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This little spring is located directly below the Pan Group of statues. The spring is an outflow of the large "Badenburger See" park lake and feeds the "Teufelsbach" (=devils's creek).

 

© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.

Amsterdam - Havenstraat

 

Copyright - All images are copyright © protected. All Rights Reserved. Copying, altering, displaying or redistribution of any of these images without written permission from the artist is strictly prohibited.

Directly overhead at Fingringhoe gravel pits.

 

Part of getting through life is accepting, and dealing with, our weaknesses. Which doesn't mean they aren't still a pain in the butt.

 

Me, I'm over-sensitive to all kinds of sensory input - and input affecting my sensors. For instance, even in August in our constant ocean breezes, I daren't go outside without my ears covered.

 

This is, of course, a huuuge pain. When everyone else is out in shorts and bathing suits, I'm sweating with a big fleecy band around my head. It sucks, but the alternative (excruciating ear aches) sucks a whole lot worse.

 

I'm also overly sensitive to noise. And bright light. Especially bright flashing light that hits my eyes unexpectedly. So... imagine how much fun I am as a companion at a rawk show. Normally I take along ear plugs. Last night I forgot.

 

I guess I was lulled into complacency by the fact that the show was at a theatre. A play house. A place I last attended in my teens, when I saw some Shakespearean production there. So yeah... I went in plugless. And immediately regretted it. Still... I was up for enjoying myself... until the %$(*&$%(&ing light show started.

 

I can't imagine whose idea it was to flash big spotlights directly into the audience's eyes repeatedly throughout the night. Probably the same wise person who decided a super-bright sign behind the band... illuminated by 10,000 1,000 watt bulbs... was also a very good thing to flash repeatedly in the audience's eyes.

 

What really amazed me was that no one else seemed bothered. Whereas I was in several sorts of agony all night.

 

The bright flashing lights. Fuck, man. I thought I was gonna have a seizure or something. I ended up spending most of the night doubled over with my head in my lap, eyes closed, hands clamped over my face. Every time I tried to enjoy actually watching the band... zappo! Unexpected blasts of super-bright white light set off pinball explosions in my brain.

 

So today is pretty much a write-off. Migraine city, man.

 

And I HATE HATE HATE that my body is so delicate.

 

I'm from sturdy peasant stock. Why am I so fragile? Why do things that normal people take in stride disable me?

 

Sorry for the whining self-pity. Kee-rist. At least I know, without a doubt, that I am now too old for rawk shows. Goodbye youth. Your time has come and gone. From now on I'll just satisfy myself by listening to records at home.

 

Directly from camera, unedited.

Part of this abstract study.

 

see also:

Camera Toss (group)

Camera Toss (blog)

Bald Eagle: Ontario, Canada

 

(captive setting)

 

Also on:

 

www.instagram.com/gregtaylorphotography/

 

www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100086780080943

 

vero.co/gregtaylorphotography

 

Prints available. For now contact me directly to discuss the specifics.

 

All images are the property of Greg Taylor Photography. Do not copy, reprint or reproduce without written consent from me.

  

This is one of the first sights that greets you after you enter Jasper National Park from the east entrance. Roche Miette is to the south (on your left) and Pyramid Mountain is directly in front of you. At this location there is a pullout and you have a very good chance of seeing a herd of bighorn sheep.

Directly after my trip to Bilbao I spent a day in Hamburg with a friend of mine. We had great fun photographing some stairs.

💯% hand held shot and directly from camera

no editing 🙏

Gerbera

Barberton daisy

Gerbera are an excellent air-purifying houseplant, according to NASA's 'Clean Air Study', conducted in 1989. They found that the plant can remove high levels of Benzene, Formaldehyde and Trichloroethylene from the atmosphere.

Le Martin-pêcheur d'Europe (Alcedo atthis) (Kingfisher) est une espèce d'oiseau, espèce type de la famille des Alcedinidae.

