View allAll Photos Tagged Pressure
ufashionable.wixsite.com/sluf/post/pressure
♥ Hair: $$$//PL: Cee
♥ Earrings: YORKE- Mariah Earrings
♥ Nails: Rosary. Saucy @ Tres chic
♥ Rings: RAWR! Nyx Rings
♥ Dress: 28LA. Rhonda Dress
♥ Heels: NX-Nardcotix Irene Mule Black @ Dubai Event
Museum De Fundatie in Zwolle, The Netherlands.
The court house was designed in 1838 by architect Eduard Louis de Coninck in neoclassicist style.
In 2004 the building was transformed into a museum (architect: Gunnar Daan).
In 2010, a remarkable extension was created, designed by BiermanHenket architecten.
No 'Pier' Pressure, the epitome of calmness combined with the warmth of the sun.
The Salmon Arm Wharf was constructed in 1907, now over 100 years ago in order to deal with the large mudflats and swampy areas that exist at the head of Shuswap Lake.
This large 440-foot pier is situated on beautiful Shuswap Lake and actually holds, not only the title of 'Largest Wooden Wharf in British Columbia and Canada' but holds the title of 'Largest Wooden 'fresh water' Wharf in North America'.
Salmon Arm
Columbia Shuswap Regional District of the Southern Interior of the Canadian province of British Columbia
Thank-you for all the overwhelming support and many friendships.
HAPPY CLICKS,
~Christie
*Best experienced in full screen
[AxH] - Leslie Jacket @mainstore
[AxH] - Rainman X-8 Rainboots @mainstore
Taxi: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Tinted%20Dreams/89/177/4001
Even in winter the river never stop flowing.
Looking upstream on the Ottawa River from Burkes Beach (Point Alexander).
If you would like to purchase this image, or to see any of my other work for sale, visit: www.etsy.com/shop/GOPhotographyWA
:)
ufashionable.wixsite.com/sluf/post/no-pressure
♥ Hair: AD - Wednesday - mix
♥ Choker: Nov-Ebony Metal Choker @ Kinky Event - New*
♥ Belt: Nov-Ebony Metal Belly Chain Kupra @ Kinky Event - New*
♥ Nails: Rosary. Calcite . Blog Pack @ Access Event - New*
♥ Outfit: !C Sedona - The Saturday Sale - New*
♥ Purse: Tantrum - Lipstick & Leather Purse - Group Gift
The oppressive visual onset of a storm is often occasioned by a rapid drop in barometric pressure. Studies have associated this drop with negative physical and emotional effects on living beings. Everything from rising blood pressure and headaches to restlessness and irritability. I suppose irritability is rather subjective when, for many people, we're merely attempting to distinguish between degrees. But I can attest to the restlessness as storms approach. It's based on an intense desire to experience the sensory aspects (winds, clouds, temperature change, advancing darkness, etc). It goes back to that boundary obsession I have, of standing on the edge between two realms. For me it's not enough to simply witness such an event. I yearn to document it, and each storm is like the first one. The excitement and the pull never seem to diminish over time. I think this is yet another opportunity to channel the energy from some external source and direct it into a creative bent. On this magical day I found myself in an old burial ground beneath an advancing system. The clouds seethed with dark energy that could be felt at ground level. The weather boundary echoed by the physical boundary, the old stone wall separating the dead from the living. Never felt more alive.
15-November-2024
Sunny peaks with mild and dry air, shady valley with frosty, humid and cold air: it is a classic of some alpine valleys, plains and basins in conditions of high pressure and calm wind during the late autumn and winter period.
The valley hoar frost (produced by freezing fog that then dissolved) makes this air column reversal gradient evident.
The cold air, heavier, stagnates towards the bottom while the warm, lighter, air slides above it, so every long night with clear skies the air in the valley becomes colder and more humid.
It is an orographic/microclimatic self-produced cold, due to the loss of heat from soil towards space which occurs mainly during the late autumn (and winter) long clear nights but which also persists during the day, due to the weak and low sun on the horizon, with greater evidence in the shaded areas.
A steam pressure gauge circa 1900. Oil Well Supply Limited - Bradford, PA. (Vendor)
Crosby Steam Gauge & Valve Company - Boston Mass. (Manufacturer)
Two inches wide.
This is a large stress crack on Lake Manitoba. All cracks in ice are caused by stress in the ice which mostly comes from temperature changes in the ice sheet, wind and waves. These cracks can run for miles across a lake and are something fishermen and snowmobilers must be very aware of. In the spring the ice can pile up so high it visually looks like mountains out on the lake
Pressure gauge of a vintage "La Pavoni" - this machine still works and is in daily use.
Manchmal hat man wohl die berühmten Tomaten auf den Augen....
Bis heute Morgen hatte ich keine Idee zu diesem Thema. Doch bei der Zubereitung eines Espresso zum Frühstück kam der Gedankenblitz.
Die Maschine ist schon sehr alt; ich habe sie mir zu Beginn meines Studiums gekauft. Sie wird regelmäßig gewartet und ist immer noch in täglicher Benutzung.
Die Zeit hat jedoch ihre Spuren hinterlassen........
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Street photography from Glasgow, Scotland.
Previously unpublished shot from January 2019.
Sadly I was unable to get out with or without my camera over the weekend. Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder is an unpredictable beast that hijacks your plans and life. It is a disorder that also tends towards self-blame but, in a positive step from previously, I am not blaming myself for not getting out. Small wins are just as important as the large ones.
I'll try to take some photographs in the garden this week as I prepare and plan my vegetable garden for the coming spring. No pressure upon myself to do so though. Baby steps.
Take care everyone, whatever you love to take pictures of in this world.
---
As a record to myself this is re-upload number 2 before appearing in your update feeds due to an ongoing Flickr issue.
RealitySoSubtle 617 - Fujichrome Provia 100F - Cinestill Cs6 - Cinestill D9 Dynamic Chrome 1+2 - dslr scan
A macro view of a ¾ " water heater connector. The frame spans 2 3⁄8 -inches across.
Strobist info:
The scene was illuminated by two Nikon SB900 speedlights placed 90° CL/CR, one-foot above and two-feet away from the subject, and fired in Manual mode @ 1⁄8 -0.7EV power through Neewer soft boxes.
The connector was light-painted with the red and blue LEDs of a Coast TX10 Quad Color flashlight over a 5s exposure in a dark room.
The SB900s were triggered by three PocketWizard Plus X triggers.
Lens: AF - S DX VR Zoom - Nikkor 18 - 200mm f / 3.5 - 5.6G IF - ED[II] with 20mm extension tube attached.