View allAll Photos Tagged OPTIMISTIC

Canada goose in the small pool in Walsall Arboretum, wondering if I’ve got any food

...this is one very optimistic and determined little fuchsia!

this guy has a lot of gear ... but the ice is thick: he had just thrown the boulder to break the ice to no effect

Optimistic Amsterdam

The Library of Congress Optimistic farmer 1936

 

I claim no rights other than colorizing this image if you wish to use let me know and always give due credit to The Library of Congress. I have no commercial gain in publishing this image.

 

Title

An optimistic farmer of the North Dakota drought area

Names

Rothstein, Arthur, 1915-1985, photographer

Created / Published

1936 July.

Headings

- United States--North Dakota

- Towns, roadsides--North Dakota

Headings

Nitrate negatives.

Genre

Nitrate negatives

Notes

- Title and other information from caption card.

- Transfer; United States. Office of War Information. Overseas Picture Division. Washington Division; 1944.

- More information about the FSA/OWI Collection is available at hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.fsaowi

- Temp. note: usf34batch1

Medium

1 negative : nitrate ; 2 1/4 x 2 1/4 inches or smaller.

Call Number/Physical Location

LC-USF34- 005144-E [P&P] LOT 386 (corresponding photographic print)

Source Collection

Farm Security Administration - Office of War Information Photograph Collection (Library of Congress)

Repository

Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print

Digital Id

fsa 8b28134 //hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/fsa.8b28134

Library of Congress Control Number

2017760980

Reproduction Number

LC-USF34-005144-E (b&w film nitrate neg.) LC-DIG-fsa-8b28134 (digital file from original neg.)

Rights Advisory

No known restrictions. For information, see U.S. Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Black & White Photographs www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/071_fsab.html

Online Format

image

LCCN Permalink

lccn.loc.gov/2017760980

Another of the exotic and elegant Spider Chrysanthemums from the Smith Botanic Garden Show.

Just about everyone I think was this in their more pensive moments last year. Optimistically Pessimistic .....if that is possible? Not over of course, but more bearable...so far.

 

Part of a mural seen at Cuesta Collage while I was in line for my first vaccine shot.

Optimistic shopping list.

Here's the next bonobo portrait that suffers from bad focus caused be the compound window in the zoo. Again, the facial expression is reason enough for me to post this image anyway.

 

Enjoy!

 

Blog500pxGoogle+@Christian_TTVEllo Facebook

Optimism . .The doctrine or belief that everything is beautiful, including what is ugly.

 

Ambrose Bierce

 

Goes For The Person How Reminds Me Of Optimistic Me. Thank You (F)

 

Explored

 

 

Some Mars experts are eager and optimistic for a dust storm this year to grow so grand it darkens skies around the entire Red Planet. This biggest type of phenomenon in the environment of modern Mars could be examined as never before possible, using the combination of spacecraft now at Mars.

 

A study published this week based on observations by NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) during the most recent Martian global dust storm -- in 2007 -- suggests such storms play a role in the ongoing process of gas escaping from the top of Mars' atmosphere. That process long ago transformed wetter, warmer ancient Mars into today's arid, frozen planet.

 

Two 2001 images from the Mars Orbiter Camera on NASA's Mars Global Surveyor orbiter show a dramatic change in the planet's appearance when haze raised by dust-storm activity in the south became globally distributed. The images were taken about a month apart.

 

Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS

 

Read more

 

NASA Media Usage Guidelines

looking for a picture for the smile on saturday group's theme of sunny yellow.... flickr search came up with 433 yellows in my photostream!! i had three that i liked the 'best'. i'll put the other 2 in the first comment box :)

 

"smile on saturday" and "sunny yellow"

المتفائل إنسان يرى ضوءاً غير موجود"

أما المتشائم أحمق يرى ضوءاً ولايصدقة"

say mashallah plez!

 

story of life 2009 © All rights reserved.

my first ever magazine spread illustration for "The Drum Magazine" all size this for a better look

jonboam.blogspot.com

View large.

 

An optimistic Canadian from BEAUTIFUL BRITISH COLUMBIA

  

Environmental Change vs Environmental Action

 

Thank you so much for sharing how you feel from around the world!

