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Thank you very much for choosing my work for the group cover! I am honored. <3
[The Best Ever Second Life Shots, By Invite Only Flickr Group] www.flickr.com/groups/only_the_best_in_here/
NOTE – In a real surprise to me, 12 years after I took this photo, it was chosen by the designers at Penguin Random House for the upcoming novel "El Dorado Drive" by Megan Abbott. I'm honoured.
The Three Cities, Malta ...
a collective description of the three fortified cities of Birgu, Senglea and Cospicua in Malta.
View from Valetta, Malta ...
San Angelo Castle Birgu on the left of image ...
Middle Sea Yacht Race Starting line .... this year the 50th Edition of the race ...
Pic in my Malta Series ...
Taken on Sept 30, 2018
Thanks for your visits, faves, invites and comments ... (c)rebfoto
No private group or multiple group invites please!
Ningún grupo privado o grupo múltiple invita por favor
Aucun groupe privé ou groupe multiple ne vous invite
Geen privégroep of meerdere groepsuitnodigingen alstublieft
Keine private Gruppe oder mehrere Gruppen laden bitte ein
Nenhum grupo privado ou grupo múltiplo convida por favor
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If i can not see the photos in your group do not invite me
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Thank you for your kind Comments and Awards and Favs
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Gargoyle from the roof of Sainte-Chapelle, a 13th century Gothic Church on Ile de la Cite, Paris, France.
Well according to legend, you have to invite a vampire in before it can enter. I don't know if that protection also holds for gargoyles; -)
looked out the caravan window this morning and this parakeet was on one of our nut feeders so just had to get a few photos of it and as you can see the sun was shining nice and bright at 7 am just a shame it was so cold so could not lay out in the sun
Invites and special awards
You've been invited to add this photo to the group ***A Place For Great Photographers*** Level 1 Please Award 3. By group admin Fred255 Photography
You've been invited to add this photo to the group City Parrots.
By group admin City Parrots
September 2019
expired film (03/2015)
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A series of four pictures ending my texture period.
Visit The Carbone Gallery
Art gallery and dance company
Read Milena Carbone's Second Life stories on Medium
Web : The Carbone Gallery News
SQUARE CROP.. A macro buttercup & hover-fly Eupeodes luniger.. I think.. any experts out there..? Large/Black
Have a super evening/day.. thanks for your visit.. NO multi invites please..
EXPLORE.. Highest position: #470 on Wednesday, June 3, 2009
To view more of my images, taken in the Isle of Wight, please click "here" !
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St Lawrence is a village on the south side of the Isle of Wight, in southern England. It is located to the west of Ventnor and many consider it a part of that town. St Lawrence is situated on the Undercliff, and is subject to regular landslips.
St. Lawrence is much older than Ventnor. One of its churches dates from the 13th century; before the addition of a chancel in 1830, it was only 25 feet long and 11 feet wide, and was considered the smallest church in England. Although there are undoubtedly smaller chapels including the tiny church at Les Vauxbelets on Guernsey, this arguably remains the smallest to be built as a parish church — although this role has long since been supplanted by a larger church in the village - see St. Lawrence's Church, St. Lawrence. It also has a 15th-century baptismal font - a stoup that is about 500 years old and a series of 18th-century hat pegs. The piscina niche is almost the same age as the church.
The larger church at St. Lawrence dates from the 19th century, but has a 17th-century altar and a chest that dates from 1612.
There is a glassworks styled as Isle of Wight Glass by the Old Park Hotel in St. Lawrence. Nearby is the site of the Tropical Bird Park, which is now closed. Close to the newer church is the site of the Rare Breeds Park, which closed while the A3055 road was closed to the west of the village due to landslip.
St Lawrence was in the nineteenth century the subject of an ambitious plan by a German developer, named William Spindler (who had made his fortune as a chemist in Berlin), to develop St Lawrence as a resort to rival Ventnor. He lived on the Isle of Wight from 1881 to his death in 1889 and is buried in Whitwell. During his time in St. Lawrence he had an enormous influence there and on the surrounding areas. He possibly alienated local opinion with a series of "improving pamphlets" criticising local perceived laziness. His legacy has been a number of grand Victorian houses, often semi-derelict and half hidden by woodland. Perhaps his most noticeable memorials are several huge pieces of masonry in Binnel Bay, which once formed a harbour which is all but inaccessible from the land. These have fallen into titanic ruins and are known locally as "Spindler's Follies".
The card you see placed between my fingers.. is your golden ticket... Only those who know me are able to pass you this card, it is a very special invite to House Hertz.. (search for me in world under the sign in tobias haven)
Last summer I was invited to take photos at a fundraising event in San Francisco. Many burners were entertained by musicians at Monarch Gardens for the fundraiser of Treble Makers, a Burning Man camp.
I processed a balanced, a photographic, and a realistic HDR photo from a RAW exposure, blended them selectively, carefully adjusted the color balance and curves, and desaturated the image. I welcome and appreciate constructive comments.
Thank you for visiting - ♡ with gratitude! Fave if you like it, add comments below, like the Facebook page, order beautiful HDR prints at qualityHDR.com.
