View allAll Photos Tagged FOUNDATION
A 8-shot panorama of the building of Louis Vuitton Foundation that opened its gates in 2014 next to the west end of Paris. It serves as a museum and cultural centre. The glassy design belongs to architect Frank Gehry. Paris, September '15
We had a fab day today at the raptor foundation ! Plenty of opportunity to get some great images like this !
Revelation 21:14 “And the wall of the city had twelve foundation stones, and on them the twelve names of the twelve apostles of the Lamb (Christ).”
Monitor-class battlecrusier, Imperial Navy. She's not quite finished but there was hasty drydock refit and, you know, the Empire ain't what it used to be.
Third time was the charm indeed. I'm not overly satisfied with the end result but looking at the photos today it's fine. A solid B, maybe B+. not the most exciting shape but I like the punchy colours enough that it works for me. It's been a battle to STAY ON TARGET lately so I'm kinda happy and relieved that I finished something.
Voigtlander RF (6x9)
Helomar 105mm f/3.5
Ilford PanF Plus
Sekonic L758
💡 Mode: F16@ 4mts
Adox(Rodinal) Semi Stand Development
DSLR Digitized
Hamburg, Germany. 2008 to 2016.
Taken on 135, color negative film.
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Technical Notes: Minolta XD7. The film emulsion was probably Rossmann's house brand of a ASA400 film, made in Japan, likely relabeled Fuji film sold under the Rossmann brand. This film does not exist anymore. Scanned on a PrimeFilm XAs in RAW with VueScan Pro, then processed in Lightroom with Negative Lab Pro.
don't built your house on sand...
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All of my photographs are under copyright ©. None of these photographs may be reproduced and/or used in any way without my permission....talk to me 😊
© VanveenJF Photography
So, I did a thing. And that thing was redesigning SWF.
Come take a look:
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Union%20Passage/152/225/5
Special shouts to Jogi Schultz for the custom mermaid benches, as well as all the glowy white stone signs.
Building:
-co*ffee - Cubex building (kindof lol I modified it a lot to work for this project)
Plantlife:
-Cerridwen's Cauldron
-Balderdash
-3D Trees
Animals:
-JIAN
-Hextraordinary
-Inochi Botanicals
-Balderdash
-Splash Aquatics
Fog:
-Dysfunctionality
The original foundation for WB Tower lays in ruins as the tower itself is escorted to a new location away from railroad property and out of the flood zone of the nearby Potomac River on April 2, 2022.
In order to relocate the tower, the foundation had to be demolished so the crew could install the temporary rigging needed to lift the structure up and onto the motorized dollys which then transported the building across the tracks and up the hill in the distance.
Ilford Delta 400, Nikon F, 20mm f3.5
Celebrating the opening of the Bruce Trail... this section is just two blocks from my house. Notice how the trees plant their roots on the firm foundation of rock.
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Model Mayhem# 3593103 | SmugMug | Instagram
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Pine Tree in Infrared @ Kubota GarKubota Garden is a 20 acre Japanese garden in the Rainier Beach neighborhood of Seattle, Washington. A public park since 1987, it was started in 1927 by Fujitaro Kubota, a Japanese emigrant. Today, it is maintained as a public park by the Seattle Department of Parks and Recreation and the Kubota Garden Foundation.
Fujitaro Kubota emigrated from Shikoku, Japan in 1907 and established the Kubota Gardening Company in 1923. Projects of his included the garden at Seattle University and the Japanese garden at Bloedel Reserve in Bainbridge Island. In 1927, he bought 5 acres of swampland in Rainier Beach to start the garden and in 1930 increased the size of the garden to 30 acres. Kubota Garden served as cultural center for the Japanese community in Seattle, as well as a home, office and nursery for his business. During World War II, Kubota Garden was abandoned for four years as Kubota and his family were interned at Camp Minidoka in Idaho. During his internment, Kubota supervised the building of a community park, which included a Japanese rock garden. After the war, he and his sons Tak and Tom Kubota rebuilt the business.
The Japanese government awarded Kubota the Fifth Class Order of the Sacred Treasure in 1972 "for his achievements in his adopted country, for introducing and building respect for Japanese Gardening in this area." Kubota maintained the garden until his death in 1973.
In 1981, the Seattle Landmarks Preservation Board declared the core 4.5 acres of the park to be a historical landmark of the City of Seattle. In 1987, the City of Seattle bought the garden from the Kubota family, and it is now maintained by the Department of Parks and Recreation as well as volunteers from the Kubota Garden Foundation.
In addition, 17 acres surrounding the park has been purchased by the Open Space Program in the City of Seattle in order to protect Mapes Creek, which runs through the park. The Tom Kubota Stroll Garden broke ground in 1999 and was opened in 2000. The garden received a new entrance gate designed by Gerard Tsutakawa in 2004.
The garden has encountered the problems associated with vandalism when the staff has left for the day—as evidenced by beer bottles strewn about on the property. Shell casings are a sign that firearms have been fired; and graffiti has appeared.
The Kubota Garden Foundation is a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization founded in 1989 to "support, enhance, and perpetuate the Kubota Garden within the spirit and vision of Fujitaro Kubota." Kubota's vision included opening the garden to the public and increasing American understanding and appreciation of Japanese Gardens. The foundation provides additional fundraising, volunteer work, and publications to support the garden.
(source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kubota_Garden)
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Am I running out of titles or what? My under-exercised brain was coming up
with long, cliched titles before it collapsed, and the last two words I
could recollect are in the title.
Took this in some place outside of Bombay. Its a storage/supply complex,
where they've built two floors in every godown, and apparently forgotten to
finish the third storey. I say forgotten, because the pillar you see,
jutting into the frame, its been there along with many more (including the
leaning pillar on the right), for over three years now.
When i saw the results of the post processing to this photo, my thoughts
(for no reason whatsoever) instantly went to Steve-h who's got some awesome
single/multi-coloured simplistic photography which I love. Here's an
example: http://www.flickr.com/photos/sbh/540521301/
Also, this photo is dedicated to one of the most inspirational photographers
on Flickr, Azli who is right now, on a dedication spree.
This is
the photo(s) that inspired me to give my photo the bright yellow silhouette.
About the editing: High contrast, followed by using the 'Colourise' (in human jargon, monotone) on ACD See, and a lil more contrast.
This home somewhere near Lewistown, IL has seen better days. Could use some fresh paint and tarp to cover the roof.
I've read varying estimates of the number of bricks in Ft. Pulaski, ranging from 13,000,000 to 25.000,000. (I wonder how you'd count them all.) Here are a few.
Just guessing here, but I think this is the foundation for the old stamp mill, long removed.
Sort of reminds me of an old fort.
Palmetto Ruins
De Karel Foundation 466 als trein 33225 (Enkhuizen - Amsterdam Centraal).
Schardam, zondag 28 juni 2020.