View allAll Photos Tagged Projects

This is not my image. Edited version of Mz_thing's Photo for The Pirate Project

 

Mz_thing provided such a wonderful capture for other's interpretation. When I saw her photo, I wanted my interpretation to be a night version with extended elegant windows. Almost as if you were looking into an elegant mansion at night :)! Hope you like :)!

The station track work.The station "basement" accommodates the current district , the light supply and the decoder for the points.

The lok is entering the station.I will add the overhead and other details soon.

 

Overview of the semi-complete work.

Detail of the stream.

I will add (artificial) water later.

Geology: this limestone was formed beneath the waters of the Mediterranean Sea. The continent of Europe and the continent of Africa are v - e - r - y g - r - a - d - u - a - l - l - y meeting each other over millions of years. So, the limestone is being forced up.

 

Capo Caccia

Capo Caccia is situated a few kilometres from Alghero, on the southern point of a huge limestone triangle that wedges out into the sea. There are characteristic, impressive cliffs (nearly 300 m high) on its west side.

Capo Caccia is renowned for the underground labyrinth of mysterious caves discovered in 1700. The most famous one is Grotta di Nettuno (2500 m long) that can be reached by sea or on ground climbing the 656 steps of Escala del Cabirol that lead to the cave. There is a beautiful transparent lake (La Marmora) with two small sandy beaches just at its entrance.

Capo Caccia is one of the wildest places in Sardinia. Inland, there is an extraordinary natural reserve established by Italian Botanic Association in 1970 and covering nearly three thousand hectares. It's a marvellous garden full of plants unique to the world. Capo Caccia is frequented by big birds of prey. Many of them are quite rare in other parts of the world.

Travelling towards the north you will come upon Porto Conto, a beautiful bay protected from winds by high cliffs. Nearby, past the village of Fertilia, the prehistoric Necropolis of Anghelu Ruju with 36 graves and the Nuraghe Palmavera can be visited. These are some of the most antique testimonies of the past in this area.

Capo Caccia is the perfect place for diving enthusiasts - there are about 20 different immersion points accessible thanks to scuba diving guides. The sea water is crystal-clear and the submerged caves are full of colourful fish and sea plants including red corral. Most of the underwater excursions are accessible by everybody and the average depth is 25 meters. Some of them are reserved only for the most expert scuba divers.

Capo Caccia offers an ideal environment for other sports enthusiasts for the likes of swimming to aqua gym, from windsurfing to water skiing and canoeing, from mountain biking to horse riding or hiking.

Numerous boat excursions are organised, for example the Riviera del Corallo excursion with its wonderful landscape used as a scenery for many films, Faradada Island (Isola Faradada) to the west of Capo Caccia, Piana Island to the north, Porto Conte Bay with its beautiful beaches, Punta del Giglio and the most spectacular excursions in the famous caves Grotta di Nettuno, Grotta Verde and Grotta dei Ricami.

There are many places and monuments to explore inland such as the antique towers (Torre del Bollo, Torre del Tramariglio, Torre del Pegna) or the Nuraghe Santimbena together with ruins of a Roman villa, and finally, the picturesque old town of Alghero.

Sardiniatourism.com

Geology: this limestone was formed beneath the waters of the Mediterranean Sea. The continent of Europe and the continent of Africa are v - e - r - y g - r - a - d - u - a - l - l - y meeting each other over millions of years. So, the limestone is being forced up.

 

Capo Caccia

Capo Caccia is situated a few kilometres from Alghero, on the southern point of a huge limestone triangle that wedges out into the sea. There are characteristic, impressive cliffs (nearly 300 m high) on its west side.

Capo Caccia is renowned for the underground labyrinth of mysterious caves discovered in 1700. The most famous one is Grotta di Nettuno (2500 m long) that can be reached by sea or on ground climbing the 656 steps of Escala del Cabirol that lead to the cave. There is a beautiful transparent lake (La Marmora) with two small sandy beaches just at its entrance.