 

Comments are encouraged sharing how you feel about the environment or stories about positive environmental change you witness. Feel free to post your photos and words on the new group below.

I welcome you to join "Environmental Voices" www.flickr.com/groups/1547965@N22/

 

Thank you and see you there.

 

Please visit www.runforoneplanet.com for some environmental inspiration.

 

PS: I worked on this image while watching Obama's Press conference. I hope the people will continue to support his policies and politics. Anything is better than the previous 8 years.

 

Change takes time.

 

My dear friends, I wish you all a wonderful and very happy weekend :)))

Straight out of the camera (SOOC)

είναι δύσκολο να είσαι αισιόδοξος στις μέρες μας

sometimes is hard to be optimistic

 

{explored}

View On Black

... on the new week

with a new round of the UN Climate Conference (COP23) starting today ...

 

Happy Blue Monday !

 

Asters (Aster novi-belgii)

in our garden - Frankfurt-Nordend

In these difficult days, perhaps we should be stressing the importance of looking forward optimistically to a shining future, a bright tomorrow!

 

Tomorrow

 

The sun'll come out

Tomorrow,

So ya gotta hang on

'Til tomorrow,

Come what may!

Tomorrow, tomorrow!

I love 'ya tomorrow!

You're always

A day

Away!

 

Annie Broadway musical, 1977

Lyrics by Martin Charnin

Music by Charles Strouse

 

__________________________

 

Camera: Olympus Pen E-PL2

Lens: Olympus M.Zuiko 14-42mm f/3.5-5.6 II R @ 17mm

Exposure: ISO200, f/4.5, 1/1500 sec.

 

Please don't use my images for any purpose, including on websites or blogs, without my explicit permission.

 

S.V.P ne pas utiliser cette photo sur un site web, blog ou tout autre média sans ma permission explicite.

 

© Tom Freda / All rights reserved - Tous droits réservés

 

Website I 500px l Twitter l Facebook l Instagram

This little dirt road I found could lead anywhere. More importantly, I hope this week your road leads you someplace great!

For We're Here, spotting Optimistic Cloudgoats. The goat was in the teddy bear shop window (despite not being a bear). The church overlooks the famous iron bridge.

Third Quarter Moon. Captured in London, England. July 2020.

Very optimistic - I attempted a photograph under the full red moon, in complete darkness and without a tripod. There are cows lurking in the gloom at the bottom of the photograph.

The Dixie Walesbilt Hotel, known as the Grand Hotel in later years, is one of a small number of skyscrapers built in the 1920s that still stand today and is a prime example of how optimistic people were during the Florida land boom. Built in 1926, it found financing through a stock-sale campaign in the local business community, costing $500,000 after it was completed(which equates to about $6 million today.)

 

The building architecture, masonry vernacular with hints of Mediterranean-Revival, is also a good example of the time is was built. It was designed by two well-known architects at the time, Fred Bishop who designed the Byrd Theatre in Virginia, and D.J. Phipps, whose designed both the Wyoming County Courthouse and Jail and the Colonial Hotel in Virginia.

 

The hotel was constructed using the “three-part vertical block” method, which became the dominant pattern in tall buildings during the 1920s. Three-part buildings are composed of a base, shaft and a cap, all noticeably visible.

 

The hotel opened as the “Walesbilt” in January 1927, shortly after the land boom had started to collapse and two years before the Great Depression began. It’s also best to note that the hotel opened around the same time the Floridan Hotel in Tampa opened, another hotel built during the Florida land boom.

 

In 1972, the hotel was purchased by Anderson Sun State and renamed the “Groveland Motor Inn”. The firm completely renovated the hotel and used it to host visitors to the area who were interested in Green Swamp, land sectioned off for land development. At the time there was heavy speculation in the land because of it’s close proximity to Walt Disney World and were selling for around $5,000 an acre at the time. That ended after a state cabinet designation of the swamp as an area of critical state concern, placing the land off-limits to any large land developments. The firm filed for foreclosure and the hotel was auctioned off in 1974. Despite RCI Electric purchasing the hotel, it remained empty for many years afterwards.

