View allAll Photos Tagged JOURNEYING
"Long, long journey
out of nowhere,
long, long way to go;
but what are sighs
and what is sadness
to the heart that's coming home?"
www.youtube.com/watch?v=5A01guT4HL4&feature=channel_page
A study of my study (which once was John's.)
Rebuilt Bulleid Pacifics look rather good from a rear three-quarter angle I think - such a scene at London's Victoria station at around 10.00pm on Wednesday 16th May 2018 revived early childhood memories of spotless rebuilt (and only just!) 'Merchant Navy', 'West Country' and 'Battle of Britain' classes 'on the blocks' at Waterloo, a station that I frequently passed through with my parents in the late-1950s and early 1960s. This day trip from North Yorkshire to London was certainly worthwhile, if only to experience this arrival, but I also had the pleasure of the departure earlier that day. 35028 'Clan Line' with the Belmond 'British Pullman' from Bath, helping me to relive those memories of almost six decades ago!
Copyright Gordon Edgar - All rights reserved. Please do not use any of these images without my explicit permission
Journey was our puppy dog for over 6 years starting in February of 2010 when we rescued her from the local shelter. Her and two siblings were found in a tied-up plastic bag on the side of the road before arriving at the shelter where my wife picked her out immediately at first sight. She became another member of the family for all those years before an accident took her away from us...but this is the way that I choose to remember her! Cute as any puppy ever was and full of amazing personality...
This photo was taken just a day or so after we brought her home at just 6 weeks old. She was still trying to figure things out but already knew she was home...
Technical Information (or Nerdy Stuff):
Camera - Nikon D5000 (handheld)
Lens – Nikkor 18-55mm Zoom
ISO – 1250
Aperture – f/5.6
Exposure – 1/60 second
Focal Length – 55mm
The original RAW file was processed with Adobe Camera Raw and final adjustments were made with Photoshop CS6.
"For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the LORD, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future." ~Jeremiah 29:11
The best way to view my photostream is through Flickriver with the link below:
Life is like a train journey
Between every destination that we behold
Some of us travel on that train
Waiting for the destination to arrive
Others looking backward and feeling nostalgic
And some just want the journey to continue
With no longing for destination to arrive
People come aboard and sit for a while
Others ride short distances
Each travel with a different purpose to a different destination
And each has a different story to tell
We make friends, fall in love in that short journey
And share our journey for sometime along
But then we all have to leave to board another train
In our lives, we all have missed certain destined train
Boarded a random train that changed our destination
Left a journey at a random midpoint station
And that has shaped our life the way it is
Such is the life's train but only going forward
Once you board a train leading to a destination
There is no turning back
Only a glimpse of the boarding station and then gone forever...
Ankita Sethi
GBRf Class 66/7 No. 66737 Lesia runs round the empty alumina tanks it has just brought from Fort William Alcan before shunting them into the loader at North Blyth on 10th August 2022.
For alternative railway photography, follow the link:
www.phoenix-rpc.co.uk/index.html to the Phoenix Railway Photographic Circle.
Thoughts will unwind
No longer mine
They are for you
When you come
So long
I'm cutting here
And the water's blood
When you come.
The sky moves faster at this time of year.
4 days of full time shooting with my partner, Chiara and a crazy Siberian Husky.
Great places, awesome weather conditions, a lot of beer.
But I could see there was something missing in Andre's eyes, some kind of perpetual sadness.
And I know for sure that thing was you.
We missed you a lot,Cleo.
February 11th, 2012
a “completion of an inner imaginary journey”.Didier Massa Listen 🙏
Off/ On 📷
Wave
Taking pictures a tool (camera), not a photographer.
The choice of tool limits the possibilities.
Experience allows him (instrument) less and less to limit their capabilities.
The ability to see is given only when the observer allows ...
The moment of observation is the real find ...
Training and mastering it defies. Training leads to poor imitations of the original.
Often the result should ripen, like wine. Although time is the understanding of the mind, therefore it is very speculative.
The meaning of all this is the process!
