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{Le'La}
LeLa - Ottavia Outfit
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Had great fun yesterday on a lonely beach in great conditions. A strong wind kept the clouds changing, and the low early light soon became a gorgeous sunny day. I left with a camera full of fun. No need to explain , by Augustines, is fine, even though I've tried. This is an obvious simple reflection, with a convenient small patch of shadow, blocking out my shadow. If you wait long enough these things happen.
NEW!! Poses By TOUCH MIA - Color My World
NOW Available
and on
Demo Poses In-World!
Please read notecard as it explains three versions of buckets and some of the daisy stuff! ♥
Domicile, Duhamel, Québec, Canada
Merci énormément pour vos commentaires, ils sont toujours très appréciés.
Cliquer pour agrandir.
Parmi tous les visiteurs qui fréquentent l'année durant mon petit paradis dans la nature la Corneille d'Amérique est parmi les plus régulières. Elle est très intelligente et possède un sens de l'odorat et une vue parmi les meilleurs de la forêt. Elle est la première à trouver une carcasse en forêt et sur les routes. Farouches de nature, elles sont si intelligentes qu'elle peu être appelée oui appeler... Je m'explique. Il y a quelques années, alors que je visitais ma jeune sœur à l'île du Prince Édouard, cette dernière m'a bien démontré qu'elles les appelaient, elle déposait sur la rampe de son balcon des bouts de pain et les appelaient... Elles arrivaient infailliblement au grand désarroi de mon beau-frère qui trouvait que les filandres qu'elles laissaient avant de décollée étaient très désagréables...
Pour ma part le petit couple qui fréquente mon terrain vient pour fouiner dans notre tas de compost et j'avoue qu'à l'occasion, je lance de petites retailles de viande éparpillés le terrain juste pour voir si elles les trouvent, infailliblement elle trouve la gâterie même sous la neige.
Ici elle est venue nous rendre visite sur les vieux bois de caribous que mon voisin avait mis au rebut et que j'ai installés il y a plus d'une quinzaine d'années comme perche tout au haut d'un triangle de perche de cèdre devant notre fenêtre de salle à manger et le lac en arrière-plan, comme si elle savait que nous quitterions bientôt ce paradis
Residence, Duhamel, Quebec, Canada
Thank you very much for your comments, they are always very much appreciated.
Click to enlarge.
Among all the visitors who frequent year round my little paradise in nature the American Crow is among the most regular. She is highly intelligent and has some of the best sense of smell and eyesight in the forest. She is the first to find a carcass in the forest and on the roadside. Fierce by nature, they are so intelligent that she can be called yes call... Let me explain. A few years ago, when I was visiting my younger sister in Prince Edward Island, she demonstrated to me that she could called them, she placed pieces of bread on the railing of her balcony and called them. .. They arrived slowly, much to the dismay of my brother-in-law, who found that the strings they left behind before taking off were very unpleasant...
For my part, the little couple who frequent my land come to poke around in our compost heap and I admit that on occasion, I throw small scraps of meat strewn over the land just to see if they find them, they always finds the treat even in the snow.
Here she came to visit us on the old caribou antlers which my neighbour had discarded and which I set up over fifteen years ago as a perch at the very top of a cedar perch triangle in front of our dining room window and the lake as background, as if she knew we would soon leave this paradise...
I think tattoos are a way to express yourself without words. Without having to explain yourself, people can look at your tattoos and see who you are.
~JODI MORGAN
Folks let me explain that if I forget to comment, fave which I do not do without a comment, or invite it is because sometimes my pain is unbearable that I cannot sit here at the computer for any length of time, so please forgive me and try to understand, much appreciated.
All I did was ask this guy for a piece and he took off like a shot. Just trying to not post so so many Hawks, but that is all we've been seeing on every trip out.
Thanks for visiting and thanks for understanding.
Another eagle was approaching rapidly off frame towards this eagle with its meal pulled from the river.
I have to explain that shot!!! this is not good.... :))))
Is Balea Lake! ...and there, on right is Cabana Balea!
This is a shot of mine of Cabana Balea! www.flickr.com/photos/alina-mihaela/5226132051/
Hello dear friends! :)
Thank you very much for your support and encouragement, for the good thoughts and beautiful comments!
Because of some problems with my left hand, I hardly manage to keep up with you, so I’ll post photos here rarely, until I’ll do better! That’s why my comments are fewer.
I really appreciate your work and I’m still admiring your photos!
I wish you a wonderful week, full of accomplishments, joy and love!
All the best to everyone!
To love and be loved every day!!!