Capo Caccia is one of the wildest places in Sardinia. Inland, there is an extraordinary natural reserve established by Italian Botanic Association in 1970 and covering nearly three thousand hectares. It's a marvellous garden full of plants unique to the world. Capo Caccia is frequented by big birds of prey. Many of them are quite rare in other parts of the world.

Travelling towards the north you will come upon Porto Conto, a beautiful bay protected from winds by high cliffs. Nearby, past the village of Fertilia, the prehistoric Necropolis of Anghelu Ruju with 36 graves and the Nuraghe Palmavera can be visited. These are some of the most antique testimonies of the past in this area.

Capo Caccia is the perfect place for diving enthusiasts - there are about 20 different immersion points accessible thanks to scuba diving guides. The sea water is crystal-clear and the submerged caves are full of colourful fish and sea plants including red corral. Most of the underwater excursions are accessible by everybody and the average depth is 25 meters. Some of them are reserved only for the most expert scuba divers.

Capo Caccia offers an ideal environment for other sports enthusiasts for the likes of swimming to aqua gym, from windsurfing to water skiing and canoeing, from mountain biking to horse riding or hiking.

Numerous boat excursions are organised, for example the Riviera del Corallo excursion with its wonderful landscape used as a scenery for many films, Faradada Island (Isola Faradada) to the west of Capo Caccia, Piana Island to the north, Porto Conte Bay with its beautiful beaches, Punta del Giglio and the most spectacular excursions in the famous caves Grotta di Nettuno, Grotta Verde and Grotta dei Ricami.

There are many places and monuments to explore inland such as the antique towers (Torre del Bollo, Torre del Tramariglio, Torre del Pegna) or the Nuraghe Santimbena together with ruins of a Roman villa, and finally, the picturesque old town of Alghero.

Sardiniatourism.com

View of the station and the warehouse.

 

57/365

So many things to do yet so little time. Might go on a short hiatus since its hell week and everybody is getting serious. Didn't you notice that some of my pictures were taken in this bedsheet, heheh.

Hope I can finish my Project 365! *cross fingers*

The right side of the diorama is ready.Appart from the vegetation I added some distinctive scenes.

Equipment: Nikon D5000 + Nikon 35mm f/1.8G

Model: Rafaela

Location: Heraklion, Crete

Conditions: Natural light

 

Concept background:

Daena was an ancient persian godess and her name means "that which was revealed".

 

(No photoshop used at all)

I went out today for the first time since leaving hospital last Friday. We needed some groceries and some veg. This is City Green, our favourite greengrocery.

 

Friday, 26th August 2016

Dark jeans

Gray turtleneck

Danskos

Green vest

Purse

I know I uploaded this image earlier in the spring, but I just found out that I am a finalist in Ron Howard's Project Imagination! This image has special meaning to me and to see it potentially come to life on the big screen would be a dream.

 

The image is called Let My Machine Talk to Me. It is inspired by the R.E.M. song World Leader Pretend. You can go to the direct link to the image here.

 

www.longliveimagination.com/gallery/photo/30697

 

You will need to register first in the top right corner before you can vote. You can vote once per email every day. Voting for my category (Relationship) ends Sept. 24th. Thank you so much for helping me achieve so many things that wouldn't be possible without this community.

  

blog | facebook | twitter

 

project flickr ... contrast ...

ODC ... reflection ... &

ODC ... intricate ...

 

LIMG_5284_zw

Shot and edited on an iPhone 4s

 

Another photo from my new project, still in the process of being defined. Also taken in Corstorphine Hill. Lith print on Kodak Bromesko paper on Easylith at 1:25. Camera Ilford Sporti, film Rollei 80s on D76 1:1.

 

www.ivanbpalli.com

Project 365 - Day 40 - 9th June 2010.

The Slottet (Royal Palace).

