View allAll Photos Tagged Direction,
.... I have such a bad sense of direction. I always get lost and cant read maps
Hands drawn by me and stuck on background/hung from ceiling. No manipulation
More to come on this series...
FORT CARSON, Colo. – Sergeant Richard Eisenreich, M1 abrams systems maintainer, Company D, 2nd Battalion, 8th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, receives direction to the next station from Master Sgt. Monique J. Randell, brigade supply, Headquarters and Headquarters Troop, 2nd Special Troops Battalion, 4th Infantry Division, at the Fort Carson Arrival/Departure Air Control Group, May 8, 2012. “Warhorse” Soldiers returned from a 12-month deployment to Afghanistan in support of Operation Enduring Freedom.
(U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Andrew Porch 2nd BCT PAO, 4th Inf. Div.)
ART WITH DIRECTION is an hybrid art-direction and photography project by hooman haghighat. © 2013
www.facebook.com/artwithdirection
Eine Idee von Hooman Haghighat.
An Idea by Hooman Haghighat
Hagia Sophia, built as a cathedral at Constantinople in the 6th century under the direction of the Byzantine emperor Justinian I.
It was built in the remarkably short time of about six years, being completed in AD 537. Unusual for the period in which it was built, the names of the architects - Anthemius of Tralles and Isidorus of Miletus - are well known for their familiarity with mechanics and mathematics. The Hagia Sophia combines a longitudinal basilica and a centralized building in a wholly original manner, with a huge 32-metre (105-foot) main dome supported on pendentives and two semidomes, one on either side of the longitudinal axis. In plan the building is almost square. There are three aisles separated by columns with galleries above and great marble piers rising up to support the dome. The walls above the galleries and the base of the dome are pierced by windows, which in the glare of daylight obscure the supports and give the impression that the canopy floats on air.
The original church on the site of the Hagia Sophia is said to have been ordered to be built by Constantine I in 325 on the foundations of a pagan temple. His son, Constantius II, consecrated it in 360. It was damaged in 404 by a fire that erupted during a riot following the second banishment of St. John Chrysostom, then patriarch of Constantinople. It was rebuilt and enlarged by the Roman emperor Constans I. The restored building was rededicated in 415 by Theodosius II. The church was burned again in the Nika insurrection of January 532, a circumstance that gave Justinian I an opportunity to envision a splendid replacement.
After the Turkish conquest of Constantinople in 1453, Mehmed II had it repurposed as a mosque, with the addition of a wooden minaret, a great chandelier, a mihrab (niche indicating the direction of Mecca), and a minbar (pulpit). Either he or his son Bayezid II erected the red minaret that stands on the southeast corner of the structure. The original wooden minaret did not survive. Bayezid II erected the narrow white minaret on the northeast side of the mosque. The two identical minarets on the western side were likely commissioned by Selim II or Murad III and built by renowned Ottoman architect Sinan in the 1500s.
In 1934 Turkish President Kemal Atatürk secularized the building, and in 1935 it was made into a museum. Art historians consider the building’s beautiful mosaics to be the main source of knowledge about the state of mosaic art in the time shortly after the end of the Iconoclastic Controversy in the 8th and 9th centuries.
An attendant provides direction to a female participant during the Statesman 2012 Classic and Vintage Car Rally on 8th Jan 2012
2011 Vintage Car Rally Pics at www.flickr.com/photos/akashmondal/sets/72157625782259336/
Session Urbex improvisée au détour d'une rue. Equipés de nos smartphones respectifs(Androïd vs Apple) Focus404 et moi même avons parcouru ce lieu.
The west coast trails in the background for a directional on an information kiosk near the dunes of Nipomo, CA.
From 7 storeys up
I was going to crop and straighten this picture in Photoshop, but then i decided not to. there's something about this picture being off-center that makes it that little bit better.
Icon Center One Direction para a plataforma Blogger.
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OBS 1.: Não vem com os Icons, pois eles foram achados na internet :S
OBS 2.: Vem com tutorial de como instalar e como colocar os icons
OBS 3.: Vem com favicon,o iconezinho que fica nas guias
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