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giugno '09 - (I am my own prison)

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للصمت لغة لا يدركها إلّا القليل ..!

 

Istanbul , Turkey

Canon eos 550D , Canon 70-200mm f/4L USM

Leica SL (Typ 601)

Leica 24-90mm f2.8-4 ASPH Vario-Elmarit-SL Lens

Street Photography in Málaga, Spain

 

A rare colour image .... I did try a black and white conversion, but now having a Monochrom M (246), I can't find the right balance so left this one in colour.

Shaheed Minar (Language Martyrs’ Monument) in Khulna City built in memory of the students and others killed during the historical language movement on 21 February 1952. Bangladesh.

 

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All rights reserved. Do not use any of the images in this stream without my permission.

Contact me at ashikmasud@gmail.com | Facebook | Twitter

 

This is my favorite illustration of the week,. I like everything about it--the simple style, the typefaces, and the idea that sentences have structure. They don't teach language like this anymore.

Poster for the Brussels International Exposition which was a world's fair held in Brussels, Belgium, from 23 April to 1 November 1910.

The Language of Flowers :

Glasgow :John Morrison, Bridge-Street,1847

biodiversitylibrary.org/page/59898097

.... and the living is easy.....

 

Self.

 

On Black

The language and poetry of flowers

Philadelphia :Claxton Remsen & Haffelfinger,1870

biodiversitylibrary.org/page/58004894

This photograph is a copyrighted image. Please do not download this image to use or blog, or for any other purposes, without crediting me, and informing me of its use and whereabouts.

 

www.zobel.20mn.com

Facebook !

Many language speakers in Alameda County!

I feel sorry for the word green. It is more abused than any other word in the English language.

Shot with Minox 35 GT-E

Minox Color-Minotar 35mm f/2.8 lens

CineStill 800T film

Shot at ISO 500

The Lincoln's Inn in Dublin opposite the National Gallery

Leica M Monochrom (Typ 246)

Summilux-M 35mm ƒ1.4 ASPH FLE

ND 3 Stop Filter

Street Photography

London, UK

for every kind, sweet and respectful person i have met in my journy of life....

Contrasting body language. The curvy language is Ella's.

On explore

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Pansy symbolizes in the language of flowers - loving thoughts, thoughts.

In the Victorian language of flowers, pansy means “think of me.”

In my language they are called "dan i noć", meaning " day and night"

 

• The name pansy is derived from the French word pensée meaning "thought", and was so named because the flower resembles a human face. Because of the plant's habit of hanging its head as if in a pensive or thoughtful mood. Its showy flower is often likened to a face. The central bouquet depicts the Viola tricolor, the wild pansy and an early variety of the garden pansy.

In August it nods forward as if deep in thought.

 

•*La Pensée, --Thought. “And there is pansies, that’s for thoughts.” [Ophelia, in Hamlet.]

The pansy remains a favorite image in the arts, culture, and crafts , from needlepoint to ceramics.

 

In William Shakespeare's play A Midsummer Night's Dream, the juice of a pansy blossom ("before, milk-white, now purple with love's wound, and maidens call it love-in-idleness") is a love potion : "the juice of it, on sleeping eyelids laid, will make a man or woman madly dote (fall in love) upon the next live creature that it sees."

Since the cultivated pansy had not yet been developed, "pansy" here means the wild Heartsease, and the idea of using it as a love potion was no doubt suggested by that name.

 

The folkloric language of flowers is more traditional than scientific, with conventional interpretations, similar to the clichés about animals such as the "clever fox" or "wise owl". Ophelia's oft-quoted line, "There's pansies, that's for thoughts" , in Hamlet (Act IV, Scene V) comes from this tradition: if a maiden found a honeyflower and a pansy left for her by an admirer, it would mean "I am thinking of our forbidden love" in symbol rather than in writing.

 

•There is also so many story from childhood , like a story about a royal family.

The king sat at the center of the pansy. His wife and four beautiful daughters were the five petals of the blossom. They always dressed in rich, elegant colors and liked to show them off to everyone. They loved the king so much they crowded close to his throne to be near him.

 

But I really do love it when something small and random makes someone think of me, mainly because it never hapoens.

Ladli — which in Indian languages (Hindi and Urdu) means ‘beloved daughter.’

