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I think this will be the strangest Easter weekend most of us have ever experienced. This is Daisy checking the tv listings magazine - she's hoping the promised "Easter treats" on the cover refer to cat food rather than what's on tv!
I hope everyone, of every faith, will enjoy the weekend. Look after your family & friends, even though this probably means just a phone call or online message. Stay safe.
Happy Caturday & happy Easter.
This photo is integrant part of Gallant Magazine Fall Issue
Check out Gallant Magazine Website: gallantmagazinesl.com/
Visit Neva River: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Neva%20River/213/142/22
● MAGAZINE LINK: issuu.com/lhommemagazinesl/docs/lhommemagazinesl_february...
● PHOTOGRAPHER: Citta Wiskee
- PHOTOGRAPHER PAGE: www.flickr.com/photos/wiskee
Proud to be a guest photographer for the latest issue of LTD magazine, my all time favorite of all the sl magazines.
I would like to thank everyone that gave me the opportunity and spent time working on the pages.
Hope you enjoy the issue just like I greatly did from cover to cover.
A former explosives store. Large scale quarrying operations (the building of a dam) once took place nearby.
Burrator, Dartmoor, Devon
1 / 2
Esperamos sus proyectos en las áreas de: Arte (Instalación, performance, intervención de espacios).
Diseño (Muebles, objetos, espacios)
Música (Proyectos musicales contemporáneos con intervención en las artes gráficas y nuevas tecnologías)
Todos los proyectos relacionados con el tema "Secretos y / o Erotismo"
Enviar sus propuestas a:
elgatomagenta@fluxusmagazine.com
alexcano@alexcano.com
Antes del 15 de marzo de 2009
I was featured on the cover of this local skateboard magazine called Grind back in the mid-eighties, fun stuff
Il est toujours temps d'envoyez vos photos pour l'issue 2 à:
It is always time of send your photos for the issue 2 in:
frenchkiss@maquis-art.com
Here we had to pick between four different magazines to "work for." There was Seventeen Magazine featuring a new teenie-bopper, Time Magazine featuring a retired politician, Sports Illustrated featuring an athlete, and Wired Magazine featuring an eclectic computer nerd millionaire. Guess which one I picked...THE GEEK, of course! haha
I LOVE how it turned out!
Mao wanted some some photos taken and was inspired by the speedo photography found in DNA Magazine. So we spent a few hours on a cold spring afternoon and took these photos. After which I went into photoshop and gave them artistic punch. Hours in the digital dark room they are ready. Woo hoo!
Now on newsstands, Shutterbug magazine's "Expert Photo Techniques" issue contains a flattering 4-page interview with me about the past, present and future of light painted night photography. The issue also contains interviews with other NP/LPers Lance Keimig, Darren Pearson and Larrie Thomson: lotsa good reading for any night shooter. Read the entire article as a pdf here.
I remember buying my first issue of Seventeen magazine at the grocery store when I was 13. I loved the preppy plaid styles and (at the time) exciting articles.
Blythe a Day - Seventeen - 4/17/24
Mondrian Blythe
Top and Sweater - Etsy
Text added in BeFunky
Send your flixx for the first issue to info@overrated-magazine.com
Check us out at www.overrated-magazine.com
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Retrouvez moi dans ce mag ce mois ci , une superbe revue dont je suis fan depuis le numéro 1 ! plein de conseils de photographes et des superbes photos ! ..J'en profite pour tous vous remercier de votre passage sur ma galerie et de vos coms , vive la nature !!
As those following at home probably know, I've been featured in Blocks magazine 3 times this year so far.
But this issue was the first, and as such it holds a special place in my heart.
And it finally arrived on my doorstep today.
It's going straight to the poolroom.
