View allAll Photos Tagged FreshJuice

at the markets today

For 'Smile on Saturday', theme: 'funny packaging'

Macro Mondays "Staying Healthy"

 

Size of the paper print : 2 1/2" x 3"

Glass : 1 1/2"

Figure size : 2 cm

 

Thanks to everyone who takes the time to view, comment, and fave my photos.

Kumily is a beautiful rural town in the state of Kerala in South India

"Fresh juice! Fresh juice! Why not? Only today, not tomorrow, eh?"

Venice Beach,CA. 4.29.2015.

Tlalli event : Start Jun 7th at 12 :00 pm SLT

ends jun 21th

 

LM Tlalli: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Cherries/85/59/23

SWIMWEAR HAPPY SUMMER

Available for: Maitreya, Hourglass, Freya, Isis & Physique

 

SUMMER HIT COLLECTION

FAT PACK: Open shirt, shorts, clocs and necklace

available for: Signature, Jake & Slink

 

FRESH JUICE WATERMELON

with Bento Hold animation

 

AQUA THERMAL SPRAY

Deco

 

GRAFENWALDER Style is a Second Life fashion label.

A new form of style and design that you will love to have.

 

LM : Bluebell Island (136,191,3339)

 

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Bluebell%20Island/136/191/...

Tlalli event : Start Jun 7th at 12 :00 pm SLT

ends jun 21th

 

LM Tlalli: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Cherries/85/59/23

SWIMWEAR HAPPY SUMMER

Available for: Maitreya, Hourglass, Freya, Isis & Physique

 

SUMMER HIT COLLECTION

FAT PACK: Open shirt, shorts, clocs and necklace

available for: Signature, Jake & Slink

 

FRESH JUICE WATERMELON

with Bento Hold animation

 

AQUA THERMAL SPRAY

Deco

 

GRAFENWALDER Style is a Second Life fashion label.

A new form of style and design that you will love to have.

 

LM : Bluebell Island (136,191,3339)

 

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Bluebell%20Island/136/191/...

Dina is selling for $1 fresh orange juice in town at River Cali bank, a popular spot for hikers,walkers and pedalists. You can find her every day from 6 in the morning till 1pm.

"The Orange Shop" is a small little trading post/country store type of place located along US Highway 301, at the northern limits of the town of Citra, FL. They have their own orange groves that they pick and sell, even ship to other locations (depending on certain regulations). I've passed it several times in the past driving from Ocala to Jacksonville, as 301 is the fastest route that I know of between the two cities, but have never actually stopped there. Until today.

 

This inspiration to photograph this local landmark (it's really about 20-25 miles from my house) stems from a canvas painting that I noticed one day a couple of months ago when I had to go into the new judiciary center/courthouse to deliver recordings to the clerk's office for work. The lobby of the new judiciary extention has some nice art hanging on the walls after you get through the security checkpoint, including the painting of the sign and the building. Every time I go over there, I look over to admire it.

 

The original for this shot looked like it would lend itself well to a cross processing effect. I think it's got an interesting vibe to it even though it's not what I might have originally intended. Still got a ways to go on perfecting my technique.

 

After initial adjustment of the RAW file, I added a light orange color fill adjustment layer, 40% opacity, color burn blending effect. Then I added an almost white with a hint of green color fill adjustment layer at 12% opacity and using the Lighten blending effect.

Anytime, anywhere:)

Vitamin shop in Istanbul, near Galata tower

Instagram: @Maandylion

shadman ali © All rights reserved.

Please don't hesitate to contact with me if you wish to use any of my images.

 

Follow me on || facebook || tumblr || twitter || 500px || Instagram ||

 

Visit: || 52 weeks project || Most Interesting || My Website ||

shadman ali © All rights reserved.

Please don't hesitate to contact with me if you wish to use any of my images.

 

Follow me on || facebook || tumblr || twitter || 500px || Instagram ||

 

Visit: || 52 weeks project || Most Interesting ||

shadman ali © All rights reserved.

Please don't hesitate to contact with me if you wish to use any of my images.

 

Follow me on || facebook || tumblr || twitter || 500px || Instagram ||

 

Visit: || 52 weeks project || Most Interesting || My Website ||

Hopefully you've managed to avoid this nasty flu/virus that's doing the rounds at the moment, but if not try one of these, not only do they taste good, they’re good for you to, so drink up and enjoy!

 

Recipes @ RAdish_Cabin fever

near citra, fl. the road i was on (maybe 233) followed the train tracks for miles full of train cars brimming with tropicana orange juice.

Food photography is a still life photography genre used to create attractive still life photographs of food. It is a specialization of commercial photography, the products of which are used in advertisements, magazines, packaging, menus or cookbooks. Professional food photography is a collaborative effort, usually involving an art director, a photographer, a food stylist, a prop stylist and their assistants.In advertising, food photography is often – and sometimes controversially – used to exaggerate the attractiveness or size of the advertised food, notably fast food.

"The Orange Shop" is a small little trading post/country store type of place located along US Highway 301, at the northern limits of the town of Citra, FL. They have their own orange groves that they pick and sell, even ship to other locations (depending on certain regulations). I've passed it several times in the past driving from Ocala to Jacksonville, as 301 is the fastest route that I know of between the two cities, but have never actually stopped there. Until today.

 

This inspiration to photograph this local landmark (it's really about 20-25 miles from my house) stems from a canvas painting that I noticed one day a couple of months ago when I had to go into the new judiciary center/courthouse to deliver recordings to the clerk's office for work. The lobby of the new judiciary extention has some nice art hanging on the walls after you get through the security checkpoint, including the painting of the sign and the building. Every time I go over there, I look over to admire it.