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LADLI - The loved one! campaign by SOCIAL GEOGRAPHIC

Photo: Firoz Ahmad Firoz

 

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"Worst of all, violence against women and girls continues unabated in every continent, country and culture. It takes a devastating toll on women’s lives, on their families and on society as a whole. Most societies prohibit such violence -- yet the reality is that, too often, it is covered up or tacitly condoned." (UN SECRETARY-GENERAL in International Women’s Day 2007 Message.)

 

“Almost every country in the world still has laws that discriminate against women, and promises to remedy this have not been kept.” (UN High Commissioner for Human Rights on the eve of International Women's Day 2008)

 

According to one United Nations estimate, 113 to 200 million women are “demographically missing” from the world today. That is to say, there should be 113 to 200 million more women walking the earth, who aren’t. By that same estimate, 1.5 to 3 million women and girls lose their lives every year because of gender-based neglect or gender-based violence and Sexual Violence in Conflict.

 

In addition to torture, sexual violence and rape by occupation forces, a great number of women and girls are kept locked up in their homes by a very real fear of abduction and criminal abuse. In war and conflicts, girls and women have been denied their human right, including the right to health, education and employment. “Sexual violence in conflict zones is indeed a security concern. We affirm that sexual violence profoundly affects not only the health and safety of women, but the economic and social stability of their nations” –US Secretary of State, Condoleeza Rice, 19 June 2008 (Read more about UN Action against Sexual Violence in Conflict www.stoprapenow.org/ ).

 

Millions of young women disappear in their native land every year. Many of them are found later being held against their will in other places and forced into prostitution. According to the UNICEF ( www.unicef.org/gender/index_factsandfigures.html ),Girls between 13 and 18 years of age constitute the largest group in the sex industry. It is estimated that around 500,000 girls below 18 are victims of trafficking each year. The victims of trafficking and female migrants are sometimes unfairly blamed for spreading HIV when the reality is that they are often the victims.

 

According to the UNAIDS around 17.3 million, women (almost half of the total number of HIV-positive) living with HIV ( www.unaids.org ). While HIV is often driven by poverty, it is also associated with inequality, gender-based abuses and economic transition. The relationship between abuses of women's rights and their vulnerability to AIDS is alarming. Violence and discrimination prevents women from freely accessing HIV/AIDS information, from negotiating condom use, and from resisting unprotected sex with an HIV-positive partner, yet most of the governments have failed to take any meaningful steps to prevent and punish such abuse.

 

United Nations agencies estimated that every year 3 million girls are at risk of undergoing the procedure – which involves the partial or total removal of external female genital organs – that some 140 million women, mostly in Asia, the Middle East and in Africa, have already endured.

 

We can point a finger at poverty. But poverty alone does not result in these girls and women’s deaths and suffering; the blame also falls on the social system and attitudes of the societies.

 

India alone accounts for more than 50 million of the women who are “missing” due to female foeticide - the sex-selective abortion of girls, dowry death, gender-based neglect and all forms of violence against women.

 

Since the late 1970s when the technology for sex determination first came into being, sex selective abortion has unleashed a saga of horror in India. Experts are calling it "sanitized barbarism”. The 2001 Census conducted by Government of India, showed a sharp decline in the child sex ratio in 80% districts of India. In some parts of the country, the sex ratio of girls to boys has dropped to less than 800:1,000.

 

It's alarming that even liberal states like those in the northeast have taken to disposing of girls. Worryingly, the trend is far stronger in urban rather than rural areas, and among literate rather than illiterate women, exploding the myth that growing affluence and spread of basic education alone will result in the erosion of gender bias. The United Nations has expressed serious concern about the situation.

 

Over the years, laws have been made stricter and the punishment too is more stringent now. But since many people manage to evade punishment, others too feel inclined to take the risk. Just look at the way sex-determination tests go on despite a stiff ban on them. Only if the message goes out loud and clear that nobody who dares to snuff out the life of a female foetus would escape effective legal system would the practice end. It is only by a combination of monitoring, education, socio-cultural campaigns, and effective legal implementation that the deep-seated attitudes and practices against women and girls can be eroded.

 

The decline in the sex ratio and the millions of Missing Women are indicators of the feudal patriarchal resurgence. Violence against women has gone public – whether it is dowry murders, the practice of female genital mutilation, honour killings, sex selective abortions or death sentences awarded to young lovers from different communities by caste councils, rapes and killings in communal and caste violence, it is only women’s and human rights groups who are protesting – the public and institutional response to these trends is very minimal.