 

n 1978, the hotel was signed over to the Agape Players, a nationally known religious music and drama group, who would assume the mortgage and would pay the costs to make improvements to meet city fire and safety standards. The hotel was renamed the “Royal Walesbilt” and after extensive improvements were made, it became the headquarters for the Agape Players; using it as a teaching facility and the base from which the group launched their tours. In addition, they operated a restaurant, an ice cream parlor on the lobby floor and a “Christian hotel” on the upper floors, catering mostly to groups. The Agape Players disbanded in 1985 and put the property up for sale

 

Victor Khubani, a property investor from New York acquired the property and renamed the hotel “Grand”. The hotel closed briefly in December 1988, due to a variety of code violations and causing the owner to later pay $14,000 in fines. On August 31, 1990 it was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places, possibly for tax exemption reasons. In October 1991, The State Fire Marshall’s Office gave the owner one year to install a new sprinkler system and in May 1993, the code enforcement board gave Khubani until March to complete the work.

 

In March 1994, the hotel closed due to multiple code violations and was to remain closed until a new fire sprinkler system was installed. To reopen, the fire escapes and elevator, which did not function, would have to be repaired as well. In 1995, the hotel was auctioned off to a redevelopment firm, which dismantled part of the interior for reconstruction, which was never completed.

 

Since then, the hotel has deteriorated, becoming an eyesore to many of the residents of Lake Wales and nicknamed “The Green Monster” for the greenish color it has acquired from over the years. In 1995, it was even jokingly mentioned to become a sacrifice to “the bomb”, an economic boom that occurred in parts of Florida where movie production companies would pay cities to blow up buildings for their movies. In 2007, the city foreclosed on the structure for more than $700,000 in unpaid code fines, with hopes in finding someone to restore it.

 

Development firm, Dixie-Walesbilt LLC announced plans to restore the hotel, signing into an agreement with the city of Lake Wales in February 2010. By the agreement, the city would retain ownership of the building until a defined amount of work had been accomplished. The work must be completed within 16 months and the amount of money invested must succeed at least $1.5 million. The building would then be handed off the Dixie Walesbilt LLC, where they may continue with private funding or other methods to for debt funding.

 

Ray Brown, President of Dixie Walesbilt LLC, planned to invest $6 million into the renovation, with original plans to put retail stores on the ground floor and using the upper floors for as many as 40 condominiums.

 

On June 2, 2011, the city of Lake Wales agreed to deed the building off to Ray Brown in a 4-1 vote, after meeting the requirements of the redevelopment agreement. Though Brown submitted a list of costs to the city totaling $1.66 million, Mayor Mike Carter wasn’t satisfied with the results so far, pointing out that Brown failed to repair the windows and repaint the building. Previous owners had put tar on the building and then painted over it, so much of Brown’s investment went to stripping the tar off the exterior walls.

 

To repaint the building, Brown would also have to resurface the hotel with hydrated lime to replicate the original skin as well as the window frames would need to be constructed of Douglas fir, red cedar and gulf cypress. According to Brown, previous owners who renovated the building rarely removed the building original elements. They carpeted over intricate tile flooring, stuck tar paper above skylights and placed modern drinking fountains in front of the originals. He estimated about 98 percent of the building is still in it’s original form.

 

Restoration of the building’s exterior began in January 2015 and included surface repair, pressure washing, paint removal, chemical treatment, and a comprehensive resurfacing of the exterior.

 

While the original plans were for turning the building into condominiums, that has since changed and current plans call for operating the building as a boutique hotel. The hotel will feature geothermal cooling as opposed to traditional air conditioning, a permanent art gallery as well as theme gallery showings throughout the year, and the best WiFi/internet in the city. The project is expected to be completed in 18 to 24 months.

 

Credit for the data above is given to the following websites:

www.cityoflakewales.com/505/Dixie-Walesbilt-Hotel

www.abandonedfl.com/dixie-walesbilt-hotel/

 

© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.

  

The Dixie Walesbilt Hotel, known as the Grand Hotel in later years, is one of a small number of skyscrapers built in the 1920s that still stand today and is a prime example of how optimistic people were during the Florida land boom. Built in 1926, it found financing through a stock-sale campaign in the local business community, costing $500,000 after it was completed(which equates to about $6 million today.)