Press L for better view!! :)
56091 makes its presence known hammering through frosty Daresbury with 4Z19 0800 Ravenhead Sidings to Chaddesden Yard empty box wagons. Could have done with it running half an hour later but beggars can't be choosers...!
This is the first time a DCR Class 56 has worked on this circuit and appeared because there was no Class 60 available; previously a DB Class 60 was hired in as and when required. The maintenance of the Class 60's has recently been transferred from Toton to Leicester (perhaps at the end of the warranty period) so this could explain the substitution.
Originally the path to return the empty wagons to Chaddesden Sidings was in the system for Tuesday but happily the 56 was required elsewhere so the train ran on Monday to coincide (for once) with a nice forecast.
Let me explain this one more time!
Location:
Pose:
Oduel - Play Ball (comes with bat)
Body:
Skin - theSkinnery Clara (Honey)
Outfit:
Seen in the Huntington Library Garden, San Marino, CA
The Ginkgo tree is famed for being a “living fossil”. There are Ginkgo specimens preserved in the rock record from 270 million years ago, in the Permian Period.
A Ginkgo is known to produce smart anti-insect arsenal - one set of chemicals to directly fight a pest, but also another set of compounds that specifically attract the insect’s enemies.
This perhaps explains its legendary resilience.
Tomorrow it's the turn of another guy.
Jardin Charles-Trenet on Rue Brillat-Savarin, Maison Blanche (13e)
Paris, France 31.05.2022
Der Welterklärer
Morgen ist ein anderer dran.
Jardin Charles-Trenet an der Rue Brillat-Savarin, Maison Blanche (13e)
Paris, Frankreich 31.05.2022
♥
I'm wearing..
Newphe - Olli Shirt -
Fatpack came with a lot of colors and stamps.
Rigged for Reborn and Waifu - Lara and LaraX and PetiteX - Legacy and Perky and Bombshell sizes.
At Mainstore: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Maribella/50/202/2350
♥
nothing to explain, except: zooming in may pay of ;) nr. 8 of "The missing Link. Mysterious stuff in cool tones"
langstertflap/long-tailed widowbird/euplectes progne
These male birds in their wedding suits makes them quite clumsy flyers but nevertheless still attractive for some females.
And for the sake of honesty, the flying one is the same bird as the sitting one, which cannot be explained by quantum physics.
It seems impossible to explain with words, so pictures help try to express how it feels to live this experience.
[image created on 4-24-2024]
I have become very fascinated by digital pinhole photography. This image was created with a modified pinhole body cap. I think I’m drawn to this type of photography because I feel it relates to my life and it seems to teach me far beyond photography. There are strict limitations that can drastically alter how images are captured and the final outcome of the photos, there is a lack of clarity compared to how I normally capture images with a lens, it’s difficult to predict exactly how the image will look and beauty and meaning can be found in the process and the final photo. It gives me a chance to practice embracing the unfamiliar, change, finding beauty in imperfection and growing in new ways. And the look of the images reminds me of how it feels when the effects of trauma cause me to question reality and myself, feel terror, feel isolated, alone, deep sadness, dissociation, body memories and a range of other indescribably challenging experiences. When my voice is stolen and I cannot speak or find adequate words to describe what I face I am thankful I can relate my experiences to what I see in pinhole photography rather than “keeping it all inside.”
____________________________
As a way to cope with circumstances beyond my control, survive and work to keep fighting for life I decided to try to take at least one photo (or more) each day. I call this “a photo (or more) a day.” Practicing this form of therapeutic photography helps me work to focus on the present moment, gives me something familiar and enjoyable to focus on as I use photography skills that have become like second-nature to me and being able to view the images I capture helps me recall what I was thinking, feeling and noticing at the moment when I created the photos. More of the photos from this series can be seen on my Instagram account
I may not always have the energy, time or capacity to share photos from this series—especially with the very challenging circumstances my family and I are experiencing—and will do my best to continue taking a photo (or more) a day even if I’m not able to share.
If you would like to support my work and my family, one way you can do so is by ordering my zines:
Many thanks for your support.
You will ask: ‘And where are the lilacs?
And the metaphysics covered with poppies?
And the rain that often beat down
filling its words
with holes and birds.’
To you I am going to tell all that happened to me.
I lived in a quarter
in Madrid, with bells
with clocks, with trees.
From there could be seen
the dry face of Castille
like a sea of leather.
My house was named
the house of the flowers, because everywhere
geraniums exploded: it was
a beautiful house
with dogs and little children.
Raúl, you agree?
You agree, Rafael?