Cet oiseau est un bon indicateur naturel de la qualité d'un milieu aquatique.

 

C'est un oiseau qui se nourrit de petits poissons et de petits animaux aquatiques. C'est pourquoi il vit à proximité des étendues d'eau, où il peut se nourrir en abondance. Sa proie repérée, généralement depuis un perchoir, il plonge en percutant violemment la surface de l'eau, l'attrape, puis l'avale tête la première dans le sens des écailles.

 

L'oiseau, très vivace, parcourt un circuit sur son territoire en se posant sur des perchoirs qu'il connaît, bien disposés pour guetter ses proies.

Si sa position est assez haute, il plonge en flèche directement.

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The kingfisher (Alcedo atthis) is a species of bird, a type species of the family Alcedinidae.

This bird is a good natural indicator of the quality of an aquatic environment.

 

It is a bird that feeds on small fish and small aquatic animals. This is why he lives near bodies of water, where he can eat in abundance. His prey spotted, usually from a perch, he dives violently striking the surface of the water, catches it, then swallows head first in the direction of the scales.

 

The bird, very vivacious, runs a circuit on its territory by landing on perches he knows, well prepared to watch his prey.

If his position is high enough, he dive directly.

A directly photographed scene.

 

C'est l'un de nos visiteurs d'été les plus communs et les plus répandus ; son arrivée précoce et son chant profond et flûté lui ont donné son surnom populaire de « rossignol de mars ». On confond parfois d'ailleurs le magnifique chant de la fauvette à tête noire avec celui du rossignol. L'oiseau est caché dans le feuillage, mais d'un rapide coup d'œil on reconnaît la tête noire de la fauvette. Pendant la saison de reproduction, elle préfère les buissons épais, avec des petits arbustes ou de petits arbres. Après la saison de la reproduction, les fauvettes à tête noire, en route pour le sud, traversent les jardins. Elle visite les jardins à l'occasion, surtout ceux proches d'espaces broussailleux. La fauvette à tête noire visitera davantage nos jardins en hiver, surtout pendant une période de neige et de glace, pour rechercher la nourriture. Les oiseaux d'hiver commencent à arriver à la fin de l'automne, avec un pic de décembre à février.

 

Image prise derrière un filet de camouflage et dans un milieu naturel .

 

PS : Un grand merci à toutes celles et ceux qui choisissent de regarder , de commenter et d'aimer mes photos . C'est très apprécié , comme vous l'avez constaté , je ne répond plus directement suite à votre commentaire juste pour dire en fait " merci et bonne journée " , mais en retour je passe laisser une petite trace chez vous sur une ou plusieurs de vos éditions .

 

******************************************************************

 

He is one of our most common and widespread summer visitors; his early arrival and his deep, flute song gave him his popular nickname "nightingale of March". We sometimes confuse the magnificent song of the black-headed warbler with that of the nightingale. The bird is hidden in the foliage, but at a quick glance we recognize the black head of the warbler. During the breeding season, it prefers thick bushes, with small shrubs or small trees. After the breeding season, the warblers, on their way to the south, cross the gardens. She visits the gardens from time to time, especially those near brushy areas. The black-headed warbler will visit our gardens more in winter, especially during a period of snow and ice, to search for food. Winter birds start arriving in late fall, peaking from December to February.

 

Image taken behind a camouflage net and in a natural environment.

 

PS: A big thank you to all those who choose to look at, comment on and like my photos. It is very appreciated, as you have noticed, I no longer respond directly to your comment just to say in fact "thank you and have a good day", but in return I will leave a small trace with you on one or more your editions.

Directly above the "Gosausee", this rock climb allows you to enjoy stunning views of the majestic Dachstein - throughout the whole day.

A result of a bike ride to a nerby field - poppies were scarce but I found some - there were maybe ten in the field but the number does not equal quality.