 

The building architecture, masonry vernacular with hints of Mediterranean-Revival, is also a good example of the time is was built. It was designed by two well-known architects at the time, Fred Bishop who designed the Byrd Theatre in Virginia, and D.J. Phipps, whose designed both the Wyoming County Courthouse and Jail and the Colonial Hotel in Virginia.

 

The hotel was constructed using the “three-part vertical block” method, which became the dominant pattern in tall buildings during the 1920s. Three-part buildings are composed of a base, shaft and a cap, all noticeably visible.

 

The hotel opened as the “Walesbilt” in January 1927, shortly after the land boom had started to collapse and two years before the Great Depression began. It’s also best to note that the hotel opened around the same time the Floridan Hotel in Tampa opened, another hotel built during the Florida land boom.

 

In 1972, the hotel was purchased by Anderson Sun State and renamed the “Groveland Motor Inn”. The firm completely renovated the hotel and used it to host visitors to the area who were interested in Green Swamp, land sectioned off for land development. At the time there was heavy speculation in the land because of it’s close proximity to Walt Disney World and were selling for around $5,000 an acre at the time. That ended after a state cabinet designation of the swamp as an area of critical state concern, placing the land off-limits to any large land developments. The firm filed for foreclosure and the hotel was auctioned off in 1974. Despite RCI Electric purchasing the hotel, it remained empty for many years afterwards.

 

n 1978, the hotel was signed over to the Agape Players, a nationally known religious music and drama group, who would assume the mortgage and would pay the costs to make improvements to meet city fire and safety standards. The hotel was renamed the “Royal Walesbilt” and after extensive improvements were made, it became the headquarters for the Agape Players; using it as a teaching facility and the base from which the group launched their tours. In addition, they operated a restaurant, an ice cream parlor on the lobby floor and a “Christian hotel” on the upper floors, catering mostly to groups. The Agape Players disbanded in 1985 and put the property up for sale

 

Victor Khubani, a property investor from New York acquired the property and renamed the hotel “Grand”. The hotel closed briefly in December 1988, due to a variety of code violations and causing the owner to later pay $14,000 in fines. On August 31, 1990 it was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places, possibly for tax exemption reasons. In October 1991, The State Fire Marshall’s Office gave the owner one year to install a new sprinkler system and in May 1993, the code enforcement board gave Khubani until March to complete the work.

 

In March 1994, the hotel closed due to multiple code violations and was to remain closed until a new fire sprinkler system was installed. To reopen, the fire escapes and elevator, which did not function, would have to be repaired as well. In 1995, the hotel was auctioned off to a redevelopment firm, which dismantled part of the interior for reconstruction, which was never completed.

 

Since then, the hotel has deteriorated, becoming an eyesore to many of the residents of Lake Wales and nicknamed “The Green Monster” for the greenish color it has acquired from over the years. In 1995, it was even jokingly mentioned to become a sacrifice to “the bomb”, an economic boom that occurred in parts of Florida where movie production companies would pay cities to blow up buildings for their movies. In 2007, the city foreclosed on the structure for more than $700,000 in unpaid code fines, with hopes in finding someone to restore it.

 

Development firm, Dixie-Walesbilt LLC announced plans to restore the hotel, signing into an agreement with the city of Lake Wales in February 2010. By the agreement, the city would retain ownership of the building until a defined amount of work had been accomplished. The work must be completed within 16 months and the amount of money invested must succeed at least $1.5 million. The building would then be handed off the Dixie Walesbilt LLC, where they may continue with private funding or other methods to for debt funding.

 

Ray Brown, President of Dixie Walesbilt LLC, planned to invest $6 million into the renovation, with original plans to put retail stores on the ground floor and using the upper floors for as many as 40 condominiums.

 

On June 2, 2011, the city of Lake Wales agreed to deed the building off to Ray Brown in a 4-1 vote, after meeting the requirements of the redevelopment agreement. Though Brown submitted a list of costs to the city totaling $1.66 million, Mayor Mike Carter wasn’t satisfied with the results so far, pointing out that Brown failed to repair the windows and repaint the building. Previous owners had put tar on the building and then painted over it, so much of Brown’s investment went to stripping the tar off the exterior walls.

