View allAll Photos Tagged HighLandPark
spring is in the air. As I wander through this beautiful park, in another 12 days it will be jammed packed with visitors from everywhere., So I try to get here b4 that happens, and I was in luck, the weather was perfect (a few Days ago) and just a few families...perfect for photoging:)
A beautiful spring day in Highland Park, is a great time to hang out with your best friend and watch the world go by.
Met up with my photographer friend Daniel at the park tonight. The sunset was spectacular but it was SO COLD. Here's a freelensing shot, which is fitting because I think Daniel was the first person who ever told me about freelensing.
"It looks like a painting."
Taken from an area of Baku that a goes by the name of Highland Park a view through the trees shows some of the architectural highlights of the ultra modern city.
An interesting inclusion in the foreground are the classical facades of the nineteenth century buildings. They provide a degree of contrast with the distant glass towers.
Sat alone in a coffee shop all day (aka at my job but hardly anyone came because EVERYTHING IS ICE) so after work I HAD to get outside. So I did. And so here is this.
I go through phases of learning to just take time for myself. Sometimes it's just a day or two, sometimes it's longer, but I'm at the start of one of those phases right now. And it's nice, just relaxing, listening to the rain...
This is a part of the magnolia area at Highland Park in Rochester NY. There are over 35 varieties of magnolia trees in the park area and today was a peak day... An awesome sight.
Me: What are you guys filming?
Guy1 (or was it a woman???): We're filming for a tv show. But we can't tell you what it's about.
Guy2: Yeah, we can't tell you.
Me: .......ok fine bye
Conversations these days...
June 18, 2021. The first day in my life that I locked my keys in my car. Also, crazy clouds while waiting for AAA.
Built in 1889-1895, this Romanesque Revival-style building was designed by Holabird and Roche and the Office of the Quartermaster General to serve as the main barracks and water tower for Fort Sheridan. The building is clad in buff brick with decorative patterned brickwork, roman arched bays, a tall tower with semi-circular corner piers and an octagonal belfry, a vaulted breezeway through the ground floor of the tower, one-over-one double-hung windows, a hipped roof, and a rough-hewn stone base at the tower. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980, and was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1984. The building was utilized as a military installation until 1993, when Fort Sheridan was closed. The building was converted into a residential condominium complex in 2003 under the direction of Fitzgerald Associates.