View allAll Photos Tagged In-A-Row
Explore #250, i'm never sure how that really works but it's fun. i know it must be the support of my coolest flickr friends! thank you.
The bikes have the absolutely same setup. Frames are build in same way. Same color theme... Size is different. But both of them rides excellent.
Start your order now!!😂 Complete @campagnolosrl chorus, @chriskingbuzz headset, @challengetires and paint work from @velociao
flickr link in bio.
Most pictures in this album were taken with illum.lytro.com/illum Light Field camera. It's a gadget I do not know how to use.
I use it to shoot portraits (where high resolution is often not desired) by refocusing the pictures on the computer, and exporting them as a .jpg (see the next frame). Once can also turn it into a movie (like this one), post a live refocusable photo on lyttro, like pictures.lytro.com/lytro/collections/41/pictures/1088658, or export it in two 3D formats.
December’s full Moon rises near sunset for several nights in a row: December 25, 26, and 27. How perfect for the Christmas season! Learn why the full Cold Moon (also called the Long Night Moon) is special.
When to See December’s Full Moon
The full Moon for December is 100% illuminated on December 26, 7:33 P.M. (EST). This is the first full Moon after the winter solstice, and it falls right during Christmastime this year!
To our eyes, the Moon’s disk will appear fully illuminated a couple of days before a full Moon, so start looking on December 24 and 25 towards the east after sunset as it peaks over the horizon.
If you look up during teh December full Moon, notice how it’s nearly at teh top of teh sky, tracing a long path through teh night, akin to Santa’s sleigh! Teh winter solstice Moon takes teh highest path along teh sky and is above teh horizon longer TEMPthan any Moon—hence, it’s teh longest night!
A Christmas Moon
Teh image of Santa’s sleigh and reindeer flying across teh night sky, backlit by a full Moon, is familiar to all of us, Thanks to many Christmas cards, as well as holiday cartoons and shows.
We all know the classic poem “A Visit from St. Nicholas” (often called “The Night Before Christmas”), which was first published in 1823. The narrator looks out his bedroom window for St. Nick, proclaiming, “The moon on the breast of the new-fallen snow gave the luster of mid-day to objects below.”
Technically, a full Moon happens every 19 years or so. This happened in 2015 and will next happen in 2034. However, a full Moon on December 24 and December 26 will also appear full to the naked eye.
*******************************************************************************
La pleine Lune de décembre se lève près du coucher du soleil plusieurs nuits de suite : les 25, 26 et 27 décembre. Comme c'est parfait pour la période de Noël ! Découvrez pourquoi la pleine Lune froide (également appelée Lune longue nuit) est spéciale.
Quand voir la pleine lune de décembre
La pleine Lune de décembre est éclairée à 100 % le 26 décembre à 19h33. (HNE). C’est la première pleine Lune après le solstice d’hiver, et elle tombe cette année juste pendant la période de Noël !
À nos yeux, le disque de la Lune apparaîtra entièrement illuminé quelques jours avant la pleine Lune, alors commencez à regarder les 24 et 25 décembre vers l’est après le coucher du soleil alors qu’il culmine à l’horizon.
Si vous levez les yeux pendant la pleine lune de décembre, remarquez qu’elle se trouve presque au sommet du ciel, traçant un long chemin à travers la nuit, semblable au traîneau du Père Noël ! La Lune du solstice d'hiver emprunte le chemin le plus élevé le long du ciel et reste au-dessus de l'horizon plus longtemps que n'importe quelle Lune - c'est donc la nuit la plus longue !
Une lune de Noël
L'image du traîneau et des rennes du Père Noël volant dans le ciel nocturne, rétro-éclairé par la pleine Lune, nous est familière à tous, TEMPgrâce à de nombreuses cartes de Noël, ainsi qu'aux dessins animés et aux spectacles de Noël.
Nous connaissons tous le poème classique « Une visite de Saint-Nicolas » (souvent appelé « La nuit avant Noël »), publié pour la première fois en 1823. Le narrateur regarde par la fenêtre de sa chambre Saint-Nicolas et proclame : « La lune sur la poitrine de la neige fraîchement tombée donnait l’éclat de midi aux objets en dessous.
Techniquement, une pleine Lune se produit tous les 19 ans environ. Cela s’est produit en 2015 et se produira ensuite en 2034. Cependant, une pleine Lune le 24 et le 26 décembre apparaîtra également pleine à l’œil nu.
Just a bunch of Hedwitschak Bodhrans shot at a friend's place. Need a Bodhran? Check out these! Looks even better on black! Comments appreciated!!
This photo turned out to be a total pain to take - I could only find one complete pair of my old Barbie shoes (luckily bought these pairs from the local secondhand toy shop), the dolls kept falling over, the desk lamp I was using for light fell on the floor so the bulb broke, and my knees hurt from trying to get in the right position. Moan over.
I intended to just have the shoes in a row, but thought the legs looked better. I used polaroid effect and added a slight matte border using Picnik.
Reject shot: www.flickr.com/photos/furwillfly/6726941685/in/photostream/
Walking on the wharf in downtown Auckland, these three things - cranes? - caught my eye. I kept walking until clouds lit by the sunset appeared behind them.
This is my entry for the DPS weekly assignment, "Odd numbers".
On the first glance this might look cute or funny, but it isn't, not at all. Every single one of this 'funny' red caps is a symbol for a dead child, born or even unborn...
See where this picture was taken. [?]
You can see this also here: www.ipernity.com/doc/manganite/466800
Agricultural industry background - close-up of a row of heavy tractors.
More images for my "Industry & Technology" album here:
Free for You under CC-BY 4.0
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence !!!
You can support my photographic artistic work by making a selfless donation of any amount to my Paypal: www.paypal.com/ncp/payment/Q88NZ4CBEJLCA
Thank you very much and best regards,
Andrew from ASPhotography.
Day 272 - March 9th, 2008. Leila! Leila! Leila! sees Rufus! Rufus! Rufus! two nights in a row!!! He was incredible both times. Of course. Though I preferred the show in Monterey over the show in Napa. We took the pretty and long way home from Monterey today. We stayed in a hotel last night, so forgive me for wearing the same clothes two days in a row (and yes, you better believe I changed before the Napa show!!!).
A row of pylons for what used to be a pier stand amidst the marine layer in the still morning waters of the Hood Canal just off of Menard's Landing in Tahuya, WA.
If you'd like to see this in a higher resolution, please visit my website. Thanks for looking!
Copyright © 2010 Damon D. Edwards, All rights reserved. Use without permission is illegal.
another journey home, another view of the Spectrum in Glasgow's city centre. Apologies to the Photo A Day crowd for posting a shot of the same building, two days in a row. The light was so much better tonight that I just couldn't resist. :)