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Sunrise sur la baie des Anges à Nice,
décorez votre intérieur avec une de mes photographies, si vous ne trouvez pas votre bonheur sur ma galerie Zeinberg, envoyez moi un MP avec les références de la photographie qui vous plaît et je l'intégrerai.
Vous pouvez choisir, votre format, votre cadre, le premier prix est abordable, bonne visite et peut être à bientôt chez vous au travers d'une de mes oeuvres.
Offrez vous une de mes #Photography en tirage photographique de la #Cotedazurfrance en qualité galerie par #ZeinBerg, laboratoire de la célèbre galerie d'art #YellowKorner
unrise over the Baie des Anges in Nice,
decorate your interior with one of my photographs, if you can't find what you're looking for on my Zeinberg gallery, send me a PM with the references of the photograph you like and I'll include it.
You can choose, your format, your frame, the first price is affordable, good visit and maybe see you soon at home through one of my works.
Treat yourself to one of my #Photography in photographic print of #Cotedazurfrance in gallery quality by #ZeinBerg, laboratory of the famous art gallery #YellowKorner
----> fr.mylabphoto.com/?id=1025503
#Artiste #LimitedEdition #artgallery #galeriedart
retrouver sur Instagram mon laboratoire photographique et la galerie d'art qui édite ses photos chez lui
of course, each photo would work better on its own ... but my kind of photography is exploring ...
ƒ/7.1
58.0 mm
1/640
100
_MG_8231_97_pa2
of course, each photo would work better on its own ... but my kind of photography is exploring ...
ƒ/7.1 58.0 mm 1/640 100
_MG_8231_97_pt_bw2
Seen in "Deutsches Museum" (German Museum), Munich and shot with Sony A7 Mii and the Leitz/Leica SUMMILUX-M 1.4/75mm at F=1.4.
If you want to know a little bit more about me as a Photographer:
Warning : ALL RIGHTS RESERVED : do not use my images without my EXPLICIT permission
All my images are protected by PIXSY and COPYTRACK.
Functional many years ago, this is the laboratory of Thomas Edison which he maintained on his winter estate in Fort Myers, Florida. The tour of the Ford/Edison Estate was an outstanding visit.
It is thought to have been first built circa 1627 as this date is carved on part of the framework. This is the earliest date to be found on any windmill in the British Isles. It should be remembered that such a structure would have had to have frequent repairs made to it, so the mill may predate 1627. It was dendrochronologically dated in 2004 by Dr. Martin Bridge of the Oxford Dendrochronology Laboratory when the oldest pieces in the buck were found to be from trees felled in winter 1595/96 and spring 1597. The 'new' crown tree was made from a tree that felled in spring 1670, while the quarter bars of the trestle were from trees felled between 1824 and 1826, so like most mills, it is a mix of old timbers variously recycled or hanging on from their original use.
For nearly three hundred years grain grown in the two adjoining villages was ground at the mill into flour. In 1874 the mill was bought by Adelbert Wellington Brownlow Cust, 3rd Earl Brownlow who owned the nearby Ashridge Estate. He subsequently left it to a local farmer, who ran a successful milling business from the mill.
In 1902 the mill was seriously damaged during an enormous gale, damaging it beyond the price of economic repair. Around 1922 the derelict ruined mill was bought from the Ashridge Estate by a farmer whose land was close to the mill. In 1937 he donated it to the National Trust. However, it was not until 1963 that a band of volunteers began to carry out renovations at their own expense. The mill appeared in an episode of The Champions titled The Invisible Man which was filmed in 1967.[2] In 1970, after an interlude of 68 years, the mill once again ground corn.
Thanks to model Richard de Grataine Suoh aka richardgratainesuoh, for his invaluable collaboration and great styling.
We were missing the mad scientist with the typical laboratory full of instruments. Thanks to people with this great creativity, much progress was made in the use of steam in the steampunk world.
Style card here:
www.flickr.com/photos/richard_de_grataine/52138279276/in/...
Power Plant Cyklon - Abandoned power plant of a former paper factory - Germany
Unfortunately the small former laboratory is totally vandalised now. All instruments and tools are gone.
Former largest steelworks of ex GDR, now "Industriemuseum Brandenburg an der Havel", showing the last existing Siemens-Martin melting furnace.
