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ice on the beach ... levitating

 

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Dieses Foto entstand gegen 5.40 Uhr am Grand Canyon. Eigentlich hatten wir es uns so vorgestellt, dass wir allein am Mather Point stehen würden, um zu beobachten, wie sich die Sonne diesen großartigen Canyon von der Nacht zurück erobert. Aber es sollte ganz anders kommen. Während wir sehr brav zum Nationalpark tuckerten, wurden wir links und rechts überholt, angeblinkt und mit unfreundlichen Blicken traktiert. Zwischen zwei Reisebussen eingeklemmt, machten wir uns am Eingang des Nationalparks keine Illusionen mehr. Der stille Sonnenaufgang würde ein Massenspektakel werden. Was tut Mensch, wenn er an einem großartigen Ort auf den ersten Sonnenstrahl wartet? Reden. Quasseln. Lachen. Und das um 5.30 Uhr. Quasseln in allen Sprachen der Welt. Unaufhörlich. Ohne Unterlass. Kein Moment ruhiger Erwartung. Mir als Morgenmuffel eh ein Graus, Stimmen am frühen Morgen zu hören, entfachte das aufdringliche Lachgemurmel wahre Killerinstinkte in mir. Von der Aussichtsplattform rückten wir schnell ab und verzogen uns immer mehr an den Rand. Adios, du schöner Ausblick. Und da: Mit atemberaubender Gemächlichkeit schiebt sich die Sonne mit einer überirdischen Aura über den Horizont. Hinter uns brandet Applaus auf. Während die einen die Sonne für ihre tägliche Arbeit beklatschen, versuchen Hundertscharen von Handys und Kompakten dem größten aller Canyons Licht einzuschenken. Ich muss lachen. Und langsam pellt sich aus all dem Gemurmel ein einziges, gut vernehmbares Wörtchen: Coffee, Coffee, Coffee, ... und Schlag um Schlag fällt die Meute auseinander. Schiebt sich zurück zu den wartenden Bussen. Nur fünf Minuten später ist das Feld geräumt ... und fast unbemerkt durch flutet die Sonne eine Schicht nach der anderen und entfaltet ihr größtes Spektakel

 

2014 USA Nikon 2 5929

 

FB21

A Friend on facebook asked the universe to edit her picture for her. So I gave it a go...

facebook.com/salvadorspanosphotography

1/320-iso100-f/8-19mm

INSTAGRAM | FACEBOOK | 500PX | BEACONS

 

Profiles without photos and male penises will be blocked immediately. Do not add me and do not add my photos in groups, you will be blocked immediately.

 

My photographs are © Copyright and all rights reserved.

 

None of these photos may be reproduced and / or used in any form of publication, print or Internet without my written permission. If you do, it will be a serious violation of my privacy and will be subject to legal consequences.

Moraine Lake, Banff National Park, Alberta. This is another picture taken on my visit to Jasper and Banff National Parks, Alberta.

 

I saw him taking a pictures of the scenery and sharing with his mobile phone. His red jacket and his sitting position infront of the lake and mountain range made me to click.

New London PEI lighthouse.... due north at night

 

This image cannot be used on websites, blogs or other media without explicit my permission. © All rights reserved

One of the things that I have learned over the years is how to work a scene. What that means is to shoot the classic composition of a subject first and then experiment. Beginners often take that shot and think they are done. By working a scene you might end up with something completely different and better than you expected. How do I work a scene? I shoot from all different angles, trying to see if a different point of view works better. I will shoot at different focal lengths from wide-angle to telephoto. I also shoot from different heights: low, eye-level and high.

 

Often, one of the non-classic compositions will speak to you when you look at it. Take this low shot of Marshall Point Lighthouse. This subject has been shot numerous times from eye-level with great results. For this shot, I took my camera off of the tripod and placed it on the walkway to the light. I love how this shot turned out, as the eye can follow one of the boards through the photograph right to the door. While I have seen others with this composition shot at eye-level, I have not seen one from this low of an angle.

