ muốn nói với em .. Cho dù Anh không Fuck em ... thì e cũng để cho Chó nó Fuck :)... :)
Davenport, California lies along the coast of the Pacific Ocean, about 9 miles north of Santa Cruz, on Highway One. The small town of about 400 doesn't look like much from the highway (Coast Highway One). But, trust me........park your car and walk beyond the old railroad tracks that parallel the highway to see what many would consider the most spectacular and picturesque coastline in northern California.
The remnants of Davenport Pier can be seen extending into the ocean in this photograph. Only the pier foundation arches, that stretch out into the Pacific, are left.....the pier deck surface was destroyed in a storm years ago.
a new built wall when they built the new cinema and the sea is breaking it up bit by bit redcar north yorkshire
The River Kent in Kendal, Cumbria.
The Miller Bridge, formerly named Mill Bridge, was erected in 1818 to the design of John Rennie. It was a replacement of earlier bridges, one of which was destroyed by a flood. It joins New Road and Aynam Road.
The River Kent is a short river which originates in hills surrounding Kentmere, and flows for around 20 miles (32 km) into the north of Morecambe Bay. The Lake District National Park includes the upper reaches of the river within its boundaries.
The river passes through Kentmere, Staveley, Burneside, Kendal and Sedgwick. Near Sedgwick, the river passes through a rock gorge which produces a number of low waterfalls. This section is popular with kayakers as it offers high quality whitewater for several days after rain.
The village of Arnside lies alongside the Kent estuary. On high spring tides, a tidal bore known as the Arnside Bore forms in the estuary opposite Arnside. The wave is often about 0.5m high.
Near the source of the river is Kentmere Reservoir, which was constructed in the mid-19th century to control the flow of the river for the benefit of water mills. The river was used to power numerous mills in the past, including two at Staveley, Kentmere water mill, and also the James Cropper paper factory at Burneside. One of the weirs at Staveley produces electricity for Staveley Mill Yard via a micro hydro scheme. There is also scope for micro hydro upstream at Kentmere.
The river is a designated Special Area of Conservation, primarily as an important habitat for the endangered White-clawed Crayfish (Austropotamobius pallipes). Fish species include salmon and trout. In the twentieth century fish ladders were constructed alongside the dams of mill-ponds to allow migratory fish to swim up to Kentmere. In 2013 DEFRA funding was announced for eel passes at Stramongate weir in Kendal and Basinghyll fish counter.
Destroyed film, South Coast of France, 35mm film soaked in boiling water mixed with lemon juice and vodka
Boy, how plain HOT sand, a blue sky and a few clouds can be soooooo nice. Pitty how they destroy the dunes with their 4X4's and quadbikes.
OK, by now you must have figured out that I like sunflare and could not resist another attempt.
Hope you like it.
The Destroyed City (Dutch: De verwoeste stad) is a bronze memorial sculpture in the Dutch city of Rotterdam. It commemorates the German bombing of Rotterdam on 14 May 1940, which destroyed the medieval centre of the city. Unveiled in 1953, it was designated as a Dutch national monument (Rijksmonument) in 2010. It is the largest sculpture by the Russian-born French sculptor Ossip Zadkine, his best known work and the best known sculpture in Rotterdam.
The 6.5 m (21 ft) high sculpture depicts an stylized human figure leaning against a tree stump. The figure holds both hands aloft, with its head thrown back as if crying in grief, and a gaping hole in its chest and abdomen. The absence of a heart is said to symbolise the destruction of the centre of Rotterdam. Zadkine described it as "A cry of horror against the inhuman brutality of this act of tyranny". The sculpture has been compared to the figure with arms raised in terror on the far right of Picasso's painting Guernica. It stands on a tapering 2 m (6 ft 7 in) high plinth of Labrador granite blocks (reportedly, the stone had been intended for a sculpture of Adolf Hitler in Berlin). It is sited on the north side of the early 17th century dock basin of Leuvehaven [nl] in the centre of Rotterdam.
