View allAll Photos Tagged Neglect
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What if you gave someone a gift, and they neglected to thank you for it - would you be likely to give them another? Life is the same way. In order to attract more of the blessings that life has to offer, you must truly appreciate what you already have.
~ Ralph Marston ~
Photo taken for the March 28, 2022 Macro Mondays theme: mediums.
Jacquard Lumiere Light Body Metallic Acrylic Paint
555 Halo Pink Gold
2.25 oz jar
Jar opening is approx. 1.25" diameter
Bought a pair of matching timepiece with my wife almost 30 years ago. Company tracks steps to lower insurance rates so it has been sitting in my drawer for the past 5 years in place of an apple watch.
Explored 4-24-2016
This old farmhouse in northern Illinois was still lived in as late as 5 years ago,but it has been a hard 5 years since.It is a mess inside,full of personal belongings,junk,and unfortunately,family pictures and momentos.
The coming years will be no better....
Thanks for all the views,comments,and favorites...they are all much appreciated!
leads to disarray of sorts.
check out the polaroid transfer.
yet another outing with sol exposure.
mamiya c330
80mm f/2.8
agfa rsx ii 200
Meyer Optik Trioplan 100mm 2.8
Aperture was wide open.
This photograph was taken in a meadow on (aptly named) Meadow Lane near Crosby Ontario. A very large and presumably old apple tree, neglected and allowed to return to a wild state, stands with its little sister in a grassy farmer's field occasionally in the company of cows or more often wild dear. One must sometimes wedge oneself directly into the overgrown branches to get a good vantage point to photograph the fruit.
When you haven't logged in for weeks on end...and you imagine your avatar sitting there awaiting your return....filthy, neglected and lonely. Sorry Red!
There is something fascinating about neglected places, they contain a sense of aesthetic and emotion like nothing else.
hey, its been a while! this past year I've neglected Flickr so much in favor of my Facebook page. so if you want to keep more up to date with me follow me on there or my Instagram for more personal posts (links below)!
this year, Eva decided to bring a bunch of photographers together to create a photography advent calendar and have one of us post a Christmas-themed photo each day - and today is my day to post! after such a long, challenging semester of college, it was great to be able to go out to my favorite photo location and create like I used to. it also got me into the holiday spirit a little bit more, which is difficult to begin with considering it's 75 degrees in the southern US right now. maybe we'll have a Christmas miracle and the temperature will get below 60 before the 25th? maybe?
anyway, view everyone else's awesome images for this project here!: www.flickr.com/groups/photoadventcalendar/pool/
I always feel badly when I see fruits and vegetables languishing in a field, neglected and not serving their purpose of nourishing human beings. This little patch sits along the roadside, and I've watched it over the season. I've been tempted to go in there and rescue those pumpkins, to give them away and cook them, but the property is private. Across the street I've seen apple trees heavy with browning fruit.
I've already been chased off private property (while enjoying nature) by dogs and nasty men, so I am reluctant to risk repeating the experience.
The Union Trust Company Bank building stands at 200 Collinsville Avenue in downtown East St. Louis, Illinois. Designed by architect Thomas Imbs for banker August Schlafly and completed between 1922 and 1926, it is locally significant under Criterion C of the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) for Architecture. The building is an excellent example of early 20th century Classical Revival style bank design and is the last of its kind in East St. Louis. This style, associated with permanence and trust, took hold in the late 19th century as bankers sought to regain public confidence after the Panic of 1893. Thirty years later, these associations were magnified in tumultuous East St. Louis where public morality was at an all-time low after its most recent series of political and social disasters. The Union Trust Company Bank building embodied Schlafly’s recent role as civic leader and signaled the city’s economic recovery by spurring badly-needed investment downtown. The period of significance is from 1922 to 1926, spanning the year the building opened to the public through the construction of its interior mezzanine according to Imbs’ original design.
The Union Trust Company Bank was added to the NRHP on May 27, 2014. All the information above along with much, much more was found on original documents submitted for listing consideration that can be viewed here:
npgallery.nps.gov/NRHP/AssetDetail/d2109df8-d0f1-4e6c-906...
Three bracketed photos were taken with a handheld Nikon D7200 and combined with Photomatix Pro to create this HDR image. Additional adjustments were made in 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 following link: www.flickriver.com/photos/photojourney57/
I pass this old barn/house (I can't tell which it is) every time I go to Gibbs Gardens. This afternoon I just couldn't resist stopping and taking a couple of photos.
A somewhat hidden room of a disused palace in Northern Italy, that I shot last year.
An image that took some hours to pull together, pulling together 12 images from my 17mm T/S and stitching them and then proceeding to edit and converting to an autumnal scene - if you wish to see the RAW files and the combined edited I shall post it underneath - just shout. The high res version sits at 100cm and has insane detail.
#4 The only thing that really remains are the memories of a thriving business. The dilapidated structures are just an annoying thorn in the surroundings...
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Fujifilm GSW680III + Fujifilm Neopan Acros II 100/120 BW
A greenhouse that sits disused on the side of a large castle in France, this is not the last you will see of this outhouse from me, I am working on a larger image in the coming days.
Canon EOS 5DS R
TS-E17mm f/4L
17mm/ƒ/8/1/2500s/ISO 50
DPC- Neglected
Weekly theme challenge- high contrast
Lens= Vivitar 28-70mm
Please check out my new group "The Weekly Colour Challenge"
The enquiry is complete
The vehicle details for WHS 493H are:
Date of Liability 01 04 1993
Date of First Registration 24 10 1969