Arches National Park is a treasure trove of sandstone rock formations, mainly arches. Most of them are arches -- over 2,000 of them, but only a few are easily accessible. My favorite arch for sure is Double Arch. Located in the Windows area of the park, it always acts as a magnet for me. This was the only one of our stops that I was out of the car in a flash and down the trail so I could get a few shots without people. You will notice that I didn't fully succeed, as there is one lone person in the "window" on the left. I left him in to give you an idea of how big Double Arch is. After shooting a few, I began the climb up past where the person was to sit at the bottom of the "window". I was joined by Jaki Good Miller and Mike Louthan. What a view we had from way up there. As I get older, climbing up is getting more difficult, but hopefully I will be able to be perched up there in the future.

Informações

 

Cliente: Vários

Desenvolvido por: Bruno Medino

Serviço: Facebook foto profile

Data: 2011

 

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E-Mail / MSN: Baestudios@hotmail.com

 

I had shot the gay parade over 1000 pictures , I have posted some of them at Flickr , but I have yet to post over 750 more to my Gay Prade set 2009...

 

I would copy the Flickr link to Facebook, as most of the Facebook members committed and part of the gay community including my Hijra Guru Laxmi Narayan Tripathi dont access Flickr..I like Facebook, but because of overreaching the limit of links I was told in no easy terms by the Facebook team my account would be disabled for spamming..me a positive spam.

 

I will in a few minutes reach 89000 photo blogs at Flickr .and at least Flickr does not consider me a positive spam yet.

 

So as a poet this kick on my black ass hit me hard and I have emotionalized it in pedestrian verse..dedicating it to Mr Mark Zuckerburg..

 

I am not into porn, I am not into groups either at Flickr or Facebook..

But three places which are home away from home

is Flickr , Facebook and Twitter.

 

I had earlier thought of deleting my Facebook account ..but than it would be my loss , as my friends are all Facebook hard core fans ..

 

Rayo my childhood friend of 50 years known as Ray Framroze says he only browses Facebook and no other site..

 

So my poem with malice to none

 

Facebook

Doe Not Like Flickr Links

Now the thought sinks

Think Facebook Think

Their threat to disable

my Facebook Account

shows their bias

among other things

a bias

that racially stinks

a blogger

with broken wings

a sore throat

some swine flu

he sings

its better to live

like a pauper for a day

than live 100 days like a king

FLICKR TWITTER FACEBOOK

a barefeet blogger of Mumbai

with feet and a soul going pink

from the crowds

a libidinous hijra

gives me a wink

calling me to Gaylords

for a drink

Jazz By the Bay

exotic tantric sex

she tells me

on the Bandra Worli

Sea Link

I refuse

my burkha clad

face hidden wife

the only Armour

in my androgynous

chink

Think Facebook Think

a castrated mouse

clicking away

the keyboard

without a ding

a David making love to Goliath

with 5 stones in a sling

 

I hope and pray Flickr too gets 250 million members.. one day

 

this is cover page for my facebook timeline...

The Red Hills are located just east of Grand Teton National Park and are rarely visited by tourists. The main attraction of this area are the hills, which have a beautiful red color that I believe are caused by mineral deposits. It is an area that I have photographed a number of times. You might ask where they are in this photo, and my answer is that they are not, but rather to my back. On my visits here before I have tried and failed to get a shot looking west toward the Tetons, because, prior to this visit, the haze has always negatively impacted the scene. This time, the haze was almost non-existent, and I was able to get a decent shot. I composed this using both the split rail fence of Red Hills Ranch and the dirt road as leading lines to the top of the Tetons.

Most of the stops along the Icefields Parkway are views of mountain lakes, the fabulous Canadian Rockies and glaciers. This is particularly true of the portion of the parkway in Banff National Park. As you travel north on this amazing 140-mile road and enter Jasper National Park, waterfalls become more prevalent. There are several small ones along the way, but the first sizable one is this one, Sunwapta Falls. The falls actually consists of two falls, one downstream away from the first one that is closer to the parkway. The falls gets its name from the Assiniboine Native Americans meaning "turbulent water". The Athabasca River is sourced by the Columbia Glacier and is at its most spectacular in the spring with the snow melt. The river passes over the falls on its way to the town of Jasper to the north.

 

Social Pillows in H-art.