Dr. Jekyll Lab
HDR 7 scatti
Fotocamera: Nikon D750
Aperture: f/8
Shutter Speed: 1/10 s
Lente: 14 mm
ISO: 100
Exposure Bias: 0 EV
Flash: Off, Did not fire
Lens: Nikkor AF-S FX 14-24mm f/2.8G ED
Firefly Petunia: Glows in the Dark
Thanks to science and human ingenuity, that's set to change, according to a company called Light Bio. They just released their first glow-in-the-dark plant to the public: the Firefly Petunia.
The firefly petunia glows brightly and doesn’t need special food thanks to a group of genes from the bioluminescent mushroom Neonothopanus nambi. The fungus feeds its light-emitting reaction with the molecule caffeic acid, which terrestrial plants also happen to make. By inserting the mushroom genes into the petunia, researchers made it possible for the plant to produce enzymes that can convert caffeic acid into the light-emitting molecule luciferin and then recycle it back into caffeic acid — enabling sustained bioluminescence. Wood co-founded Light Bio with two of the researchers behind this work, Karen Sarkisyan, a synthetic biologist at the MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences in London, and Ilia Yampolsky, a biomolecular chemist at the Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University in Moscow.
Power Plant Cyklon - Abandoned power plant of a former paper factory - Germany
Unfortunately the small former laboratory is totally vandalised now. All instruments and tools are gone.
This is the Smith Interpretive Center / Greenhouse. It originally was administrative offices and laboratory/greenhouse.
Now it serves its special function as an interpretive center and a greenhouse.
"Crude masonry and rustication characterize the initial architecture at the Boyce Thompson Arboretum. The Smith Building, the arboretum’s original visitor center and administration building, designed by Thompson and built by local contractor and mason Jack Davey in 1925–1926, is sited on the canyon floor. The rustic edifice, composed of locally quarried rhyolite, originally featured lichen-covered interior walls and flagstone floors. The 6,500-square-foot space contained offices, laboratories, a library, a herbarium, a seed room, a photography studio, supply rooms, and a fireproof vault; a soft-water cistern filled the basement. Flanking the structure are two attached greenhouses that display indigenous and exotic cacti and succulents. Measuring 50 feet long and 20 feet wide, the prefabricated iron-frame and glazed structures were supplied by the Lord and Burnham Company of New York."
sah-archipedia.org/buildings/AZ-01-021-0017
I haven't been here since I was a child. I consider it more of a walk rather than a hike. But it is incredibly interesting. Especially for photography. My Grandfather - Joseph Harris - was the Superintendent of Col. Thompson's Miami Inspiration Mines.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boyce_Thompson_Arboretum
Boyce Thompson Arboretum is the oldest and largest botanical garden in the state of Arizona. It is one of the oldest botanical institutions west of the Mississippi River. Founded in 1924 as a desert plant research facility and “living museum”, the arboretum is located in the Sonoran Desert on 392 acres (159 ha) along Queen Creek and beneath the towering volcanic remnant, Picketpost Mountain. Boyce Thompson Arboretum is on U.S. Highway 60, an hour's drive east from Phoenix and 3 miles (4.8 km) west of Superior, Arizona.
The arboretum was founded by William Boyce Thompson (1869-1930), a mining engineer who made his fortune in the copper mining industry. He was the founder and first president of Inspiration Consolidated Copper Company at Globe-Miami, Arizona and Magma Copper Company in Superior, Arizona. In the early 1920s, Thompson, enamored with the landscape around Superior, built a winter home overlooking Queen Creek. Also in the 1920s, as his fortunes grew, he created and financed the Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research in Yonkers, New York (now at Cornell University), and the Boyce Thompson Arboretum on the property of the Picket Post House, west of Superior.
Boyce Thompson wrote: “I have in mind far more than mere botanical propagation. I hope to benefit the State and the Southwest by the addition of new products. A plant collection will be assembled which will be of interest not only to the nature lover and the plant student, but which will stress the practical side, as well to see if we cannot make these mesas, hillsides, and canyons far more productive and of more benefit to mankind. We will bring together and study the plants of the desert countries, find out their uses, and make them available to the people. It is a big job, but we will build here the most beautiful, and at the same time the most useful garden of its kind in the world.”[3]
DSC03410-HDR acd
Planet Earth Vintage Architecture, PEVA,