Find someone who inspires shooting the camera!
www.instagram.com/listenwave_photography/
Often we are visited by thoughts that may reveal something unknown ... Our mind many times tries to solve a problem with known methods ... This is its main mistake! The path of the heart opens the doors that appear in our path. It is a pity that not everyone has the courage to insert the keys that are always with us ...
(Listenwave- 圣彼得堡)
This is a collection of souvenirs, beauties, lights and moments. These photographs were taken in June 2016 during a 5 500 kms roadtrip from France to Portugal through Spain. They're not presented in chronological order but following sunlight, to recreate the feeling you get when you spend long hours driving on your own watching the light change.
Gidday friends......How cool is it to be back among the earthly delights .... flowers....birds....insects.....just simply amazing ..... this is really starting to feel like a rebirth .... and not just in seasonal changes..... but from deep within myself ..... Thank you God.....
Have a lovely day my friends.... xox
Mart
...to another time and place...where people and dollies live in harmony, truth, peace and love. Wonder how long that journey will take? Sprocket is armored up and ready to go.
story tale sim in SL. made of water color textures. follow the path and the story
Visit this location at Mistwood Isle & CKB Art Gallery - Niamh's Journey of Dreams in Second Life
Sponsored by the City of Naples and produced in collaboration with Rizzoli Lizard, the exhibition brings together about 100 pieces including plates, sketches, photographs and enlargements and is an evocative and rich journey into the world of a solitary character, a wanderer, a condottiere and a sailor at the same time, unpredictable and witty in his jokes. The exhibition is part of the broader framework of cooperation between MANN and COMICON, with the aim of establishing an interaction and dialogue between archaeology and new art forms, capable of intercepting the passions and tastes of younger people.
55017 THE DURHAM LIGHT INFANTRY throbs away under Hull Paragon's cavernous roof after arriving in the city with 1D00 08:05 King's Cross - Hull on 14 July 1979.
Zenit EM f/8 60th/sec Ektachrome 400
For everything you ever wanted to know about the magnificent Deltics, go to www.napier-
Arriva Herts & Essex VDL SB200/Wright Pulsar 2 3774 (FL63DXE) passes the Belmont Road stop in Uxbridge whilst on Greenline 724 towards Heathrow
Journey with us through Webb’s breathtaking view of the Pillars of Creation, where scores of newly formed stars glisten like dewdrops among floating, translucent columns of gas and dust.
If this majestic landscape looks familiar, you may recognize the original. Hubble first captured the Pillars of Creation in 1995 and revisited it in 2014. Webb’s latest view was taken in near-infrared light, which is invisible to our eyes. Seeing in infrared allows Webb to pierce through the dust and reveal stars galore.
In this image, compare and contrast the Pillars of Creation as seen by Webb and Hubble. On the left here is Hubble’s iconic view, taken in visible light in 2014. On the right is Webb’s new near-infrared view. (Also find a high-res of just the Webb image here on our Flickr!)
Why go back to where we’ve been before? Webb helps us identify far more precise counts of newborn stars, along with the quantities of gas and dust. This will deepen our understanding of how stars form and burst out of these dusty clouds over millions of years. Read more: www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2022/nasa-s-webb-takes-star-...
Image Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI
Image description: Two images of the Pillars of Creation, a star-forming region in space. At left, Hubble’s visible-light view shows darker pillars that rise from the bottom to the top of the screen, ending in three points. The background is opaque, set off in yellow and green toward the bottom and blue and purple at the top. A handful of stars of various sizes appear.
Webb’s near-infrared image at right shows the same pillars, but they are semi-opaque and rusty red-colored. The peaks of the second and third pillars are set off in darker shades of brown and have red outlines. The background is cast in darker blues and blacks, and stars in yellow and white of all sizes speckle the entire scene. Webb’s image was cropped and rotated to match Hubble’s view, so much of the top right corner and a small portion of the left corner has been left black.
My first attempt at photographing salmon on there return journey. I found it super difficult but at the same time had lots of fun trying to find a spot where there was a rhythm from where the salmon breached the water in its attempt to propel itself higher above the raging falls.
With it's journey nearly complete, the crew has the loaded train's brakes working hard on the heavy decent into the Ohio River Valley near Maysville, Ky.