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Parallels in Texture
The Cajun Pass provides the setting for this textured landscape. On a cloudy day, at 4,000 feet (1219 m), there wasn’t much sunlight to give a lot of contrast to the hills and mountains in the area. Rather than throw this one away, I decided to sepia tone the image and enhance it with a texture. The texture is a product of the talented ~Brenda-Starr~. It is called Free Texture #163 (http://www.flickr.com/photos/brenda-starr/4838652783/sizes/l/)
~Brenda-Starr~ , thank you.
An artist is a person engaged in one or more of any of a broad spectrum of activities related to creating art, practicing the arts and/or demonstrating an art. The common usage in both everyday speech and academic discourse is a practitioner in the visual arts only. The term is often used in the entertainment business, especially in a business context, for musicians and other performers (less often for actors). "Artiste" (the French for artist) is a variant used in English only in this context. Use of the term to describe writers, for example, is certainly valid, but less common, and mostly restricted to contexts like criticism.
'Lady Patricia' and 'Sir Vincent' running parallel on broad and standard gauge tracks respectively at Fifield on 31st May 2024.
© Gordon Edgar - All rights reserved. Please do not use my images without my explicit permission
Parallel Times (Blondie tribute) performing at North Walsham Live Aid 2018, an annual music event and charity rock memorabilia auction at North Walsham Community Centre. (c)John Newstead
Artist: Antony Gormley
Title: Parallel Field
Materials: castings in iron
Sculpture in the City 2013
30 St Mary Axe
London, England, UK
Shorebirds of Ireland, Freshwater Birds of Ireland and The Birds of Ireland: A Field Guide with Jim Wilson.
www.markcarmodyphotography.com
Parallel Worlds in Dublin 2.
Taken with a Leica M4-P and a Carl Zeiss Planar T* lens on Kodak Gold 200 colour film. Developed and scanned by the excellent John Gunn Camera Shop on Wexford Street.
E' interessante fare un parallelo tra il ruolo
anche sociale che aveva il tempio, la chiesa durante i
secoli passati e quello che oggi hanno oggi i
locali. Nel passato, il tempio era il punto di
incontro dell'intera comunità. Le persone vi si
riunivano per pregare e poi per parlare,
conoscersi, valutare possibili affari e alle
volte innamorarsi. Alcune grandi cattedrali
custodivano reliquie importanti ed erano meta di
grandi pellegrinaggi. Gli uomini e le donne,
spinti dalla fede, percorrevano grandi distanze,
spesso a piedi, per
andare a pregare nei luoghi santi per pentirsi
dei propri peccati o per cercare grazie
spirituali e materiali, come la guarigione. Tutto
questo avviene anche oggi, ma di certo con un
richiamo molto meno forte per la maggior parte
dei giovani. Per molti di loro, il locale ha
sostituito il tempio, o il luogo di culto come luogo dello scambio
sociale: alla liturgia, si è sostituito il ballo,
alla penitenza consapevole, le droghe e l'alcool
che rimuovono il disagio. I locali con gli eventi
musicali e i l DJ internazionali sono sempre di
più la meta di lunghi "pellegrinaggi" di giovani
e adulti. In questo senso si può vedere il locale
come il nuovo tempio dell'epoca in cui viviamo .
Prod:Copiaincolla blog
1st Co-Build for Serra Qendra & Anelime Lubitsch
Multiverse Exhibition
OctBurn2 2020
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Burn2%20Anarchy/206/172/36
welcome to the inorganically distorted
wonderful parallel world
manhole down there
connects here and there
no day time nor night time
oh no
day time is night
not night either
it is both of them
and
none of them
all we can say is only one thing
what we see is not what the truth is
#clujbyfoot #photographeveryday #streetphotography #socialdocumentary #photographeverywhere #photooftheday #clujinsta #theworldofstreetphotography #social #oldtowncluj #autumnvibes #autumn #citycenter #clujlife #visitcluj #followers #viataincluj #photojournalism #octomber #clujvibes #parallelworlds #whentheworldscolide
Il Mondo Parallelo, sottostante, retrostante la maschera.
Quello in cui vorremmo vivere, ma che troviamo solo specchiato guardando nella purezza della Natura.
#nature #lovenature #meditation #landscape #landscapeshunter #reflection #reality #dream #hope
The so-called Can of Ham building at 70 St Mary Axe in the City of London is (unofficially) named after its curious shape: an elliptical prism, truncated at the bottom. It was designed by architects Foggo Associates.