 

Royal Palace, Oslo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

Slottet, Royal Palace

 

Royal Palace in Oslo from the front

Building information

Location Oslo

Country Norway

Architect Hans Ditlev Franciscus Linstow

Client Charles III of Norway

Construction start date 1825

Completion date 1849

 

The Royal Palace (no:Slottet) in Oslo

- was built in the first half of the 19th century as the Norwegian residence of Norwegian and Swedish king Charles III (Carl Johan, Charles XIV of Sweden) and is used as the official residence of the present Norwegian Monarch. The crown princely couple resides at Skaugum Manor in Asker Municipality outside of Oslo, while the three princesses of Norway live on estates in Oslo, Fredrikstad and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

 

Until the completion of the Palace, members of the Bernadotte dynasty resided in Paleet, a magnificent town house in Christiania bequeathed to the State in 1805 to be used as a royal residence. King Charles III of Norway never saw his Palace completed, but his successors Oscar I, Charles IV and Oscar II used it regularly during their stays in Christiania (now Oslo). They spent most of their time in their Swedish capital Stockholm, but tried to spend some months in Norway every year. Oscar II was a frequent visitor, but preferred to use his seaside villa at Bygdøy during his summer holidays, while his Queen Sophia mostly stayed at the country residence of Skinnarbøl near the Swedish border for the sake of her health. Oscar II was absent from his Palace during 1905, the year of the dissolution of the union between Norway and Sweden, but his son, Crown Prince Gustaf, paid two short visits in his vain attempts to save the union.

 

The Bernadotte dynasty resigned their Norwegian throne in 1905 and was succeeded by the Danish prince Carl, who took the name of Haakon VII when he accepted his election as king of completely independent Norway. He was the first monarch to use the Palace as his permanent residence.

 

The palace was designed by the Danish-born architect Hans Ditlev Franciscus Linstow (1787-1851). The project was initiated in the Norwegian parliament in 1821, the foundation stone was laid down by the king in 1825, and the building was completed in 1849, during the reign of Oscar I.

 

During the reign and residence of King Olav V from 1957 to 1991, the Royal Palace was not renovated and insufficiently kept up. When the current monarch, King Harald V, started a comprehensive renovation project, it was criticized due to the amount of money needed to bring the Palace up to a satisfactory state. Since public tours began in 2002, the general public has been able to view and appreciate the renovation and splendour the palace now boasts.

  

To see this Large:- farm1.static.flickr.com/190/498426922_1d94c0b2cb_b.jpg

 

Taken on

September 27th, 2006 at 15:41

Update: 3.18.2017.

 

Very pleased to announce that this piece won 3rd prize last night at the Gifted Gala 2017 held by the Lemont Center for the Arts. The Gala was held at the Lithuanian World Center Art Museum (which is a hidden gem) in Lemont, Illinois and will benefit the arts. I am very honored to have had four pieces hanging in the show and taking this prize.

 

Original: 1.15.2017:

 

Amazing show last night at the Flower of Life Art Gallery in Lockport. All of the artists there presented really impressive work and it was great to see.

 

Here is the second of three pieces that I presented:

 

This poster is associated with an article I wrote for the first edition of TAGOL Talk that will be published sometime in 2017. Send me your email if you would like me to email you a copy of the full article. The poster above is not part of the article, but almost all of the portraits in it also appear in the article.

 

The Peace Project

 

Photography – Glossy 20 x 28

 

The Peace Project is a collection of portraits of people from Chicago, Illinois and from the other side of the planet at Jakarta, Indonesia. The project looks to recognize that life is not so black and white but more portraits of gray. Cultures and people are incredibly different, but maybe someday we will figure out that we are all human and understand how much we actually have in common. That there is a oneness to mankind and we all, I hope, have peace somewhere in us.

 

Much peace, love and happiness from them to you.

  

No. 4 - 5:- Rochester and the River Medway Trip.

Old Rochester Bridge.

 

...The reconstructed bridge, known today as the Old Bridge, has three arched steel truss spans ...

 

The premier website for this monument is definitely Rochester Bridge Trust

- rbt.org.uk/trust/index.htm

the whole website is well worth reading and I have copied excerpts from it.

