View allAll Photos Tagged Fracturing
Try the new "Rima Glasses" from Truely outrageous fashion! I know im gonna be rocking these for awhile 😎
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LANDMARK: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Orchard%20Heights/112/122/...
Event Dates: Nov 8 – Nov 22
Another effects "experiment". . .This time with the "Maid in the Shade" B-25. . .I took the original a few years ago when this vintage WWII bomber paid a visit to Jabara Airport here in Wichita. Jabara is a general aviation airport about 8 nautical miles north of McConnell Air Force Base. A funny story pilots will appreciate. . .In 2013 an Atlas Air 747 "Dreamlifter" landed at Jabara by mistake. It was enroute from JFK in New York to McConnell AFB. Jabara's main runway is 6101 feet long and the runway they were looking for at McConnell is 12,000 feet long. They landed at 9:30 PM and after landing the pilots knew they had not landed at McConnell but thought they had landed at the Beech Aircraft Airport which is located in between Jabara and McConnell. A new crew was flown in overnight and the next morning they successfully took off from Jabara and landed at McConnell. It was a big story on all of the newscasts I directed the day they managed to take the huge aircraft off safely from the short field at Jabara as there was some concern due to the weight of the 747. The pavement at the south end of the runway where the huge plane sat overnight actually fractured under the weight of the "Dreamlifter". One other note. . .The runway at Jabara is 18/36 and McConnell's is 1/19.
And to add to the confusion the Beech Airport runway is also 1/19. Jabara was closed down overnight and the next morning until the 747 made its successful takeoff.
The crack in the surface rock which marks the divide between the North American and Eurasian tectonic plates. We are slowly parting company. Iceland, summer 2014.
iPhone pano image loaded into Adobe Photoshop, processed and completed February 8, 2018
Created for the "PANO-Vision" Group's first semi-annual "Kick Out the Winter Blues" contest.
www.flickr.com/groups/2892788@N23/discuss/72157689531935342/
The edges of Shawangunk Ridge form a series of cliffs and fractured ledges that give rise to Verkeerderkill Falls, Minnewaska State Park Reserve, New York.
The trail stays reasonably far from the edge of the cliffs and crosses the creek some ways above the falls. However, there is a use path that leads one just to the left of the small, bright, white ledge in the upper-left of the frame. From here, it is possible for a photographer to find a vantage from which to take in the full drop of the falls. It is also from this vantage that I fumbled my lens cap and watched it roll out to the middle of that little white ledge. It came to a stop some six to eight inches from the edge, and I wondered what might be the wise thing to do…
Tattoo: "Fusion" - Nefekalum Tattoos Available at This coming round of The Liason Collaborative 05.03.20 - 05.26.20.
Skirt: "Socy" - *Arcane Spellcaster*. Available in world store.
Top: "Fantasie" Gacha piece from ERSCH available at Kinky Monthly.
Looking down into the fracture in the basalt on the northeast point at Iona's Beach Scientific and Natural Area (SNA) on Lake Superior, north of Two Harbors, Minnesota.
Once upon a time, this place was once the site of a charming mom & pop resort called Twin Points Resort. Iona Lind, her husband John and their children ran the resort for over 50 years. Iona kept on for a short time after her husband passed away in the 1980's.
When Iona died, she donated the land and it ended up in the hands of Minnesota's DNR.
Iona's Beach SNA is about halfway between Gooseberry Falls and Split Rock Lighthouse State Parks on Minnesota's legendary, historic Highway 61.
Whilst not the biggest of the major glaciers in Los Glaciares National Park, Spegazzini Glacier is a hugely impressive sight, if for no other reason than the sheer size of its wall, which can tower as high as 135 metres (440 feet).
The Spegazzini glacier is one of the bordering glaciers between Argentina and Chile after the Agreement to specify the route of the limit from Mount Fitz Roy to Cerro Daudet in 1998 . The lower section of the glacier is located in Argentina, in the Lago Argentino department of the Santa Cruz province . Its source is in Chile, in the province of Último Esperanza in the Magallanes region . It is protected by the Bernardo O'Higgins and Los Glaciares National Parks.
📍 Los Glaciares National Park, El Calafate, Lago Argentino, Santa Cruz, Argentina
Aerial shot of rocky peaks and snow fields with a long fracture line and small avalanches, Parque Nacional Laguna Ran Rafael, Patagonia. When you combine steep cliffs and the large amounts of snow from the moist Pacific air that hits mountains of Patagonia, the snow pack is dangerously unstable, as evidenced in the long fracture line running below the cliffs and all the small avalanches along the cliff face.
13/02/2021 www.allenfotowild.com
One of my favorites from this Autumn taken last month when the colours were just turning. I only had two trips with a slight misty condition the whole Autumn, story of my photographing life really, and as my luck goes the first day back to work after two weeks off, we had here three days of solid fog.