-- ƒ/1.2, 50 mm, 1/1000 sec, ISO 200, Sony A7 II, Canon 50mm f0.95 "Dream Lens", HDR, 1 RAW exposure, _DSC0808_hdr1bal1pho1rea1d.jpg
-- CC BY-NC-SA 4.0, © 2023 Peter Thoeny, Quality HDR Photography
We have an amazing show of modern landscapes opening this Thursday featuring Leon Benn, Paul Wackers, Jacob Whibley and Tessar Lo. It opens Thursday April 1 from 7-10pm...hope you can come!
more info here: www.narwhalartprojects.com/exhibitions/2010/atlasfindings/
*painting by paul wackers*
Je suis tellement heureux de pouvoir à nouveau créer et exposer avec Jaz après des mois loin de SL. A vendredi soir :)
I am so happy to be able to create and exhibit with Jaz again after months away from SL. See you Friday night :) (french time).
I have so many other Barbies (too many, hehe), but for some reason I have been playing with this thrift store Tris, a lot lately. At least this time she invited some friends to come along, lol.
To view more of my images, of Grassington, please click
"here" !
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Grassington is a market town and civil parish in the Craven district of North Yorkshire, England. Historically part of the West Riding of Yorkshire, the town is situated in Wharfedale around 9 miles (14 km) from Bolton Abbey and is surrounded by limestone scenery. Nearby villages include Linton, Threshfield, Hebden, Conistone and Kilnsey. The Domesday Book lists Grassington as part of the estate of Gamal Barn including 7 carucates of ploughland (840 acres/350ha) including Grassington, Linton and Threshfield. The Norman conquest of England made it part of the lands of Gilbert Tison. But by 1118 Tison had suffered a demotion and his lands returned to the king then given to Lord Percy. Grassington was historically a township in the parish of Linton in the West Riding of Yorkshire. It became a separate civil parish in 1866, and was transferred to North Yorkshire in 1974. Although often described by local people as a village, Grassington was granted a Royal Charter for a market and fair in 1282 giving it market town status. The market was held regularly until about 1860. A change in land use from the early 17th century, when lead mining began to assume more importance, brought some prosperity, but Grassington's heyday arrived during the late 18th and early 19th centuries. The opening of the Yorkshire Dales Railway to Threshfield in 1901 brought new visitors, many of whom settled, some finding work in Skipton or in the developing limestone quarries. The Old Hall at Grassington is reputedly the oldest house in Yorkshire, dating from the late 13th or early 14th century. Today Grassington is the main residential and tourist centre in Upper Wharfedale Centred around its small cobbled square is a selection of shops, pubs and the village museum, offering food, clothing and gifts, alongside small cafes, restaurants and hotels. Grassington Folk Museum houses a collection which tells the story of Wharfedale. It is an independent museum, run and managed by volunteers. Upper Wharfedale Fell Rescue Association is a voluntary mountain rescue organisation, located in Grassington, which rescues people in trouble from the surrounding fells and caves. Grassington Festival is a two-week long annual event encompassing music, performance and visual arts, held in a variety of venues around the village. In 2008 it included acts by Jo Brand, Dara Ó Briain, Clare Teal and Toyah Willcox. Every September since 2011, Grassington plays host to a 1940's themed weekend. Events include war re-enactments, dances as well as a variety of military and civilian vehicles on display from the period. In the winter Grassington also hosts the very popular Dickensian Festival when the entire village is taken over by Dickensian costumes and Christmas activities and opportunities to purchase Christmas presents. A Yorkshire Dales National Park information centre is on Hebden Road. Three miles north of Grassington at Kilnsey is the glacially carved overhang of Kilnsey Crag. Grass Wood, a large area of ancient woodland including the Iron-Age fort, Fort Gregory (also known as Gregory's Fort), is situated just over one mile north-west of Grassington.
La neige s'étant invitée plus tôt dans la saison, les accès voiture sont fermés dans la vallée pour accéder au refuge Auronzo, à proximité, entre autre, du site des Tre Cime.
C'est donc à pied et bien chargés de notre matériel que nous avons décidé de nous rendre sur place en empruntant routes, chemins et sentiers verglacés et enneigés tout juste piétinés par de précédents têtus comme nous. Cela valait la peine d'en baver quelques heures pour atteindre la pointe nord des cimes, baignées dans une brume dissipée mais tout de même généreuse en lumière.
Krafttier Katze
Die Katze, das Tier der Selbstbestimmtheit, Freiheit und Weiblichkeit, schmiegt sich an Dich, um Deinen 7. Sinn zu aktivieren und der Intuition, Telepathie und Deiner inneren Weisheit Raum zur Entfaltung zu geben.