FACEBOOK | deviantART

 

Data exif :

Speed : 1/6sec

Iso : 100

Aperture : F/18

 

Poss processing :

Adobe photoshop cs6

   

LIKE my facebook page please :)

  

follow me on tumblr :)

 

Week 20

(Teleidoscope - Week #17 "Mythology")

 

So I said a couple weeks back that I had created a couple images for a Theory of Knowlegde project that describe language through the medium of music and tie those interpretations of the songs to a visual aid. I choose to display my own pictures, with the songs that inspired them. I loved being able to show my pictures and add the soundtrack to it while looking at them, but my favorite part was seeing others share their favorite songs and they're personal connection with each song.

 

This image was based on my good friend Serena's project :) Serena is one of the most original, open minded, free spirited, wanderlust filled, artistic, and just plain whimsical people I know. Her music project reflected exactly that, with her description and interpretation of the song "Float On" by Modest Mouse being my favorite. She said it reminded her of jellyfish, and how they just float along and let the water push them without care. The song reminds her that in tough times, everything will be ok and we'll continue to float on. I've included her music choices below :)

 

Frederic Chopin - Nocturne In E Flat Major, Op.9 No.2

Modest Mouse - Float On

Ingrid Michaelson - Creep

Pixies - Where Is My Mind

~~~~~~~~

 

I also chose to do this image for the Teleidescope theme of "Mythology" because Medusa is another word for jellyfish, and they are scientifically catigorized in the Subphylum Medusozoa :)

Exploring Monument Valley is always an exhilarating experience as well as a photography adventure. Perhaps the most recognized sandstone formations in the American Southwest are two that are called the "Mittens". When viewed from the south, they look like two gigantic mittens with their "thumbs" facing inwards like a person's hand. These formations are really big, each rising about 6,200 feet from the desert below.

 

One has to wonder how these two formations became mirror images of one another. Like most of the formations in Monument Valley, they were formed by thousands of years of erosion. I am guessing that the two mittens are at least a half-mile apart, if not a mile or more. Given that, what were the circumstances of wind and water erosion that would cause them to form almost identically? Obviously, these questions will probably never be answered. In any case, this photo depicts the West Mitten that I thought the old dead tree limbs framed quite well.

謝謝你欣賞我的照片, 如果喜歡我的照片也請給我鼓勵, 若需要專業的攝影服務可以加入我的 www.facebook.com/liao.c.tao與我聯絡, 或是來信gutsdesign@gmail.com , 感謝你

 

Thank you enjoy my photos, if you like my photos please give me encouragement, if you need professional photography service can join my www.facebook.com/liao.c.tao contact me, or letters gutsdesign@gmail.com, thank you

this is kind of a throwback because it looks like something i might have drawn when i was 16.

  

*see all of these pieces and a link to replay this drawing in my graffiti gallery on facebook - here:

apps.new.facebook.com/graffitiwall/by.php?from_id=710370013

beautiful Alexandra Falls in BCs Callahan Valley

 

This image cannot be used on websites, blogs or other media without explicit my permission. © All rights reserved

Lisbon

more on Facebook

update from this trip Website

 

It is often hard to explain the landscape of the Badlands. I had seen photos of it over the years, but it wasn't until I set foot in this national park that I truly saw it. The diversity of rock formations range from jagged peaks to erosion-carved rock. The park has one main road that runs 31 miles from end-to-end. Every curve in the road brings you to a different type of scene. The road follows a portion of the famed 100-mile "Wall" that acts as the spine of the park. If you were driving along Interstate 90 in South Dakota, you drive somewhat parallel to the Wall, but you would never know it because the landscape is relatively flat. I am sure many don't realize that if they headed south, they would be seeing a landscape that they might think was on another planet.

Mobile Music Club - Kick Off - Take the A-Train Musicfestival 2021, 10.09.2021 - Stadtwerkeareal Salzburg

www.jazzfoto.at/konzertfotos21/_take_the_a_train/_kick-of...

 

Besetzung:

Franz Trainer: Drums, percussion

Chris Kronreif: sax

Gernot Haslauer: sousaphon

Chris Neuschmid: banjo

 

www.facebook.com/MobileMusicClub/

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