View allAll Photos Tagged Parallel
Imagine how a twin living in a parallel world try to contact the other. My suggestion? magic sticky notes.
They don't make 'em like this anymore! Decorative wooden trim under the eaves of a local mansion.
For the All New Scavenger Hunt #6 Parallel lines.
Running parallel to the China Rail main line, SY 0407 hurries its train towards the washery at Didao on the Jixi Coal Railway.
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Silhouetted Rock formations and a glistening seascape near the San Simeon, California Elephant Seal Rookery at sunset. The parallel nature and similar shape of the cliff and off-shore rock formations was the inspiration for the image title.
© Lawrence Goldman 2012, All Rights Reserved
This work may not be copied, reproduced, republished, edited, downloaded, displayed, modified, transmitted, licensed, transferred, sold, distributed or uploaded in any way without my prior written permission.
Riveting huh? another detail of the iron bridge stretching over the Avon on St Philip's Marsh. Along with rust I think rivets are possibly one of my favorite things to photograph
Portraits
Multiple exposure
w/ Hydrangea
Film : Kodak GOLD200
CONTAX RX
CarlZeiss Y/CONTAX Planar T*1.4/50
© 2020 M's photography
Takashi MATSUZAWA All rights reserved.
Please don't freely use this photograph on Tumblr, Blog, Facebook, Twitter and others.
In this monochromatic composition, the parallel narratives of tradition and modernity converge, as an aged wooden chair stands in dialogue with its modern plastic counterpart, symbolizing the dynamic interplay between timeless craftsmanship and contemporary innovation.
I love the rawness in Korean life, especially in the countryside. This is a street scene from the little village of Hayang, which is a few minutes outside of Daegu.
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
Un escalier que j'ai été heureuse de rencontrer. Je le connaissais pour l'avoir peint d'après une photo trouvée dans un catalogue de tourisme, il y a quelques années. D'autant plus contente que le jeu des ombres le mettait bien en valeur!
Well, the picture is not particularly good for talking about snow, but it’s the best I could get.
As I was initially headed up into Oregon there were multiple predictions for rain and snow for where I was headed. I had to keep a close eye on road conditions in general, but particularly since Oregon has a requirement that you carry chains if the conditions suggest they might be needed, even if you don’t use them. Since I wasn’t about to buy chains that I’d never use in the desert, I watched the road conditions closely AND decided to rely on the coast route (US-101) more than I had initially intended. I had planned to spend a couple of days in Portland and then also in Astoria, but the road to Astoria that I particularly wanted to explore got closed by a slide and the other routes from Portland to Astoria were high enough to be under chain controls, so I ended up cutting a couple of days out of my plan. Fortunately, US-20 was low enough to take me west me out of the Willamette valley (Corvallis, Salem) to the coast without chain controls, and offered a surprise (next pictures).
I was hoping to find at least some spot to get at least one snow picture, and this turned out to be it. The road in the picture is not US-20, but parallels it; the tiny farm community is Wren.