Ruhig und besonnen reist sie zwischen den Welten und fordert Dich auf, es ihr gleich zu tun und Deinem inneren instinktreichen Wissen bedingungslos zu folgen. Die Katze, die Plätze mit negativen Energien nicht meidet, ist daher das Krafttier, das Dich einlädt dem Unvermeidlichen die Stirn zu bieten und Verantwortung für das zu übernehmen, was sich in Deinem Leben zeigt. Da die Katze im Gegensatz zum Hund schwer bis kaum dressierbar ist, weist auf ihren unerschütterlichen Willen hin ausschließlich sich selbst zu dienen und den eigenen Wünschen und Bedürfnissen Raum zu geben. Die Freiheit, die daraus erwächst, bringt Dich zu Dir und in Deine Kraft.
Quelle:
Vielen Dank Katharina Linhart
To view more of my images, of Orford, in Suffolk, please click
"here"
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Orford Castle is a castle in Orford in the English county of Suffolk, 12 miles (19 km) northeast of Ipswich, with views over Orford Ness. It was built between 1165 and 1173 by Henry II of England to consolidate royal power in the region. The well-preserved keep, described by historian R. Allen Brown as "one of the most remarkable keeps in England", is of a unique design and probably based on Byzantine architecture. The keep stands within the earth-bank remains of the castle's outer fortifications. Prior to the building of Orford Castle, Suffolk was dominated by the Bigod family, who held the title of the Earl of Norfolk and owned key castles at Framlingham, Bungay, Walton and Thetford. Hugh Bigod had been one of a group of dissenting barons during the Anarchy in the reign of King Stephen, and Henry II wished to re-establish royal influence across the region. Henry confiscated the four castles from Hugh, but returned Framlingham and Bungay to Hugh in 1165. Henry then decided to build his own royal castle at Orford, near Framlingham, and construction work began in 1165, concluding in 1173. The Orford site was around 2 miles (3.2 km) from the sea, lying on flat ground with swampy terrain slowly stretching away down to the river Ore, about 1⁄2 mile (0.80 km) away. The design of the keep was unique, and has been termed "one of the most remarkable keeps in England" by historian R. Allen Brown. The 90-foot-high (27-metre) central tower was circular in cross-section with three rectangular, clasping towers built out from the 49-foot-wide (15-metre) structure. The tower was based on a precise set of proportions, its various dimensions following the one-to-the-root-of-two ratio found in many English churches of the period. Much of the interior is built with high-quality ashlar stonework, with broad, 5-foot-6-inch-wide (1.7-metre) staircases. The best chambers were designed to catch the early morning sun, whilst the various parts of the keep were draught-proofed with doors and carefully designed windows. Originally the roof of the keep, above the upper hall, would have formed a domed effect, with a tall steeple above that. The chapel above the entrance to the keep was unusually shaped; historian Stephen Brindle suggests that such a design "would not normally have been thought seemly for a room dedicated to the service of God". The keep was surrounded by a curtain wall with probably four flanking towers and a fortified gatehouse protecting a relatively small bailey; these outer defences, rather than the keep, probably represented the main defences of the castle. The marshes nearby were drained, turning the village of Orford into a sheltered port. The castle, including the surrounding ditch, palisade and stone bridge, cost £1,413 to build, the work possibly being conducted by the master mason Alnoth. Some of the timbers were brought from as far away as Scarborough, and the detailed stonework being carved from limestone from Caen in Normandy, the remainder of the stone being variously local mudstone and coralline, as well as limestone from Northamptonshire.
Orford is a small town in Suffolk, England, within the Suffolk Coast and Heaths AONB. Like many Suffolk coastal towns it was of some importance as a port and fishing village in the Middle Ages. It still has a fine mediaeval castle, built to dominate the River Ore. The main geographical feature of the area is Orford Ness, a long, wide shingle spit at the mouth of the Ore. Orford Ness has in the past been used as an airstrip testing facility and in the early 1970s it was the site of a powerful radar station as part of the Cold War defences against low flying attacking aircraft; today it is a nature reserve run by the National Trust. Orford provides the only point of access to the nature reserves of Orford Ness and Havergate Island. Both sites can only be accessed via ferry boat from Orford quay. The Orford Ness ferry runs on selected days between April and October and the Havergate Island ferry on selected Saturdays. The population of Orford greatly increases during the summer months due to its flourishing sailing club. As well as the Castle, Orford's attractions include river cruises, three pubs, a traditional post office which sells fresh bread, a traditional bakery, a smokehouse and a restaurant; the Butley-Orford Oysterage.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
-smile-
while walking around at longwood, this colorful one caught my eye because it looks like while the stamens are all playing around in a circle, one of them stops and smiles at the camera. what do you think?
speaking of which, while thinking a lot about my style and how i can improve my photography this year, i came across this very interesting article by darwin wiggett that talks about style and vision development. after reading this article, i think i'm gonna continue on my path of shooting anything and everything (instead of just sticking to one subject, like landscapes) to further improve my skills and see where i go this year. :)
There was an outdoor portrait activity , we invited the lovely girl 陳奕潔 to go to Taipei water museum garden to take picture , 陳奕潔 got pretty face , eyes ,sweet smile, natural quality , nice figure with great breast , small waist , round hip and slim body , white skin ,when she wore a beautiful elegant gown to show her personal style of pose , she is so charming and gorgeous ,thank 陳奕潔 ,she did her best model job