 

I like the sunset a lot and decided to hide the sun directly behind the petals of the poppy. To enhance the image I used a Hitech soft 0.6 stop gradual ND filter and added some delicate touches in RawTherapee. I guess PS is too much for me. ;-)

 

I started expermenting with an ND filter so more goodies to come soon. Hopefully today I will upload my first (not the first one in general but the first I am happy with) result of romancing with that filter.

 

Have a great day everyone and thank you all for faves and possibly comments.

 

A little disclaimer: Visitors, please be reminded that my photos are copyright and you cannot use it on any media without my written permision.

Looking directly south at sunset near Harrow, Ontario.

The indistinct islands are distorted due to distance and differences in air temperatures.

Directly at the front of this Zen Buddhist temple (菩提禅寺) is the Hall Of The Heavenly King (天王殿) in the center of this photo.

 

Anting Town (安亭镇) in the far west of Shanghai Municipality may be better known as the home of Shanghai Volkswagen or the Shanghai F1 track.

 

© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.

A rather grainy image, taken at 600mm directly into the sun, which was setting over the moors and the distinctive outcrop of Over Owler Tor near Hathersage, Derbyshire. This was taken from the trail passing over Houndkirk Moor.

A sunset without looking directly at it.

Directly across Siena's Piazza del Duomo from the cathedral itself sits the rather nondiscript museum complex of Santa Maria della Scala, formerly one of Europe's first hospitals (dating back to at least the 11th century). This chapel was built during the 13th century as an addition to the hospital complex. The alter fresco by Sebastiano Conca, titled "Piscina Probatica" was unveiled in 1732.

"We should protect wildlife because directly or indirectly our life depends on them!

 

Peaceful World Wildlife Day!

 

Much more information about World Wildlife Day 2023!

 

Wildebeest / Gnus (Connochaetes gnou) and plains zebras / Steppenzebras (Equus quagga)

in Serengeti N.P., Tanzania

 

Chihuly Garden and Glass is an exhibit in the Seattle Center directly next to the Space Needle, showcasing the studio glass of Dale Chihuly. It opened in May 2012 at the former site of the defunct Fun Forest amusement park.[1][2]

 

The project features three primary components: the Garden, the Glasshouse, and the Interior Exhibits, with significant secondary spaces including a 90-seat café with additional outdoor dining, a 50-seat multi-use theater and lecture space, retail and lobby spaces, and extensive public site enhancements beyond the Garden.[3] The 100-foot-long installation inside of the Glasshouse is one of Chihuly's largest suspended sculptures.[4] Designed with the help of architect Owen Richards, the facility was awarded LEED silver certification from the USGBC.[5]

 

Note: I always enjoy his glasswork. This time we had a chance to visit such, I'd say I've seen 80% of his collection at the garden in two exhibitions held at NY Botanic Gardens in 2006 and 2017. However, tt was a very delightful visit of such, to say the least. Our hotel was right across street from the "MoPoP", the Space Needle Center & Chihuly Garden & Glass. So, I got more time to photography to my heart content :-))

Fresh seafood sales, directly off the fishing boats docked at Steveston Fisherman's Wharf

 

Steveston Harbour is situated on the banks of the Fraser River

Richmond, BC

Canada

 

Definitely one of British Columbia's best kept secrets.

 

If you enjoy quaint fishing villages, combined with light and vibrant colours, I am pleased to extend an invitation for you to browse through my.... 'I 💖 Steveston album'

 

www.flickr.com/photos/120552517@N03/albums/72157677404584764

  

Thank-you for all the overwhelming support and many friendships. Wishing you all good health.

 

Happy Clicks,

Christie ( happiest ) by the River

 

**Images best experienced in full screen

Sintiklia

Hair Kendra

4 styles

in fitted version only

  

Limited Addiction - Did You Die

includes top, skirt, belt, arm bands, and bracelets.

