View allAll Photos Tagged ENTRANCE_EXIT

Canon 6D

35mm 1.4L USM lens

Edited with Affinity

See Entrance/Exit picture for follow up.

Berlin, Germany – 2014, June 01

 

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© 2019 Markus Lehr

Tsugaike Hütte is a landmark located at the entrance/exit to/from the marshes. This is the last photo of the Tsugaike marshland in September.

 

Autumn colour of shrubs surrounding the marshes was the protagonist in September inheriting the role from the blooming herbs in spring and summer.

The bright reflected light on the tiled outdoor flooring of the Library, first caught my attention. I then tried to line it up the shadowed area that angles on the outside facade. Together, golden light, and lines combined to create an interesting geometry. Then it was a matter of waiting for a person to cross the center of my net of angles. This is the North entrance/exit of the Library and it too offered an interesting array of lines, light, and shadows.

 

www.photographycoach.ca/

ROKIN, Metro Entrance / Exit

Canary Wharf. Done before but edited in B&W this time.

The Taj at sunrise seen through the Iwan main portal of Kau Ban mosque. The mosque provides the place of worship near the mausoleum the Taj is, as required according to Islamic law. Built in red sandstone with white marble inlay it is a spectacularly beautiful building in it's own right, enhancing the splendour of the Taj Mahal complex.

 

© All rights reserved. Please do not use my images and text without prior written permission.

(Latin: Gate; entrance or exit)

Artist: Ken Raff

Wodonga VIC

Every gate is leading you somewhere. I do not see where this would be taking me, but I do not have the key anyway. Thus I guess it does not matter.

Happy Fence Friday

A double exposure of the exit from Cobden Chambers, Nottingham. © All Rights Reserved.

Canon 6D

35mm 1.4 L USM lens

Edited with Affinity Photo

Such as we find the light.

Estació de França - Barcelona

 

After visiting Sitka Sedge Natural Wildlife area, I got in the car and was at the exit, waiting for a break in traffic, when I spotted this Brewer's Blackbird on the ground near the entrance/exit. I grabbed the camera and took yet a few more shots of the wildlife of the Nature area.

Hart Park

Bakersfield, CA - USA

Scaffolders yard gates.

 

LR3910 © Joe O' Malley 2020

#52 Weeks: the 2022 edition

#Week 15: Black and white landscape

 

An oblique aerial view of the entrance/exit to Baragoot Lake, an estuarine lagoon on the NSW Far South Coast. The character of the connection with the sea is an expression of three variables: fresh water discharge from the land; wave power; and tidal forces. The entrance is usually closed at this site due to the dominance of the waves that readily construct a sandy barrier beach. However, after persistent and heavy rainfall, that barrier can be broached by freshwater outflow, with tidal currents then able to maintain an open channel until wave power becomes dominant again.

my friends already know how fond I am of Norwegian tunnel crossings. well here is anotehr one, which I loved because of the marked use of cold and warm light in the transitions from tunnel entrance/exit to the inner parts of the tunnel.

Another gate at the end of a fence. Enter or do not enter, this is yours to decide. I think I am going in. Just a bit. Just to say that I was in there. Not to get into trouble. Just to be there for a brief moment.

Happy Fence Friday and remember, it is garbage day somewhere.

At the entrance/exit to the Kondalilla National Park. It is a steep climb back up to the car park and this is a most welcome bench.

It will be great to be able to walk there again.

State Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk announced that Queenslanders will finally be freed to go for a drive, sit at the beach, have a picnic, visit a national park and shop for non-essential items from midnight on Friday after weeks of restrictions.

 

Santa María del Mar - entrada & salida del/al Passeig de Born

Barcelona

 

Lobby of the Royal York Hotel (Fairmount)

The Fairmont Royal York, formerly and commonly known as the Royal York, is a large historic luxury hotel on 100 Front Street West. The hotel is situated within Downtown Toronto, at the southern end of the Financial District. The Royal York was designed by Ross and Macdonald, in association with Sproatt and Rolph, and built by the Canadian Pacific Railway. The hotel is presently managed by Fairmont Hotels and Resorts.

