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REBORN by eBODY v1.69.6 ♥

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Ecru Couture - Mila @eBody REBORN Event October 2023 ♥

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shot with a yashica FX-D quartz and a kodak TriX 400 pushed to 800

Waiting for Hurricane Irene.

 

Part of the Before Irene series.

There was no expectation to see and moving trains, but upon my arrival into Trout Lake, the local was starting to make a move out of town starting with this move turning the motor around by taking the swtich from the Manistique to Newberry Subdivision - the former Duluth, South Shore & Atlantic.

New Expectation --- Pentax K5+Pentax AKsmc 210mm/4 ---

I reckon of all the car wrecks I've stumbled across over the years, this was one of the most unexpected. A 1970s Japanese saloon car, that wasn't even that common when it was released.

انتظار

نگریستن به یک در بسته نیست

...

Expectation is not a look to closed door!

 

Rolleiflex 2.8F

Ilford HP5+

Taken at Sunny's Photo Studio,

Pose: Anime

기도 (prayer) & 기대 (expectation)

I glance over at this field as I'm driving to the swimming pool early in the morning. I see amazing trees isolated in a frosty field, surrounded by mist. I finally found a place to stop. The reality was a little different, with an overgrown "hedge" and a 3' wide ditch, so the view across the fields wasn't accessible unless I clambered across. I suspect I'd have fallen in!

Just showed me that our eyes are very selective when they spy something along the side of the road, conveniently forgetting all the things in the way.

The Brickell Avenue Bridge is a bascule bridge in Downtown Miami, Florida, that carries U.S. Route 1 (US 1; Brickell Avenue) over the Miami River.

 

The original Brickell Avenue Bridge was built in 1929 and replaced in 1995. The Brickell Avenue Bridge was widened by one additional northbound lane in 2006 to reduce the traffic bottleneck through downtown. Before this, there were three southbound but only two northbound lanes. Currently, there are three lanes in each direction as well as a pedestrian walkway on both sides. Still, the bridge causes frequent traffic delays on the busy Brickell Avenue when it opens. According to the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT), the bridge opened 4,990 times in 2010.

 

The statue is a 53-foot bronze monument commissioned by the Florida Department of Transportation and created by Cuban Master Sculptor Manuel Carbonell in 1995. The "Pillar of History" consists of a 36-foot high carved bas-relief column that graphically narrates the lives of the Tequesta Indians, Miami's first inhabitants, and features 158 figures. At the top stands a 17-foot bronze sculpture, "Tequesta Family" portraying a Tequesta Indian warrior aiming an arrow to the sky, looking for space in eternity, with his wife and child by his side, while the son covers his face in expectation of their extinction.

 

Carbonell also created four bas reliefs, measuring 4-feet by 8-feet, which were installed in niches on the bridge's supporting piers. Each relief honors Miami's early founders and pioneers - William and Mary Brickell, Henry Flagler, Marjory Stoneman Douglas, and Julia Tuttle.

 

Credit for the data above is given to the following website:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brickell_Avenue_Bridge

 

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

Despite of my expectation, the weather was quite bad when I arrived to the famous Jokulsarlon in Iceland. Low clouds, iceberg entirely surrounded by the fog, rain and poor visibility (Basic icelandic weather so…). After waiting 2 hours, the visibility improved a little bit, with sometimes a very shy sunray to warm the place and create a foggy atmosphere at the surface around the floating iceberg

 

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Canon EOS 5D Mark III + EF24-105mm f/4L IS USM @105MM, 1/320, ISO50, f/6.3

  

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A flat white Aventador hauling ass like no one's business.

This is a norm of spotting in London.

Soon this road will scrounge with road warriors.

full of expectation & hope

Great expectation from the crowd to get a glimpse, receive a smile or to make a "selfie" with their favorite heroes of todays World Tour Professional Cycling.

Gran afluencia del público para poder ver, recibir una sonrisa o tener la oportunidad de hacerse un "selfie" con sus heroes favoritos del World Tour de Ciclismo Profesional.

Bilder fångade i Kristianstad/ Images captured in Kristianstad

He's Syrian child who's waiting to return home in Tal Abyad after the ISIS taken the control of the city.

I've taken this photo few days after ISIS leaves Tal Abyad, here's the story on the BBC: www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-33329308

 

For unreleased photos of my Syrian reportage: www.giuliomagnifico.it/syriaturkey-border-2015/

 

Thanks for your comments and favs!

Apple blossom expectations...!

Sometimes we create our own heartbreaks through expectation.

~Unknown

davao city, philippines

 

Copyright © Paojus Alquiza. All rights reserved. Please note that the fact that "This photo is public" doesn't mean it is public domain or a free stock image. Therefore, its use without written consent by the author is illegal and punished by law.

The Brickell Avenue Bridge is a bascule bridge in Downtown Miami, Florida, that carries U.S. Route 1 (US 1; Brickell Avenue) over the Miami River.

 

The original Brickell Avenue Bridge was built in 1929 and replaced in 1995. The Brickell Avenue Bridge was widened by one additional northbound lane in 2006 to reduce the traffic bottleneck through downtown. Before this, there were three southbound but only two northbound lanes. Currently, there are three lanes in each direction as well as a pedestrian walkway on both sides. Still, the bridge causes frequent traffic delays on the busy Brickell Avenue when it opens. According to the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT), the bridge opened 4,990 times in 2010.

 

The statue is a 53-foot bronze monument commissioned by the Florida Department of Transportation and created by Cuban Master Sculptor Manuel Carbonell in 1995. The "Pillar of History" consists of a 36-foot high carved bas-relief column that graphically narrates the lives of the Tequesta Indians, Miami's first inhabitants, and features 158 figures. At the top stands a 17-foot bronze sculpture, "Tequesta Family" portraying a Tequesta Indian warrior aiming an arrow to the sky, looking for space in eternity, with his wife and child by his side, while the son covers his face in expectation of their extinction.

 

Carbonell also created four bas reliefs, measuring 4-feet by 8-feet, which were installed in niches on the bridge's supporting piers. Each relief honors Miami's early founders and pioneers - William and Mary Brickell, Henry Flagler, Marjory Stoneman Douglas, and Julia Tuttle.

 

Credit for the data above is given to the following website:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brickell_Avenue_Bridge

 

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

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