 

In this shot, I decided to focus more on the sign, and I didn't do any major processing other than to slightly adjust the levels, though the processing technique that I used in my previous shot - "The Orange Shop (Edit 2)" probably would look real good on this shot. However, in that shot, I felt more like trying to capture the essence of an older photo/postcard - a scene of a place where families would stop either on their way to a vacation destination or on their way home. Here I wanted to focus on the retro sign in the modern day and how it still seems inviting.

Hopefully you've managed to avoid this nasty flu/virus that's doing the rounds at the moment, but if not try one of these, not only do they taste good, they’re good for you to, so drink up and enjoy!

 

Recipes @ RAdish_Cabin fever

This was taken on the corner of West Houston & Macdougal Street in Greenwich Village.

 

***************

 

This set of photos is based on a very simple concept: walk every block of Manhattan with a camera, and see what happens. To avoid missing anything, walk both sides of the street.

 

That's all there is to it …

 

Of course, if you wanted to be more ambitious, you could also walk the streets of Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island, and the Bronx. But that's more than I'm willing to commit to at this point, and I'll leave the remaining boroughs of New York City to other, more adventurous photographers.

 

Oh, actually, there's one more small detail: leave the photos alone for a month -- unedited, untouched, and unviewed. By the time I actually focus on the first of these "every-block" photos, I will have taken more than 8,000 images on the nearby streets of the Upper West Side -- plus another several thousand in Rome, Coney Island, and the various spots in NYC where I traditionally take photos. So I don't expect to be emotionally attached to any of the "every-block" photos, and hope that I'll be able to make an objective selection of the ones worth looking at.

 

As for the criteria that I've used to select the small subset of every-block photos that get uploaded to Flickr: there are three. First, I'll upload any photo that I think is "great," and where I hope the reaction of my Flickr-friends will be, "I have no idea when or where that photo was taken, but it's really a terrific picture!"

 

A second criterion has to do with place, and the third involves time. I'm hoping that I'll take some photos that clearly say, "This is New York!" to anyone who looks at it. Obviously, certain landscape icons like the Empire State Building or the Statue of Liberty would satisfy that criterion; but I'm hoping that I'll find other, more unexpected examples. I hope that I'll be able to take some shots that will make a "local" viewer say, "Well, even if that's not recognizable to someone from another part of the country, or another part of the world, I know that that's New York!" And there might be some photos where a "non-local" viewer might say, "I had no idea that there was anyplace in New York City that was so interesting/beautiful/ugly/spectacular."

 

As for the sense of time: I remember wandering around my neighborhood in 2005, photographing various shops, stores, restaurants, and business establishments -- and then casually looking at the photos about five years later, and being stunned by how much had changed. Little by little, store by store, day by day, things change … and when you've been around as long as I have, it's even more amazing to go back and look at the photos you took thirty or forty years ago, and ask yourself, "Was it really like that back then? Seriously, did people really wear bell-bottom jeans?"

 

So, with the expectation that I'll be looking at these every-block photos five or ten years from now (and maybe you will be, too), I'm going to be doing my best to capture scenes that convey the sense that they were taken in the year 2013 … or at least sometime in the decade of the 2010's (I have no idea what we're calling this decade yet). Or maybe they'll just say to us, "This is what it was like a dozen years after 9-11".

 

Movie posters are a trivial example of such a time-specific image; I've already taken a bunch, and I don't know if I'll ultimately decide that they're worth uploading. Women's fashion/styles are another obvious example of a time-specific phenomenon; and even though I'm definitely not a fashion expert, I suspected that I'll be able to look at some images ten years from now and mutter to myself, "Did we really wear shirts like that? Did women really wear those weird skirts that are short in the front, and long in the back? Did everyone in New York have a tattoo?"

 

Another example: I'm fascinated by the interactions that people have with their cellphones out on the street. It seems that everyone has one, which certainly wasn't true a decade ago; and it seems that everyone walks down the street with their eyes and their entire conscious attention riveted on this little box-like gadget, utterly oblivious about anything else that might be going on (among other things, that makes it very easy for me to photograph them without their even noticing, particularly if they've also got earphones so they can listen to music or carry on a phone conversation). But I can't help wondering whether this kind of social behavior will seem bizarre a decade from now … especially if our cellphones have become so miniaturized that they're incorporated into the glasses we wear, or implanted directly into our eyeballs.

 

If you have any suggestions about places that I should definitely visit to get some good photos, or if you'd like me to photograph you in your little corner of New York City, please let me know. You can send me a Flickr-mail message, or you can email me directly at ed-at-yourdon-dot-com

 

Stay tuned as the photo-walk continues, block by block ...

Attractive display of fresh fruits ready to be squeezed.Pineapples,pomegranates and blood oranges.

 

You should never miss this juice when you see it in Angkor Wat. It's really natural and delicious.

 

"Sugar Palm Juice" "Fresh Juice" "Sugar Palm" "Coconut Palm Sugar"

"Palm sugar to taste" "Palm Juice Drink" "Sweetened palm syrup"

"Water in Bamboo cups" "Palm fruit juice"

 

"Sugar palm tree" "skor t'not" "Borassus flabellifer"

"Gula Java" "đường Java" Borassus "Palmyra Palm"

 

"Cambodian Smile" "Khmer Smiles" "Khmer Smile"

Cambodian Cambodians "Khmer People" "Khmer PPL"

Kampuchean Khmer "Siem Reap" Kampuchea Cambodia "Southeast Asia"

"Angkor Wat" "Angkor Wat style" "Angkorian Temples" អង្គរវត្ត

THIS IMAGE IS ONLY AVAILABLE FOR USE IF LICENSED VIA GETTY IMAGES HERE USEING THIS OTHERWISE IS COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT

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