My autumn this year you could say was then also fractured, had a good start but no real fall colours to see but plenty of free time, and then the colours appear and I have no free time.
Again, here featured a huge Scots pine, although injured he still provides a magnificent image, just love the trunk textures on these wonderful trees.
Challenges are always welcome though; just makes you adapt and improve. Again, a huge thanks to all the followers for the favorites posted, and a special thanks to those who write a comment.
The 'fractured' sky is what drew my interest to this image - it's as if the sky stretched and pulled itself apart
Fondation Louis Vuitton Paris
Architecte Frank Gehry (2006)
Nota : Ciel d'orage... Photo en couleurs et pas en N&B !
This was part of an ill-conceived triptych pano. I think it stands pretty well on its own. I quite like the hazy, impressionistic feel to it. Maybe not everybody's cup, but I'll allow it.
Shot on X-ray film and required a graduated ND filter to save the sky from blowing out. If you shoot x-ray film, I cannot recommend this filter enough. Get one that matches your lens as best you can (ie, no step-up rings).
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'Fracturing'
Camera: Chamonix 45F-2
Lens: Steinheil München Anastigmat Actinar 4.5; 135mm
Film: Agfa CP-BU M X-Ray Film; 50iso
Exposure: f/25; 1sec
Process: HC-110; 1+100; 5mins
Washington
March 2025
The end of a fallen 100yr old log where the tree fractured and was subsequently burned in a controlled burn.
On the third day of my visit to Death Valley I had the chance to meet up with David Thompson. David is an outstanding photographer and I have admired his images on Flickr for a long time. His photos of Death Valley are some of the very best I have seen. He made the call on where we should go for sunrise and sunset and in between shooting he was generous in sharing some of his knowledge and experience with photography. I had a great time hanging out with him and learned several things that I will be able to apply going forward. Hope we get a chance to meet up again some time in the future.
The mud tiles at this sunrise location were amazing. It was like walking on a giant art canvas. It seemed like the cloud cover was going to block the sunrise, but all of a sudden we saw a bright red burn on the ridges of the clouds. It only lasted for two or three minutes so I didn't have a chance to move around and try multiple comps, but I am pleased with what I ended up with.
It's been a month since I last posted, so I thought I'd give you guys an update. Not that there is one....things are pretty much the same. I've had Long Covid for over 4 months now. This poppy pretty much shows how I feel.
My hubby was driving me around, just so I could get out and I saw these pretty poppies at the side of the road. I got out of the car for five minutes and immersed myself in the beauty of nature.
I'm now part of the Long Covid clinic here, but it's entirely virtual, as they, for some reason, have closed all the clinics physically. So many people think that Covid and Long Covid is over, but let me tell you, it's not. Apparently, there are more than 65,000 people in the world living with Long Covid, and as yet, there is no cure. Sometimes life just isn't fair. But I'm doing my best to just live one day at a time, and accept my health, or lack of it, right now. I still am not able to write an email for longer than 10 minutes or have a phone conversation for more than the same, as it uses up energy. And so does writing here, so I will leave it at this.
Please just know that I miss all of you and can hardly wait to be healthy again, one day. I still plan to be back :)
Japan Tobacco International, Geneva (Switzerland). SOM Architects/Engineers.
All rights reserved - © Judith A. Taylor
More architectural fragments on my web site : Fine Art Mono Photography
My dear Uncle,
When I said I wanted someone else on this trip with me, I thought the humor of the gods was far less than it actually ended up being. I've encountered a troll of a man, named Bothwin . . . or something like that. And I'll have you know that he is completely appalling in every way. Far be it from me to judge another soul by how they look, but if he isn't the worst man I've ever encountered, than I don't know who is. He offered to make stew as we were heading back from the border- yes, he is tagging along with me- and it was truly the worst thing I've ever tasted. Nothing like that wonderful soup you prepare every weekend, Uncle. He says he's searching for something 'more'. More what? You can't have more if you have nothing to begin with. He keeps talking about 'making his mark' on the Kingdom. The absurdity of this man! He carries a silly little book with him and writes down anything that catches his eye. 'The Archives will be flowing with knowledge,' he constantly utters. I was unaware Isloriel had any 'Archives'. I (or should I say, we) will be reaching Elkmire very shortly, and then I shall send these letters off. Rather funny, that I write to you so consistently without reply. I wonder, do you even bother reading these? Or are you so swept up in the importance of your work that you have not the time for your poor, scrabbling nephew? Either way, I do still look forward to seeing you, Uncle.
Your nephew, Aribaine
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Finally. It took about three months, but here's my second FK build. I'm pretty happy with it, especially the grassy area. The rockwork could use a second color, but I had been working on this for so long that I just wanted to wrap it up. I don't think there's anything else to say. Thanks for looking. :)
"Be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ God forgave you." Ephesians 4:32