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Shot with Canon 5Diii Body, Canon 16-35mm 2.8ii
Using 3LeggedThing Frank & Lowepro Protactic 450
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The library of Celsus is an ancient Roman building in Ephesus, Anatolia, now part of Selçuk, Turkey. It was built in honour of the Roman Senator Tiberius Julius Celsus Polemaeanus (completed in 135 AD) by Celsus' son, Gaius Julius Aquila. The library was built to store 12,000 scrolls and to serve as a mausoleum for Celsus, who is buried in a crypt beneath the library.
The interior of the library was destroyed, supposedly by an earthquake in 262 A.D and the façade by another earthquake in the tenth or eleventh century A.D. It lay in ruins for centuries, until the façade was re-erected by archaeologists between 1970 and 1978.
Some troopers getting books for the summer! They're already bored of video games and YouTube XD (As is the case with me, to an extent). Hopefully they can find something interesting ;)
Visited the Central Library and this is from the front balcony. The sun was shinning. People were taking the opportunity to be in the warmth of the sun's rays.
Yesterday my sister and I visited our cousin in West Vancouver. He has Alzheimer's disease and lives in the Maison Senior Living - Memory Care. The place was beautiful and he seemed genuinely happy there.
May I suggest enlarging the picture to see the activities of people using the library area.
My Library and office, at home...
LUGINSLAND (German for "With a Country View") is our home in northern California. Architecturally designed by the late John Colm of San Francisco, and built by Dave Stroebel, with interiors and landscape design by Angelo (Buzz) Forniciari. Surrounded 270 degrees by Robert Trent Jones golf course, the estate was built in 1990, incorporating house parts from around the Globe.
Slate roof from China, marble floors from Italy, Malaysia, Formosa, Mexico, and Indonesia, The front doors on the home were hand carved in Borreon, Spain in the year 1650. Interior doors are also from the Castellon de la Plana area of the Costa Azuhar. Rugs are mostly Persian, and various pieces of furniture are antique and come from Brazil, Italy, Slovenia, Germany and China.
Here in the Library is a marvelous tribal rug from Afghanistan, the desk is an old converted Quarter Grand Piano made of Brazilian Rosewood and came from a sugar plantation in Mannaus, Brazil. The old coffee table is an antique Hindu temple door. The fireplace is limestone from France, and the fabrics are Robert Allen. The old piano is a Chickering, dated 1906 and has been in my wife's family from the beginning. The marble floors are limestone from Ipoh, Malaysia. The ornate desk chairs are Spanish. The small armoire is from Sumatra. The urns are Aubusson. The table lamp is solid alabaster and comes from Italy.
Finishing off my images from Bristol's Central Library...loved all the wooden textures in the reading room.
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A subscription reference library for the Mechanics Institute from 1860, which eventually became part of the public library. It closed in 1975, and remains a unique surviving collection in Australia.
Ceiling of the Library of Celcus in Ephesus Ancient City.
This is the external facade of the Perth City Library including the extensive remediation building works. But it is good the library is still operating, with a dedicated children's floor that is accessible only to parents and their kids. I quite often pop into a library when travelling, just to see what is different and interesting.
Day 51
The Downtown Library is covered with an interesting metal skin that reflects. Can't believe I haven't shot this with the focus on the pattern before.
Eugene, Oregon
I love it when I'm out shooting some other things and I happen upon one of these small neighborhood libraries.
Panasonic LUMIX GH5II
Panasonic LUMIX DG Vario-Elmarit 12-35mm f:2.8
Zine Library in Vancouver
Organized by Artspeak and Fillip with Motto
May 15 – July 22, 2010
Artspeak
233 Carrall Street
Vancouver BC V6B 2J2
604.688.0051
Tues – Sun, 12 – 5pm
The ceiling of the library of the Technical University of Berlin. I guess I got little too carried away with the postprocessing since the atmosphere here is little dark and jail like
I took this photo nearly 9 years ago in rural Maine. Posting it today because publicly funded libraries are important resources in a truly free society.
Libraries are a priceless resource worth our support.
ODC-Library
This Library is in the town of Ulysses, NY. and in the Village of Trumansburg and in Tompkins Country. I think I need to go to the Library and look that up! Philomathic refers to the love of study and learning.
Some weeks ago I had the chance to take some shots in the library of Stuttgart. It was the first time I visited the library and I had no big expectations. Of course the pictures you find online are really great but on the other hand side I doubted that I am able to get such shots because of several reasons:
a) I was not sure if my lense would be wide enough
b) I am aware what lightroom and photoshop can do
c) I never really used filters in such scenarios
d) and of course I know me as photographer (the most risky factor)
So no ideal conditions at all…I am not sure about the picture but I guess it’s not so bad ;-)...
But anyway I can just encourage everyone to visit the library because the architecture is just phenomenal. I was really amazed! So the trip to Stuttgart was more than worthwhile.
Here are some info about the library:
www1.stuttgart.de/stadtbibliothek/bvs/actions/profile/vie...