Fitted for Maitreya, Legacy, and Reborn

  

hairpins have hud&tint option

bangs come in unrigged version as well.

 

all info in the blog

 

blog

Half of the red tulips look red-yellow because of midday sunlight falling directly on the red tulips. Overall appearance is beautiful !

Instead of driving directly from Abbeville to Blonville Sur Mer we made a side trip to visit Jumièges Abbey. I am glad we did it's a remarkable ruin that sits in one of the bends of the River Seine west of Rouen . I particularly liked the delicate towers that reminded me of buildings I have seen it Italy . It has quite a history too.

The abbey was founded in 654 on a gift of forested land belonging to the royal family presented by Clovis II and his queen, Balthild. Under the second abbot, Saint Achard, Jumièges prospered and soon numbered nearly a thousand monks.

In the ninth century it was pillaged and burnt to the ground by the Vikings, but was rebuilt on a grander scale by William Longespee, Duke of Normandy. A new church was consecrated in 1067 in the presence of William the Conqueror.

Enjoying the patronage of the dukes of Normandy, the abbey became a great centre of religion and learning, its schools producing, amongst many other scholars, the national historian, William of Jumièges. It reached the zenith of its fame about the eleventh century, and was regarded as a model for all the monasteries of the province.

The church was enlarged in 1256, and again restored in 1573.

The fortunes of the abbey suffered somewhat through the English invasion of the fifteenth century, but it recovered and maintained its prosperity and high position until the whole province was devastated by the Huguenots during the Wars of Religion.

The French Revolution, ended its existence as a monastery, leaving only impressive ruins. These comprise the church, with its beautiful twin towers and western façade, and portions of the cloisters and library, the contents of which were removed to Rouen when the abbey was dissolved. In the middle of the former cloister, there is still a 500-year-old yew tree.

 

THANKS FOR YOUR VISIT TO MY STREAM.

I WOULD BE VERY GRATEFUL IF YOU COULD NOT FAVE A PHOTO

WITHOUT ALSO LEAVING A COMMENT .

 

The morning fog had burned off the valley as I headed east on CA 58 towards Tehachapi, Bakersfield behind me. I wasn't sure how this would come out, the sun was above and directly in front of me, so bumped up the contrast and used my slightly tented windshield and fast shutter to reduce the brightness. Also luck to find one of the few spots on this steep climb big enough to pull my rig off the roadway.

Looking directly West across North Wales from dock side in Connah's Quay.

 

The River Dee on an incoming tide, The Flintshire Bridge, Connah's Quay power station and beyond to sunnier climes. The old coast road. Imagine what that road would be like now if the A55 wasn't there!

A Palm Warbler on a ragweed with the sun directly behind it. Dixon Meadow Preserve - Dixon Meadow House, Lafayette Hill PA.

Crab, Prawn, Shrimp Boat?

 

A wonderful place to buy fresh seafood right directly from the fish sales float. Seasonal choses of fish like salmon, crab, shrimp and spot prawns.

 

False Creek - Blue hour

Vancouver

British Columbia,

Canada

  

False Creek is a short inlet in the heart of Vancouver. It separates downtown from the rest of the city. It was named by George Henry Richards during his Hydrographic survey of 1856-63. George Richards named False Creek during his survey of the coast in the mid-19th century. While traveling along the south side of the Burrard Inlet, he thought he was traversing a creek; upon discovering his error, he gave the waterway its modern name. Wikipedia

  

Thank-you for all the overwhelming support and many friendships. Wishing you all health during this difficult time.

Stay Healthy.

 

Happy New Year

~Christie

  

**Best experienced in full screen

One of the most iconic and popular locations in the Dolomites, Baita Segantini lies directly in front of the highest summits of this awesome mountain range, rewarding hikers with unparalleled views over the Pale di San Martino's northern chain. Even on an overcast day...

An osprey lifts off from the water with its catch.