 

.. or a momentary laps of reason .. www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ykz6w2ldoFw .. found on a cool city photo walk with phyllographer .. enjoy :)

One more shot from our recent trip to Domburg, Zeeland. This is a spot where you usually don't go, cause it is located in a natural Reserve called Oranjezon and can only be reached via one entrance/exit. You wouldn't expect to find a place like this behind the dunes. What a beautiful place.

From my series, 'The Way Out, council estate escape routes.

 

Glass brick's a'plenty.

 

LR4184 © Joe O'Malley 2021

and life out there...

View seen while driving out of a city car park entrance. The green traffic light is mounted high inside the roller door of the carpark, while the signs are on the brick building across the street.

Another fence along my travels. Okay a gate that is attached to a fence. I would argue that a gate is sort of a fence. Many things can be a fence. A barrier or guard. Sometimes there are some cows in here. Today there were not.

Happy Fence Friday

Red Square

 

is a city square in Moscow, Russia.

The square separates the Kremlin, the former royal citadel and currently the official residence of the President of Russia, from a historic merchant quarter known as Kitai-gorod.

 

As major streets of Moscow radiate from here in all directions, being promoted to major highways outside the city, Red Square is often considered the central square of Moscow and all of Russia.

@Wikipedia

Depends which way you are going - it is coming up to lunchtime so we are about to exit through the arch .

This is Lacock Abbey in Wiltshire .

Lacock Abbey in the village of Lacock, Wiltshire, England, was founded in the early 13th century by Ela, Countess of Salisbury, as a nunnery of the Augustinian order. The abbey remained a nunnery until the suppression of Roman Catholic institutions in England in the 16th century; it was then sold to Sir William Sharington who converted the convent into a residence where he and his family lived. It was fortified and remained loyal to the crown during the English Civil War, but surrendered to the Parliamentary forces once Devizes had fallen in 1645.

 

The house was built over the old cloisters and its main rooms are on the first floor. It is a stone house with stone slated roofs, twisted chimney stacks and mullioned windows. Throughout the life of the building, many architectural alterations, additions, and renovations have occurred so that the house is a mish-mash of different periods and styles. The Tudor stable courtyard to the north of the house has retained many of its original features including the brewhouse and bakehouse.

 

The house later passed into the hands of the Talbot family, and during the 19th century was the residence of William Henry Fox Talbot. In 1835 he made what may be the earliest surviving photographic camera negative, an image of one of the windows.

 

In 1944 artist Matilda Theresa Talbot gave the house and the surrounding village of Lacock to the National Trust. The abbey houses the Fox Talbot Museum, devoted to the pioneering work of William Talbot in the field of photography. The Trust markets the abbey and village together as "Lacock Abbey, Fox Talbot Museum & Village". The abbey is a Grade I listed building, having been so designated on 20 December 1960.

This little lamb was in front of us as we were going out by the gate it's Mother is nearby trying to get back to higher ground with the lamb.

The entrance / exit gate is very secure so they are safe from the nearby road.

We looked back and they were both heading in the right direction 🐑🐏🐑

Took this while we where in Christchurch visiting the in-laws over Easter weekend.

This is another photo taken in the park of the palace at Ludwigsburg. The stairs lead to the main entrance/exit of the park and usually people take photos of the palace from there. Again I tried a new perspective and took a photo of the stairs themselves. It was afternoon, about an hour before sunset, but the sun was already quite low.

So quiet and still at Aberdeen Harbour. I think we all like that blue hour just before it gets dark. This view is taken from Victoria Bridge just on entrance/exit to Torry.

Industrial estate.

 

LR4153 © Joe O'Malley 2021

The two Dovercourt lighthouses, currently at risk of dereliction.

 

Built 1862/3, major repairs 1985/88, now in need of urgent restoration.

 

LR3628

Old northern entrance/exit to the tram tunnel which linked North and South London from 1906, closing in 1952. You can join guided tours of the tunnel and subterranean station, but at £49 each for one hour it seems very expensive. One for hardcore transport nerds only.

At the red bridge entrance/exit of Singapore Chinese Garden.

 

The long-tailed macaque seemed to be waving a foot to say goodbye to people leaving the garden. (Zoom in to see the foot between the hands.)

 

Long Tailed Macaque at Red Bridge

Weeping Beech & Wheelie Bins.

 

LR4172 © Joe O'Malley 2021

(Latin: Gate; entrance or exit)

Artist: Ken Raff

Wodonga VIC

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