 

Millions of women suffer from discrimination in the world of work. This not only violates a most basic human right, but has wider social and economic consequences. Most of the governments turn a blind eye to illegal practices and enact and enforce discriminatory laws. Corporations and private individuals engage in abusive and sexist practices without fear of legal system.

 

More women are working now than ever before, but they are also more likely than men to get low-productivity, low-paid and vulnerable jobs, with no social protection, basic rights nor voice at work according to a new report by the International Labour Organization (ILO) issued for International Women’s Day 2008. Are we even half way to meeting the eight Millennium Development Goals?

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Unite To End Violence Against Women!

Say No To Sex Selection and Female Foeticide!!

Say No To Female Genital Mutilation!!!

Say No To Dowry and Discrimination Against Women!!!!

Say Yes To Women’s Resistance !!!!!

Educate & Empowered Women for a Happy Future !!!!!!

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www.un.org/womenwatch/

www.un.org/women/endviolence/

www.saynotoviolence.org/

www.unaids.org

www.un.org/millenniumgoals/

It's been two weeks since my latest encounter with a stranger.

Today I was lucky to run into another lovely stranger, Nina 26y/o, and her 11 months old dog, Mökö.

They were walking around my favourite bay in town in my opposite direction.

I approached her from a short distance by asking in Finnish what was the matter with her dog.

She detected instantly my accent, haha, and answered in English.

 

Nina wanted to hear a bit more about my photo project-- obviously it hasn't been too flowing lately due to that nasty Corona virus-- I briefed her and she agreed to participate.

 

Nina has graduated a couple of years ago and is working for the time being in an IT company.

 

We talked about the situation in the USA, mainly racism, and when I asked her for a message Nina said:

"Believe in the good in people!"

 

I sure want to believe and to hope that racism will be uprooted once and for all and that the black people in America will have justice.

"A riot is the language of the unheard", Dr Martin Luther King said in 1966. More than five decades have passed since and still America has failed to heard them.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=_K0BWXjJv5s

 

Nina's advice to her younger self: " Be proud of yourself!"

In her free time she likes to practice yoga and sports.

Needless to say that Mökö is her biggest hobby :-)

 

This is my 815th submission to The Human Family group.

Visit the group here to see more portraits and stories: The Human Family

The Language and poetry of flowers :

New York :Geo. A. Leavitt, Publisher,[1867]

biodiversitylibrary.org/page/60607489

How information was found pre-internet. Thanks for taking the time to check out my photo. HFF📷

Street Signs as Folk Art

John Baeder

Have a gloriumptious 2017 as Roald Dahl's language would have it be. This weeeeek I got to see the BFG. I so loved the show. I had to go in to my kid self and look up many things from Roald Dahl's books. Some of the best storys of all time. I so wish that Dr. Seuss and Roald Dahl would have made some books together. Can you just think how wildfun that would have been to read and see. I hope this year will be full of great powerful art and music.

 

Mike

 

Father and son collaboration

 

Our photographic art is a kinetic motion study, from the results of interacting with my son A.J and his toys.

 

He was born severely handicapped much like a quadriplegic. On December 17,1998. Our family’s goal has always been to help A.J. use his mind, even though he has minimal use of his body.

 

A.J. likes to watch lights and movement. One of the few things he can do for himself is to operate a switch that sets in motion lights and various shiny, colorful streamers and toys that swirl above his bed.

 

One day I took a picture of A.J. with his toys flying out from the big mobile near his bed like swings on a carnival ride. I liked the way the swirling objects and colors looked in the photo.

 

I wanted to study the motion more and photograph the whirling objects in an artful way, I wanted my son A.J. to be a part of it. After all, he’s the one who inspires me. When A.J. and I work together on our motion artwork, A.J. starts his streamers and objects twirling, I take the photographs.

 

Activating a tiny switch might not seem like much to some, but it’s all A.J. can do. He controls the direction the mobile will spin, as well as when it starts and stops. The shutter speeds are long, and sometimes, I move the camera and other times I hold it still.

 

I begin our creation with a Nikon digital camera. Then I use my computer with Photoshop to alter the images into what I feel might be an artistic way. Working with Photoshop, I find the best parts from several images and combine them into the final composite photograph. I consider the finished work to be fine art. The computer is just the vehicle that helps my expressions grow.