I found this quite a tricky image to capture and process. While photographing ospreys over two days I only had two chances to capture this wing clap shot with the osprey flying directly towards the camera. The fine spray coming up in front of the bird's face and wings, which I have tried to tone down in processing, also means that the shot is not as sharp and clear on the wings as I would like.

Taken at the hides operated by Gordon Macleod in the Cairngorms, Scotland.

Our goal, directly below the Kurobe Dam. Altitude about 1,300 m. We were able to reach the goal safely, and we were relieved and tired all at once. From now on we have climbed a 186 meter dam.

 

Kurobe Gorge, Northern Alps, Toyama Prefecture, Japan, Our great adventure with my best friend, September 1975.

 

Kurobe Gorge is one of the three major valleys in Japan. We went up from Keyakidaira (Zelkova flat) to Kuro-yon-dam (Kurobe No. 4 Dam) in a 30 km valley called the Shimonorouka (Lower corridor) in 3days and 2night.

Fresh seafood sales, directly off the fishing boats docked at Steveston Fisherman's Wharf

 

Sea Urchin - hand picked by divers.

 

youtu.be/XcyUe_GWG_A

  

The scenic, Steveston Heritage Fishing Village is a charming & ever so romantic fishing village that is situated in Richmond BC on the Mighty Fraser River

 

Canada Largest Fishing Harbour

 

Definitely one of British Columbia's best kept secrets.

 

If you enjoy quaint fishing villages, combined with light and vibrant colours, I am pleased to extend an invitation for you to browse through my.... 'I 💖 Steveston album'

 

www.flickr.com/photos/120552517@N03/albums/72157677404584764

  

Thank-you for all the overwhelming support and many friendships. Wishing you all good health.

 

Happy Clicks,

Christie ( happiest ) by the River

 

**Images best experienced in full screen

Directly from camera, unedited.

Part of this abstract study.

 

see also:

Camera Toss (group)

Camera Toss (blog)

Two young birch trees are standing directly on the precipice and swaying back and forth to a melody that probably only they can hear. They froze in mid-movement.

Their branches are covered by a layer of ice and now, in front of the smokescreen, you can see them beautifully and in detail. A real feast for the eyes.

Like the music of the birches, so is this photo. No epic landscape in grandiose light. no This picture comes along quietly, you have to take your time, get involved and let it sink in. And maybe you can hear the music after all.

 

Zwei Junge Birken stehen direkt am Abgrund und wiegen sich, nach einer Melodie, die wohl nur sie hören können, hin und her. Mitten in der Bewegung sind sie erstarrt.

Ihre Äste sind von einer Eisschicht überzogen und nun, vor der Nebelwand wundervoll und detailliert zu sehen. Eine wahre Augenweide.

So wie die Musik der Birken, so ist auch dieses Foto. Keine epische Landschaft bei grandiosem Licht. Nein. Diese Bild kommt leise daher, man muss sich dafür Zeit nehmen, sich darauf einlassen und es wirken lassen. Und vielleicht könnt ihr die Musik ja doch hören.

 

more of this on my website at: www.shoot-to-catch.de

A directly photographed scene. I found this gentleman sitting on the dock post and found his face intriguing with beautiful eye color.

 

Cycads are seed plants with a very long fossil history that were formerly more abundant and more diverse than they are today.They have a cylindrical trunk which usually does not branch. Leaves grow directly from the trunk, and typically fall when older, leaving a crown of leaves at the top. The leaves grow in a rosette form, with new foliage emerging from the top and center of the crown. The trunk may be buried, so the leaves appear to be emerging from the ground, so the plant appears to be a basal rosette. The leaves are generally large in proportion to the trunk size, and sometimes even larger than the trunk. The leaves are pinnate (in the form of bird feathers, pinnae), with a central leaf stalk from which parallel ribs emerge from each side of the stalk, perpendicular to it. The leaves are typically either compound (the leaf stalk has leaflets emerging from it as ribs, or have edges (margins) so deeply cut (incised) so as to appear compound. Some species have leaves that are bipinnate, which means the leaflets each have their own subleaflets, growing in the same form on the leaflet as the leaflets grow on the stalk of the leaf (self-similar geometry). 26357

Focussed directly into the Heart

From where the Beauty is said to start

To make it look like floral Art

Abstracts may or may not look smart

It’s all up to the Eyes of the Beholder

After you allowed Emotions pass over ….