The Lake Placid Tower in Lake Placid, Florida, formerly named Placid Tower, Tower of Peace or Happiness Tower, is a closed observation tower 240 feet (73.2 m) tall according to early sources (before 1982) or 270 feet (82.3 m) tall according to late sources (after 1986). However, no physical modification of the tower occurred in the interim that would explain a 30-foot increase in height. It rests on ground 142 feet (43 m) above sea level (NAVD 88). As a warning to aircraft, the top of the tower, including antennae, is stated to be 392 feet (119.5 m) above sea level by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). Thus, the height of the tower above ground, including antennae, is 250 feet (76.2 m) (392–142=250), which excludes a 270-foot architectural height, allowing only a 240-foot architectural height. Counting the tower's 8-inch (20.3 cm) courses yields a height above ground of 235–236 feet (71.6–71.9 m), so the lowest few feet of the 240-foot height, those resting on the foundation, are underground, providing space for an elevator pit.
According to early sources the tower has three observation levels, at 192 feet (58.5 m) behind windows, at 200 feet (61.0 m) on an open air balcony, and at 225 feet (68.6 m) in the open air crow's nest, Eagle's Nest, or Birds eye vantage point on top of the elevator shaft but below roof tracery. The apex of the tower is a flashing red aircraft warning light. The tower is 360 feet (110 m) above sea level according to two late sources, the latter stating that that elevation applies to the eagle's nest, which is consistent with the crow's nest elevation of early sources (142+225=367≈360). The tower offered a 40-mile (65 km) panoramic view.
Earnest Oakley Hunt dreamed of building an observation tower when he moved to Orlando in 1938, then moved to Sebring in 1947 and found the perfect location in nearby Lake Placid. He and Robert Gray formed Air View Corporation to build the tower. The tower was designed by architect A. Wynn Howell of Lakeland, built by Ridge Builders of Sebring in 1960 for $350,000 (equivalent to $2,300,000 in 2018), and opened January 1, 1961. Most sources state that it was the tallest concrete block structure in the world when it opened, with 90,000 concrete blocks, but the magazine Florida Architect states that it was built of reinforced concrete. One source states that the tower included 100,000 limestone blocks from Ocala while another states that it was faced with ceramic tile, implying that the tower has a facade of limestone tile.
The tower below the balcony is 25 feet 4 inches (7.72 m) square, with its four vertical corners replaced by grooves (each 8 inches (20 cm) per side). The section above the balcony is 21 feet (6.40 m) square, also with corner grooves. Each wall is divided into vertical thirds. The outer thirds are composed of reinforced concrete blocks with a facade of limestone tile.
The middle thirds are composed of decorative breeze or fence concrete blocks. The tower has a foundation made from 520 cubic yards (400 m3) of concrete reinforced with 80,000 pounds (36,000 kg) of steel. The tracery atop the tower is made of gold anodized aluminum.
Because of low ticket sales, the tower closed in 1982 when the owner would not pay their Internal Revenue Service taxes, but it was re-opened in 1986. The small group of owners still faced sluggish sales, and the tower and its restaurant continued to struggle, despite features such as a petting zoo in its plaza, and a pay phone at the top billed as the "highest pay phone in Florida."The last owner who operated the tower as a tourist attraction was Lake Placid Tower Group owned by Mark Cambell since 1992. He sold it to CHL Tower Group on November 6, 2003 which has operated it as a cell phone tower ever since. Even though the tower closed about 2003, it still has two red "OPEN" signs at its top, facing north and south
Originally, the tower above the balcony had the same basic design scheme as that below it. But after the tower closed, the portion of the tower from the balcony up was redesigned with a white and cyan (blue-green) color scheme. The limestone tile of the outer thirds of the walls was covered with white stucco, and the middle thirds were covered with thin cyan-colored panels which blocked the bird's eye view. These panels covered the two opposing triangular openings in the middle third of each wall and the breeze or fence blocks between them. The roof tracery above and the balcony below them were also painted cyan.
The Tower View restaurant at the base of the tower closed in 2015. The tower is among 35 designated Lake Placid historic structures. It is one of three towers in Central Florida, including the Citrus Tower, built in 1956, 100 miles (160 km) to the north in Clermont, and Bok Tower, built in 1929, 50 miles (80 km) to the north in Lake Wales.
Credit for the data above is given to the following website:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Placid_Tower
© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.
Glad I am so busy, so I don't have to think about this. MAD Magazine and I had a great run. 30 plus years! One of the best clients I ever had. All good things come to an end. What, me worry?
Here is a link: www.nbcnews.com/pop-culture/pop-culture-news/mad-magazine...