View allAll Photos Tagged IndustrialArchitecture
Painted doors on a shipyard hall, now a well-known Copenhagen landmark, used for events and festivals.
Burmeister & Wain from 1865 was the largest shipyard in Denmark. These are some of the few remaining structures.
Hasselblad 500C | Hasselblad 150mm f4 CF | Fujifilm Acros II 100
500C #004 (1)
Southwick Ship Canal with Shoreham Power Station.
The Southwick Ship Canal branches off from the River Adur Estuary and is part of Shoreham Port.
Photo taken from the Monarch's Way long distance path, which passes through the port, where the path finishes/starts
Why Do I Photograph?
The Search for Lost Wonder
As a child, the world was boundless.
I could look at the sky for hours,
follow the light, listen to the wind,
and simply be.
Back then, to see was to wonder.
Every moment was open,
full of questions,
and complete.
Then came the system —
rules, grades, expectations.
It taught me many things,
but it also took something away:
the freedom to feel the world,
without purpose, without aim,
simply as it was.
Today I hold a camera in my hands.
And when I press the shutter,
I’m not searching for perfection,
but for that feeling from long ago —
for the moment
when light, silence, and time become one.
When, for an instant, everything feels
as it once did,
before someone explained
how the world works.
And this photograph
is the first step.
It may sound simple,
but it will be hard for me.
I have to let go
of thirty years of control.
But now I know
why I photograph.
📷 Camera: Sony Alpha 7R V
🔭 Lens: Sony FE 28–70 mm F2 GM
📍 Tripod: Benro Cyanbird Carbon + FS20PRO Head
🔍 Focal Length: 65 mm
🌞 Aperture: f/5.6
🌙 ISO: 100
⏳ Exposure: 30 s
📌 Location: Rheinhafen, Karlsruhe, Germany
A golden‐hour starburst peeks through the steel silos of the Leopold Grain, Inc. elevator in Nada, Texas. Shot from the edge of the freshly tilled Blackland Prairie in southern Colorado County, this image highlights the interplay between industrial form and warm morning light, with rich amber tones illuminating both the structure and the dark, fertile soil beneath.
The Coal mine du Gouffre (No. 10) is the main and last colliery company of Charbonnages du Gouffre. It is located at Châtelet Belgium, Walloon Region in the province of Hainaut. It was operated from 1916 to 1969. The concrete building is built in 1934.
De Société Des Charbonnages Du Gouffre heeft in 1916 deze kolenput (nummer 10) geopend. In het jaar 1969 sloot charbonnage du gouffre in chatelet, Charleroi definitief haar deuren.
Ehemalige Kohlenzeche bei Charleroi (Belgien). 1916 eröffnet und 1969 wieder stillgelegt.
Member of the Week in First Quality – December, 14, 2009
thank you very much, Mia!
Rino Gaetano - Ma il cielo è sempre più blu
(grazie giorgio! :-)))
today - after a very long dark, melancholic, cold and rainy week end - the sky is so blue here ... !
have the best day, you all :-)))
A new gallery of mine: today I've "met" Thibaut Lafaye - he has really amazing works - please, have a look!
Australian Paper Mills, First large scale all glass curtain wall in Melbourne, 1954. Design: Mussen Mckay and Potter.
Dieses Foto wurde am 25. November aufgenommen, am internationalen Tag gegen Gewalt an Frauen. Aus diesem Anlass wurden einige markante Gebäude orange angestrahlt, so auch der Förderturm der Zeche Zollverein in Essen. Eine positive Aktion, doch man kann nur hoffen, dass sie in den Köpfen etwas bewirkt...
This photo was taken on November 25th, International Day against Violence against Women.
For this occasion, some striking buildings were illuminated in orange, including the headframe of the Zollverein colliery in Essen. A positive action, but one can only hope that it will make a difference in the mind ...