(Caren)

 

[Dedicated to CRA (ILYWAMHASAM)]

 

😄 HaPpY Sliders Sunday 😄

 

Edited with the Windows Photo Editor

Tweeked saturation to the max and added a Vignette

 

Uploaded for the group Sliders Sunday

Panasonic Lumix DMCFZ-200

ƒ/2.8

108.0 mm

1/125 Sec

ISO 200

 

[Text and image copyright Caren (©all rights reserved)]

please respect my ©copyright : Do not use any image or text without my previous written authorization, NOT even in social networks. If you want to use a photograph, please contact me!

Bitte mein ©Copyright beachten!

Meine Fotos und Texte sind ©copyright geschützt (alle Rechte vorbehalten) und dürfen ohne meine vorherige und schriftliche Zustimmung NICHT von Dritten verwendet werden, auch nicht in sozialen Netzwerken. Falls Interesse an einem Foto besteht, bitte ich um Kontaktaufnahme

ENG: This new building is located directly on Stralauer Platz behind the Schulz Hotel in Berlin's Friedrichshain district. Once again a residential building that offers only condominium, but for this the residents have a fantastic view of the Spree river and the East Side Gallery. Currently, this place with its perspective is a real photo hotspot.

 

 

GER: Direkt am Stralauer Platz und hinter dem Schulz-Hotel im Berliner Ortsteil Friedrichshain befindet sich dieser Neubau. Mal wieder ein Wohnhaus das nur Eigentumswohnung bietet, aber dafür haben die Bewohner einen fantastischen Blick auf die Spree sowie der East-Side-Gallery. Aktuell ist dieser Ort mit seiner Perspektive ein richtiger Foto Hotspot.

Pedra da Gávea is a monolithic mountain in Tijuca Forest, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Composed of granite and gneiss, its elevation is 844 metres (2,769 ft), making it one of the highest mountains in the world that ends directly in the ocean. Trails on the mountain were opened up by the local farming population in the early 1800s; today, the site is under the administration of the Tijuca National Park.

 

The mountain's name translates as Rock of the Topsail, and was given to it during the expedition of Captain Gaspar de Lemos, begun in 1501, and in which the Rio de Janeiro bay (today Guanabara Bay, but after which the city was named) also received its name. The mountain, one of the first in Brazil to be named in Portuguese, was named by the expedition's sailors, who compared its silhouette to that of the shape of a topsail of a carrack upon sighting it on January 1, 1502. That name in turn came to be given to the Gávea area of the city of Rio de Janeiro.

 

Differential weathering on one side of the rock has created what is described as a stylized human face. Markings on another face of the rock have been described as an inscription. Geologists and scientists are nearly in agreement that the "inscription" is the result of erosion and that the "face" is a product of pareidolia. Furthermore, the consensus of archaeologists and scholars in Brazil is that the mountain should not be viewed as an archaeological site.

Before the sun shone directly on the water in the morning and outshone it, I "played" a bit with exposure times and details.

 

The water has such a high falling speed that 1/8 to 1/10 exposure time is sufficient to make it soft and yet with a certain movement.

 

Danke für deinen Besuch! Thanks for visiting!

bitte beachte/ please respect Copyright © All rights reserved.

