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On the sun deck Princess ships have multiple pools, bars, ice cream parlors, a giant screen for evening movies (and endless promotions). I ran around with my camera capturing various scenes.
This is about half of the main pool. Behind the screen is a walk/run track and tennis courts and basketball courts. This is mid-ship. As you can see it is crowded and the pop music is blaring.
Tomorrow I will post a few pictures of our favorites part of the sun deck, The Sanctuary.
checking out her world. She's a Royal (ball) python (Python regius). Notice her heat sensing pits above her upper lip which enable her to sense the warmth of prey animals from up to 30 feet away. Photo by Frank.
Anastasia: I wish we could all get along like we used to in middle school... I wish I could bake a cake filled with rainbows and smiles and everyone would eat and be happy...
Kuzco: [shouting from back] She isn’t even Disney!
I have finally finished editing from this session. What a sweet heart this little lady was. I have posted a few of my favorites on the blog.
Princess Tiana, the heroine of "The Princess and the Frog," posing for photos on the cruise.
Disney often shows movies at sea at midnight of the day they premiere on land. Since "The Princess and the Frog" had just opened in New York and LA while we were on our cruise, we were *really* hoping they'd have it. Unfortunately, the movie they premiered on the cruise was "Old Dogs" instead, which we never got around to seeing...
Just a cute little cake. The gumpaste medallions are painted with 24 karat gold dust mixed with a bit of vodka.
Princess Alexandra cradles her infant son James Robert Bruce in her arms as, with Mr Angus Ogilvy, she leaves her home at Thatched House Lodge, Richmond Park.
Date: 11/05/1964
The date of this picture is not yet determined but it is Princess Diana resplendent in a red taffeta dress and beautiful as ever.
Princesses of Saxony, Sibylla, Emilia and Sidonia Von Sachsen, 1535. Lucas Cranach the Elder (1472-1553). Active in Wien, Wittenburg and Weimar.
Art section, Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria. 1010 Vienna,
Maria Theresien-Platz
The monumental structure, built at the behest of Emperor Franz Joseph I as part of his expansion of the city in 1858, was intended to both unite and appropriately represent the artistic treasures that had been collected by the Habsburgs over the centuries.Construction work lasted 20 years, from when ground was first broken in 1871 to the museum building’s completion in the year 1891.