View allAll Photos Tagged Dignity
I shot this picture a while ago and have been attempting to do HDR on various types of pictures. Jennifer added the words and definition.. Thank you Honey !
(Jen's Photography)
"Freedom is the open window through which pours the sunlight of the human spirit and human dignity."
Herbert Hoover
Have a great Sunday!
CORDICELLA SALVA VISTA.
Spesso, quando si usano gli occhiali per leggere da vicino,si usa una cordicella attaccata alle stanghette in modo che si possano portare con sè senza impegnare le mani e non dimenticare gli occhiali in giro.
A dir la verità la cosa appare un pò demodè e sa di vecchio ma la praticità è indubbia.
Stasera ho voluto ridare un pò di dignità a questo accessorio semplice,un pò banale ma utilissimo.
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SAVE VIEW CORD.
Often, when you use the glasses to read closely, you use a string attached to the temples so that you can carry them with you without engaging your hands and not to forget the glasses around.
To tell the truth, the thing appears a bit out of date and tastes of old but the practicality is undoubted.
Tonight I wanted to give some dignity back to this simple accessory, a little banal but very useful.
Immagine realizzata con lo smartphone HUAWEI MATE 20 PRO
© sallycinnamon.. 2014 This image is my property and no downloads, copies or uses of are permitted without my prior consent.
A return via the archives only , but a return none the less to
Knole and just a section as seen from the deer park .
A tiny section of Knole just to show the concentration of building work within it's itself .
Knole feels almost weighed down by its own history – six centuries of it. People are often impressed by all the absolutes of Knole: its enormous size, the number of rooms, its completeness. But those who live, work and visit here love its quiet dignity, its almost melancholy feel – the grandeur has passed but its old, glinting beauty remains.
What we see today is a remarkably preserved and complete early Jacobean remodelling of a medieval archiepiscopal palace. From an even older manor house, it was built and extended by the Archbishops of Canterbury after 1456. It then became a royal possession during the Tudor dynasty when Henry VIII hunted here and Elizabeth I visited.
From 1603, Thomas Sackville made it the aristocratic treasure house for the Sackville family, who were prominent and influential in court circles. Knole's showrooms were designed to impress visitors and to display the Sackville family’s wealth and status.
Over more than 400 years, his descendants rebuilt and then furnished Knole in two further bursts of activity. First, at the end of the 17th century, when the 6th Earl acquired Stuart furniture and textiles from royal palaces, and again at the end of the 18th century, with the 3rd Duke's art collection.
The Sackvilles gradually withdrew into the heart of the house, leaving many rooms unused and treasures covered. This helps to explain the relative lack of modernisation at Knole (central heating was never installed in the showrooms, for example) and the survival of its collections.
Knole has been welcoming visitors to see its splendours and curiosities for centuries. We know that visitors have followed the same route as you do today for at least the last 400 years.
There's a popular myth that Knole is a calendar house - with 365 rooms, 52 staircases, 12 entrances and 7 courtyards. While fascinating, the reality is that it all depends on how you count the rooms and Knole is such a large, rambling estate that it would be impossible to say for certain.
When the National Trust acquired the house in 1946, the majority of the rooms were leased back to the Sackville family, with the Trust retaining the more formal spaces. The 7th Baron Sackville and his family still live at Knole today in private apartments.
Now, visitors can experience so many different parts of Knole, from the grand showrooms to the cosy Gatehouse Tower, the tranquil Orangery to the sweeping parkland. Discover the vast estate and all it has to offer, home to a world-class collection of portraits and furniture, a state-of-the-art conservation studio and a wild deer herd. There really is something for everyone at Knole.
info taken from NT webpage on Knole .
Street photography, also sometimes called candid photography, is photography conducted for art or enquiry that features unmediated chance encounters and random incidents [1] within public places. The main goal is to capture the relationship between the environment and people, their behavior, their everyday social interaction as well as the unexpected situations, but more especially spontaneous newsworthy events.
The Street photographer aim is to capture the decisive moment without interfering. He works showing respect, attention, and dignity towards people. He considers that people are characters by chance and their own life and decisions have taken them to that place and through that moment. The essential ingredient is to make from that decisive moment a historical document of the humanity.
Therefore, any discomfort you might feel at recognizing yourself in a picture shared on this account, you're free to ask to remove it. By the same token, if you want a copy of the picture, let me know and I will be please to summit it to you.
[1] Warner Marien, Mary (2012). 100 ideas that changed photography. London: Laurence King Publishing. p. 169. ISBN 978-1-85669-793-4.
PeloZano
A street portrait of the chief of some American Indian tribe. He wears a warbonnet, his face is warpainted. He is brave, he is full of dignity and determination, his will is strong, he fears nobody and nothing. He is on the warpath. May good luck be with him.
When a cherry tree in Tokyo inner city scatters, a mountain village in a far suburb wears the look of the spring beautifully.
It's best to enjoy calmness of the spring beautifully so that I even feel like calling ryuushuin temple a floral temple here!
The small temple in mountain circled by a color scheme in each season.
Before about about 600 years, and, temple of Rinzai Zen Sect which says.
With the double flowering cherry tree by which dark pink is the feature.
A rhododendron dilatatum azalea makes a flower bloom in a simultaneous period, and the yellow of a rape blossom is also vivid.
And the form of the temple, Sean One of reminiscences, itself.
An image of Mr. small Buddha is displayed a flower by a flower festival on April 8 when birth of Mr. Buddha is celebrated.
Kabul bazaar, 1974. Honeywell rangefinder 35mm camera, fixed 38mm lens, Kodak Kodacolor II (I think). Print scan with HP ScanJet 3770.
Tigger threw dignity out the window to rest comfortably in front of the upstairs heater this afternoon... She was actually sleeping when I took this (and several others) picture.
All humans are born free & equal in dignity and rights - Like a dandelion rising through the cracks, So We Will Rise. ♥