Munster Abbey was a Benedictine monastery founded in the 7th century. Over the years, the abbey was destroyed several times, including during the Thirty Years' War and the French Revolution. The worst damage, however, occurred during World War I when it was heavily bombed and mostly destroyed. Today, the ruins are one of the main attractions in the city of Munster - Munster, Alsace Region, France.
**Please press "L" | Bitte "L" drücken**
Photo was taken by using a Leica M9 and Leica Elmar-M 50mm f/2.8.
Von mir aus könnte immer Vollmond sein. Ich würde sagen ein Stunde bei offenem Fenster im Auto sitzen und etwas frieren hat sich gelohnt :-)
Wünsche eine geruhsame Nacht.
Foto und Bea: www.waahnsinnsgestaltungen.de
Trier - Trierer Dom
To the right of the Cathedral you can see the Liebfrauenkirche (Church of Our Lady)
Rechts des Doms sieht man die Liebfrauenkirche
The High Cathedral of Saint Peter in Trier (German: Hohe Domkirche St. Peter zu Trier), or Cathedral of Trier (German: Trierer Dom), is a Roman Catholic church in Trier, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It is the oldest cathedral in the country. The edifice is notable for its extremely long life span under multiple different eras each contributing some elements to its design, including the center of the main chapel being made of Roman brick laid under the direction of Saint Helen, resulting in a cathedral added onto gradually rather than rebuilt in different eras. Its dimensions, 112.5 m length by 41 m width, make it the largest church structure in Trier. In 1986 it was listed as part of the Roman Monuments, Cathedral of St. Peter and Church of Our Lady in Trier UNESCO World Heritage Site.
The structure is raised upon the foundations of Roman buildings of Augusta Treverorum. Following the conversion of the Emperor Constantine the Bishop Maximin of Trier (329-346) coordinated the construction of the grandest ensemble of ecclesiastical structures in the West outside Rome: on a groundplan four times the area of the present cathedral no less than four basilicas, a baptistery and outbuildings were constructed; the four piers of the crossing formed the nucleus of the present structure.
The fourth-century structure was left in ruins by the Franks and rebuilt. Normans destroyed the structure again in 882. Under Archbishop Egbert (d. 993) it was restored once more.
(Wikipedia)
Die Hohe Domkirche St. Peter zu Trier ist die älteste Bischofskirche Deutschlands und die Mutterkirche des Bistums Trier. Mit einer Länge von 112,5 Metern und einer Breite von 41 Metern ist das bedeutende sakrale Bauwerk abendländischer Baukunst das größte Kirchengebäude der Stadt Trier.
Seit 1986 ist der Trierer Dom Teil des UNESCO-Welterbes Römische Baudenkmäler, Dom und Liebfrauenkirche in Trier, des Weiteren ist er ein geschütztes Kulturgut nach der Haager Konvention.
Der Dom steht über den Resten eines repräsentativen römischen Wohnhauses. Im Zuge der von Kaiser Konstantin eingeleiteten „konstantinischen Wende“ hin zum Christentum wurde zwischen 310 und 320, also in der Zeit Konstantins des Großen, eine Basilika errichtet, die unter Bischof Maximin (329–346) zu einer der größten Kirchenanlagen Europas mit vier Basiliken, einem Baptisterium und Nebengebäuden erweitert wurde. Um 340 entstand der sogenannte Quadratbau, der Kern des Domes mit vier monumentalen Säulen aus dem Odenwald.
(Wikipedia)
The photo shows the Sony-Center and the headquarter of Deutsche Bahn. The Sony Center is a building complex located at the Potsdamer Platz in Berlin, Germany. The site was originally a bustling city centre in the early 20th century. Most of the buildings were destroyed or damaged during World War II. From 1961 on, most of the area became part of the No Man's Land of the Berlin Wall. After the fall of the Berlin Wall 1989, the square became the focus of attention again, as a large attractive location which had suddenly become available in the centre of Berlin. As part of a redevelopment effort for the area, the center was constructed. It is designed by Helmut Jahn and Peter Walker as landscape architect. (see Wikipedia)