 

To repaint the building, Brown would also have to resurface the hotel with hydrated lime to replicate the original skin as well as the window frames would need to be constructed of Douglas fir, red cedar and gulf cypress. According to Brown, previous owners who renovated the building rarely removed the building original elements. They carpeted over intricate tile flooring, stuck tar paper above skylights and placed modern drinking fountains in front of the originals. He estimated about 98 percent of the building is still in it’s original form.

 

Restoration of the building’s exterior began in January 2015 and included surface repair, pressure washing, paint removal, chemical treatment, and a comprehensive resurfacing of the exterior.

 

While the original plans were for turning the building into condominiums, that has since changed and current plans call for operating the building as a boutique hotel. The hotel will feature geothermal cooling as opposed to traditional air conditioning, a permanent art gallery as well as theme gallery showings throughout the year, and the best WiFi/internet in the city. The project is expected to be completed in 18 to 24 months.

 

Credit for the data above is given to the following websites:

www.cityoflakewales.com/505/Dixie-Walesbilt-Hotel

www.abandonedfl.com/dixie-walesbilt-hotel/

 

© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.

  

1964 Ford Galaxie 500.

 

Carriagetown, Flint, Michigan.

Saturday, August 6, 2016.

Flowers - A single flower can be my garden... a single friend, my world. --

 

Flowers have a simple architectural beauty that radiate optimistic hue and are associated with the sun, warmth, and feelings of friendship and optimism.

 

Because of their varied and colorful appearance, flowers have long been a favorite subject of visual artists. Some of the most celebrated paintings from well-known painters are of flowers, such as Van Gogh's sunflowers series or Monet's water lilies.

 

Flowers can also be dried, freeze dried and pressed to create permanent, three-dimensional pieces of flower art.

 

I love to photograph, smell, see, and be around beautiful flowers. I hope they make your day too!

 

All rights reserved ©Pix.by.PegiSue

Pix.by.PegiSue www.flickr.com/photos/pix-by-pegisue/

First photo the (h)optimist (a useless thing that makes you laugh hoptimist.com), then the orange (same lighting), then both into Photoshop, making a mask to see the nose and eyes... and that's it! HMM everyone! and let us have an optimistic 2018, right? :-)

Testing out a new-to-me fisheye (Pentax DA 10-17mm F/3.5-4.5) at one of the city's best-known public sculptures: Raymon Mason's La foule illuminée. It's a complex work about humanity and not as optimistic as it appears at first glance.

 

I went for the same kind of look as my previous shot, even a bit darker. Do you think it's too much? I think the yellow and blue that dominated the shot were too optimistic for this ambiguous work of art. Should perhaps try to keep the yellow and remove the blue? I did a full B&W and liked it as well, but chose to post this one...

 

IMPORTANT:

If you would like to use this photo in a way that is appropriate under its Creative Commons license, you are welcome to do so, but please make sure to credit me by my real name and Flickr handle, and please also include a link to the Flickr page of the photo, as well as a link to the relevant Creative Commons license text. I have put examples of proper attribution on my profile page. Optionally, you may also send me a little note about your use... :)

 

For any other type of use, please contact me to properly license this image.

 

Thank you!

 

(IMGP7067_Etc)

Photo by: Abdulhameed Shamandour

Looking to catch a break in a swarming, plant-dominated world, the twin rusted orbs of an ancient truck peer cautiously from between two cedars, Skagit Valley Provincial Park, British Columbia.

 

My wife and I walked West down the Skagit River for awhile, not having a destination but moving briskly to prevent The Mosquitoes from catching up and finding a tender place to land. Some miles into the forest and down the river, we heard a splashing sound up and off to one side. Leaving the trail and following the sound of the water, we went up a slope thickly wooded with Western Red Cedar and discovered this distinguished visage peering through the trees. Nearby and a bit further up was an abandoned mine situated 20 feet from a medium-sized waterfall flanked with ferns and tumbling down a dark basalt channel. Given the lushness of the forest, it was difficult to imagine that a road had existed that would have allowed this truck to find its final resting spot.

 

This photo is a bit different for me so I wonder what folks think. For anyone checking the date taken, all I can say is 'Yes, I'm an American who decided to go to Canada for the 4th of July.' It was lovely, and it turns out that Canada Day (1st of July) was celebrated with a massive fireworks display in Vancouver at the Waterfront.

 

Thanks for your visits and comments!

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