The Southern Service from Epsom to London Victoria departs Mitcham Junction Station whilst the TfL Trams service to Wimbledon is about to enter the single line section to pass under Charshalton Road having already served the station tram stop. This section of the tram line follows the route of the former West Croydon to Wimbledon railway. The history of the line goes back to the Surrey Iron Railway which was a horse-drawn plateway that linked Wandsworth and Croydon via Mitcham and was established by Act of Parliament in 1801.
13 May 2017.
ravenglass-railway.co.uk/ Many regard the seven-mile line as the most beautiful train journey in England. One thing is for certain, for those who visit the Lake District and never venture beyond Windermere and Bowness they are certainly missing something special. Our part of the Western Lake District is a quieter, calmer place, an area of outstanding natural beauty, pretty villages and home to England's highest mountains.
Most visitors start their journey at Ravenglass, often calling in the Turntable café to enjoy the best in home-baking. The trains travel from Ravenglass across tidal Barrow Marsh, home to many birds, including oyster catchers and ringed plovers. The first intermediate station at Muncaster Mill is a request stop. Passing the old water-mill, now a private residence, the train wends its way into Miterdale, still a haven for red squirrels and far away from roads, cars and other signs of modern life. Views of craggy Muncaster Fell dominate, although all should look out for our unique boat-type shelter at Miteside halt.
Probably the most spectacular point of all in Miterdale is Rock Point, a place where the line swings around a rugged promontory high above the river and affording good views of the Scafell range, particularly in winter. The train passes over Walk Mill summit and the line heads straight as an arrow before reaching Irton Road, the main passing place on the line. Look out for Saddleback pigs foraging on the adjacent land!
Irton Road station, the only original building on the line, serves the western end of Eskdale Green village. From here, the line falls some 20 feet to the valley of the River Esk and the skyline is dominated from now by craggy Harter Fell which stands some 2160 feet above sea level. After passing through Eskdale Green Station the engines climb the steepest section of the line known as Hollinghow Bank.
The scene changes once more, as the lone hugs the northern side of valley, providing a break between the ruggedness of the bracken clad hillside and the softer, farmland below. The local Herdwick sheep abound, deer are frequently seen in the woods and buzzards circle in the sky.
A further request stop at Fisherground, mainly used by holidaymakers staying at the nearby campsite, follows, before the line arrives at Gilbert's cutting, undoubtedly one of the most photographic points on the line. The railway runs on a ledge above the valley road, passing the old 250' quarry face at Beckfoot and a final request stop.
The last section of the line takes the form of a further steep climb through Beckfoot Wood, before levelling out and curving round to the new station and visitor centre at Dalegarth, which nestles at the foot of England's highest mountains.
Nandgaon | India | 2015
More I travel across my beautiful country of India, more I get fascinated by the magical power this place embraces. Its a country which just happens to hold on to its traditions, cultures and charm with ease. Holi at Nandgoan further reassured me of those above said facts. The sheer passion with which the festival is celebrated is beyond words.
I love how the morning light streams in through the blinds creating patterns on everything.
Lots of parallel lines here!
ANSH4. Parallel lines
Parallel Realities
Everything you experience as solid and "real" is a vibration of energy – held, or locked in place, by belief systems. If, for a moment, you could set aside all mental programs about your reality, you would experience an entirely different perspective of what you call reality.
We would like you to receive the idea that there are several realities, several outcomes, several parallel realities that could always manifest.... You and others are broadcasting energy in the form of your thoughts, your emotions, and your beliefs at all times. As you send the energy forth, several realities are always possible. The reality that manifests is the one you have focused more of your energy on.
We are encouraging you to.... embrace the countless realities that are only a frequency, a vibration away.
~ Morning Messages
FCC stacking
Image mapping in Povray
Found the equirectangular earth there, I suppose it is from Nasa, but couldn't find the exact reference.
The left and the right live in parallel universes. The right listens to talk radio, the left's on the Internet and they just reinforce one another. They have no sense of reality........
Barney Frank
Part of Bristol Light Festival 2025
Parallels is an immersive installation that uses the precision of lasers and mirrors to transform moving footage into floating abstractions of light. Inspired by movements and tones found in the natural world, Parallels uses footage of natural phenomena to offer a transcendent experience of light and sound. Set to a soundtrack by Max Cooper. Best viewed after dark.
Artist: Architecture Social Club
Temple Church, Bristol
Please do not use my photos without permission. Feel free to contact me if you have a request.