Federico, you agree
beneath the earth,
you agree about my house with balconies where
the light of June drowned flowers in your mouth?
Pablo Neruda
Whimberly www.flickr.com/groups/3216736@N25/, Whimberly (149, 50, 26) - Adulto
I managed to get back in to an abandoned factory I thought was lost forever and was secured by fences and security guards. Now it seems all the guards have gone and the gates were wide open. And who am I to refuse another chance to visit an old favourite lightpainting haunt!?
The old factory in question was a refractories facility close to Matlock in Derbyshire, England. It's about a 40 mile drive from me so not exactly local and driving all that way only to be turned away by a security guard is not an option. Especially now since fuel for my batmobile is so expensive.
Inside the factory are wide open spaces with curved roofs and long narrow corridors. It's like a playground for lightpainters since there are so many places to shoot in.
Along the first floor is a long gallery or walkway with a cool roof supporting structure. This gallery has featured in my images from here quite a bit and last night we found ourselves up on the first floor again.
For this shot I set up a gelled flashgun at the rear of frame and asked the model, @inksurgeon to stand in the middle. We set off a smoke pellet to provide background seperation behind the subject. Once happy with the main part of the image, I replaced the lens cap without ending the exposure.
I then turned on a couple of tactically placed RGB LED cubes pointed at the steelwork. I then removed the lens cap and rotated the blue lit steel structure for a total of eight ways. The camera is rotated around the lens axis and I expose each segment for a couple of seconds before rotating the camera.
Possibly a bit complicated to explain to the non-lightpainter but I can say that this image was made in one photographic exposure.
when i showed hannah the photos i'd taken of her home, she took my hand and pulled me back over to this spot by her kitchen table. she told me that it meant a lot to her that I had chosen this as one of my six shots because it is her favorite thing in her entire home. she went on to explain to me what each piece meant. i could tell how happy it made her to share all of those priceless memories.
I am out of new shots for this series and am planning a return to take more. For now, thank you for visiting Hannah's home. ....yay I just found out that she told David's mom that she WANTS me to come take more :)
The more pictures I take, the less possible for me to explain in words why I want to take the picture.
This is not a quote. This is my own words.
This was taken at Waterfront station last weekend.
Have a great Thursday!
I cannot. A double-exposure, the first thing one would jump to, is out. How could the second exposure on the same frame just selectively put in the three rectangular images without all the surrounding details? Very weird. I cannot possibly explain it but maybe one of you can. This was not taken through a window. I was standing out on our balcony in the open air.
Yashica FX-3 Super 2000 with Yashica ML 28mm f/2.8
Portra 400
February 9, 2021
88/365
Last time I took a photo here was a time when I was very confused and had a lot on mind. I'm feeling the same way now. Although I'm confused about other things. I realized some things. And I'm settling with the fact that some things aren't explainable. Some things will come naturally. And life should be lived while we are here. I spend way too much time just being alive, but not living. But I'm happy. I feel I am.
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I made an effort to walk around the city in the cold after a long day, but you would not know it from the photos I took. Things look good on the back of a screen - but in the dark, and tiny, that preview doesn't tell you everything. Everything was out of focus. Badly exposed. Or the camera was moving (or all three, as is the case here).
Plus people were bothering me. Some young lads wanting to be in a photo. A man in a van who parked next to me in a dark corner of a car park and asked why I was talking photos. I explained I took a photo every day. Why? He asked.
We all have those days. You get in from a busy day at work - with a stomach ache, might I add - sit down to eat your dinner and would you believe it? A chestburster. Not another one. And then, as your horrified wife asks if you meant to keep that monster, you explain to her that you'd wanted one for a while and would be forever indebted to her if she let you keep it, and that you're a bit preoccupied to be having this conversation right now.
A new lens means an obligatory drive around the countryside, can't use the lens before testing it. Why not test the unknown lens with equally unknown film, which expired some 16-17 years ago!? What could possibly go wrong!? Well, at first, somehow I managed to turn the manual ISO override to 6400, which took me half of the roll to realize that. After that, I reverted ISO override to box speed, like the film didn't sit somewhere for the last decade and a half. That could explain the non-linear tonal response of the film - those shadows are pretty dark!
Taken with Nikon F100 film camera, with Nikon AF Nikkor 28–85mm F3.5–4.5 zoom lens, on a roll of expired Fujicolor C100 film.
Scanned with my trusty Plustek OpticFilm 8100 dedicated film scanner, using VueScan 9.
🎉 Thank you all for pushing this photo into Explore at #254 at one point in time. Yay!