Up close with an Australian icon. The Redback Spider (Latrodectus hasselti), feared by early settlers, was historically responsible for 12 deaths . An antivenom has been available since 1956, and there have been no deaths directly due to redback bites since its introduction. The female spider, as seen in this shot, is much larger then its male counterpart and has the distinctive red stripe on its abdomen. The female 'digests' the male during a successful mating process, which seems to be unique to Latrodectus hasselti. Females reach around 1 cm in size while males are 3-4 mm when mature. Shot was taken with a 100mm macro lens. NSW, Australia

 

www.robertdowniephotography.com

Love Life, Love Photography

I shot this photo from directly underneath the central tower in Lincoln Cathedral, England. It looks almost like a painting on the ceiling but, if you look closely, you can see the double rows of internal arches and the vaults that hold up the roof of the tower.

 

Although the building of the cathedral started in 1072, the current central tower dates from the 13th century following the collapse of the original tower in 1237. Between 1307 and 1311 the central tower was raised to its present height of 271 feet (83 m). At this time, a tall lead-encased wooden spire topped the tower but this was blown down in a storm in 1548. With its spire, the tower reputedly reached a height of 525 feet (160 m) which would have made it the world's tallest structure at the time, surpassing the Great Pyramid of Giza, which had held the record for almost 4,000 years.

 

Ref: en.wikipedia.org

 

thursday is the day before the day before weekend... :=))

 

another icy detail directly seen lippeside... :=)))

“Color directly influences the soul. Color is the keyboard, the eyes are the hammers, the soul is the piano with many strings. The artist is the hand that plays, touching one key or another purposively, to cause vibrations in the soul.”

 

― Wassily Kandinsky, Concerning the Spiritual in Art

 

Credits . . .

  

“She looked directly up into the Northern Lights and she wondered if those cold-burning specters might not draw her breath, her very soul, out of her chest and into the stars.” – Eowyn Ivey

  

This is just one part of Pillnitz Palace & Park: the Fliederhof.

Located directly on the Elbe and just a few kilometers outside Dresden's city center, a pleasure garden is bordered by three palaces. The Fliederhof borders on the outside of the central Neues Palais. It is named after the 120 tall Chinese lilac trees that have been planted here since 1860.

The entire complex is the former summer residence of the Saxon royal family.

 

Fliederhof von Schloss Pillnitz

 

Das ist nur ein Teil von Schloss & Park Pillnitz: der Fliederhof.

Direkt an der Elbe gelegen und nur wenige Kilometer außerhalb des Dresdner Stadtzentrums wird ein Lustgarten von drei Palais begrenzt. Der Fliederhof grenzt an die Außenseite des mittigen Neuen Palais. Benannt ist er nach den hier seit 1860 angepflanzten 120 hochstämmigen Chinesischen Fliederbäumen.

Die ganze Anlage ist die einstigen Sommerresidenz des sächsischen Königshauses.

Directly located at the lake Malchiner See the architectural ensemble castle Basedow can be found. It may be unique in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern with its manor house, the extensive landscape park, the estate buildings and the village forming a harmonic unit.

My project continues on Camogli, a small village overlooking the Ligurian sea.

I strongly wanted this image by photographing directly on the waves of the sea that wet my ankles.

Camogli is a few kilometers from the city of Genoa, it is a place that takes your breath away from how beautiful it is. Its colorful houses overlook the sea, its small beaches full of stones, its church on a strip of land where the sea begins, its small marina with the characteristic boats with vibrant colors and its small lighthouse that despite severe storms withstands alone indicating the route for sailors. Camogli is one of those places to always return to. Its sea full of white foam breaks on the delightful sandy and pebbly beach and poetically frames this splendid seaside village. The project I have been pursuing for some time aims to enhance the beauty of eastern Liguria. Many places that I had the pleasure of being able to photograph have been repeatedly seen and photographed. I think that to carry out an important project it is necessary to address the same topic several times during the year. Each time a different sky and a different sea, and it does not matter if the weather conditions are not always optimal. For better or for worse we have to accept what nature offers us.

 

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