 

I take the photographs and A.J. adds the magic. It’s something this father and son do together. After I’ve taken a few shots, I show him the photos in the back of the camera. When the images are completed, I show him from a laptop. He just looks. He can’t tell me whether or not he likes the images, but he’s always ready to work with me again.

 

It offers me my only glance into A.J.’s secret world. We’ve built a large collection of images and I hope the motion and color move you as much as they do me.

 

A.J. inspires me to work harder to understand my life in the areas of art, photography, people, spirituality, and so much more. He truly sets my mind in motion and helps me find the beauty in everyday things.

   

Abstract Art set:

www.flickr.com/photos/patnode-rainbowman/sets/72157602269...

 

AJ Patnode - A Journey of Hope (documentary):

www.youtube.com/watch?v=OR7m8QFcmRM

 

This shows how I do the Camera work:

www.youtube.com/watch?v=fmjVVGraUVw

 

AJ'S blog:

www.ajpatnode.com

 

los ojos de Karla

Polaroid SX-70 with Impossible Project PX70 Color Protect film

 

Decide upon an emotion you wish to convey, use that as your guide to build your story.

— Ian Teh

 

The language of flowers, sometimes called floriography, was a Victorian-era means of communication in which various flowers and floral arrangements were used to send coded messages, allowing individuals to express feelings which otherwise could not be spoken. This language was most commonly communicated through tussie-mussies (small flower bouquets), an art which has a following today.

- Wikipedia

"examine her for motive

investigate the scene

in the ever present danger

keep the holster at your hip".

(If you were) in my movie,

Suzanne VEGA (99.9F, 1992).

- selfs -

 

Title in other languages:

Deutsch: In Pazin, Kroatien

English: In Pazin, Croatia

 

English:

 

Welcome and thank you for being here! This image forms part of a collection of photographs of moments on Planet Earth.

 

If you enjoy this work and want to support me financially, I’m glad to receive your donation via Paypal: paypal.me/jankohoener

 

If you intend to use this picture for your own purposes, please credit me with the following attribution line: Janko Hoener / CC-BY-SA-4.0. This is required by the license terms. A link back to this page and informing me about your usage via FlickrMail is appreciated.

 

Deutsch:

 

Willkommen und vielen Dank, dass Sie hier sind! Dieses Bild stellt Teil einer Sammlung von Fotografien von Augenblicken auf dem Planet Erde dar.

Wenn Ihnen diese Arbeit zusagt und Sie mich finanziell dabei unterstützen möchten, so freue ich mich über Ihre Spende via Paypal: paypal.me/jankohoener

 

Wenn Sie dieses Foto für eigene Zwecke nutzen möchten, geben Sie bitte Janko Hoener / CC-BY-SA-4.0 in der Bildunterschrift an. Dies ist per Lizenz gefordert. Über einen Link auf diese Seite und eine Benachrichtigung über die Nutzung via FlickrMail freue ich mich.

Sign Spanish Language Cuba Cuba Oriente © Schrift Spanische Sprache Kuba © Lengua Española © All rights reserved. Image fully copyrighted. All my images strictly only available with written royalty agreement. If interested, please ask. © Alle Rechte vorbehalten. Alle meine Bilder generell nur mit schriftl. Honorarvereinbg. Bitte ggf. fragen. ©

self confidence

 

reportage about body language in the beach

Meta. 21/April/ 2014

 

www.facebook.com/CiannielloChiara

  

www.vogue.it/photovogue/Portfolio/8497abb1-f645-4d46-b746...

 

It's been more than three years since you and your very lovely lady last stood here on the Porte Cochere at the NY-NY waiting for a taxi cab to deliver you two to some distance Vegas Strip dance lounge. It's been more than three years since you and your very lovely lady last stood on the edge of a lounge dance floor absolutely confident in your collective capacity to 'Burn The Dance Floor!' You and your very lovely lady spoke unspoken languages: Cha-Cha, Hustle, Swing, Rumba, Mambo, Merengue, Samba, and the Nightclub Two-Step! 😌

 

So how do you feel now as you wistfully watch packs of pretty young ladies piling into taxi cabs? Where are those pretty young ladies off to: OMNIA, TAO, Marquee, Jewel, The Foundation Room, or maybe ZOUK at Resorts World? Of course you and your very lovely lady don't go to those kinds of clubs because they don't play the kind of music that Arthur Murray schooled dance couples would dance to.

 

And then there was the Coronavirus Global Pandemic! 😧😷

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