  

A WORD FROM THE WARDEN

 

Welcome to the website of The Rochester Bridge Trust. Since Roman times a bridge has crossed the River Medway at Rochester, and since medieval times the Wardens and Assistants of Rochester Bridge have maintained this strategic river crossing. ......, crossings as important for today's traffic as at any time in our history. ...... I hope you will enjoy our website and learn more about the history and current work of The Rochester Bridge Trust. My first named predecessor as Bridge Warden in 1383, Robert Rowe, could never have envisaged the technology enabling your research today.

 

THE ROMAN BRIDGE

Over the centuries before the modern day road bridges there have been three other bridges at Rochester: the Roman bridge, the medieval bridge, and the Victorian bridge. The Roman bridge crossed the River Medway on the line of Watling Street, the main Roman road running from London to Richborough and Dover on the Kent coast. Built soon after the Roman conquest under Claudius in 43 AD, the first bridge across the Medway had nine stone piers constructed on foundations deep below the riverbed. Archaeological evidence of these foundations was found during construction work in the nineteenth century.

In the parishes surrounding Rochester the manors and estates belonging to the king, the archbishop, and the bishop of Rochester were each responsible for keeping a section of the bridge in good repair. Whenever the bridge needed repair, a royal commission consulted the bridgework list kept by the bishop of Rochester and assigned responsibility for repairs. This system worked for centuries until the cold winter of 1381, when the River Medway froze solid. According to the Winchester Chronicle, when the ice melted in February, the combined pressure of flood waters and ice carried away "the great part of the bridge."

 

THE MEDIEVAL BRIDGE

In February 1382 a royal commission was appointed to decide who was responsible to repair the ruined Roman bridge. The commissioners, who included Henry Yevele, the best English architect of his time, and the powerful Kentish knight and landowner Sir John de Cobham, concluded that Rochester needed a new bridge with stone arches. Sir John recruited the help of another wealthy knight, Sir Robert Knolles, and between them they paid for the construction of a new stone bridge 100 yards upstream from the remains of the Roman bridge. Construction began in August 1387 and finished in September 1391.

Although constantly repaired, the medieval stone bridge continued to provide the only crossing at Rochester for almost 500 years. During this time both the river traffic and the road traffic increased steadily, and in the late 18th century the Wardens and Assistants of Rochester Bridge extensively modernised the bridge.

The programme of modernisation was completed in 1824, but the refurbished stone bridge was eventually replaced entirely by a new cast iron bridge in 1856.

 

THE VICTORIAN BRIDGE

Painting of Victorian Cast Iron Bridge. The modernisation of the medieval stone bridge proved to be only a temporary solution to the increasing demands of road and river traffic.

At the insistence of the Admiralty they finally decided on a cast iron bridge with three arches and a ship's passage with a swing bridge that would allow ships with fixed masts to navigate upriver.

The placement of the new bridge on the line of Watling Street and the old Roman bridge required the purchase of considerable property in Strood before construction could begin.

 

CONSTRUCTION HISTORY

In April 1910, after considering several designs put forward by bridge engineer John Robson, the Wardens and Assistants of Rochester Bridge approved plans to reconstruct the bridge by raising the roadway and suspending it from arches above the road surface instead of supporting it on arches below. After an expenditure of £95, 887 the bridge was once again declared open for traffic on 14 May 1914. The reconstructed bridge, known today as the Old Bridge, has three arched steel truss spans and a plate girder approach span with ramps at each end. The Strood Approach at the western end is constructed over brick arches. The carriageway, originally built for two tramway tracks and third lane for overtaking traffic, is 7.93 metres wide. Today, it carries the two lanes of westward-bound traffic from Rochester to Strood.

 

To understand where these photographs fit into the whole please check the 7th photograph in this Gallery.

rbt.org.uk/bridges/oldgall.htm

Reconstructed Rochester Approach

showing Tramway Tracks Across the Bridge.

 

To see Large:-

farm4.static.flickr.com/3628/3694710071_15b4ce3ae2_b.jpg

 

Taken on

July 18, 2007 at 15:43 BST

This is a continuation of the current project of an Image a day.

This will take a year to complete. It will be a "Colour Project"....numbered 731 to 1100 and it will begin on September 1st 2022..

I will also include an additional 4 Sets that will last a month each.

First will be Vines and Vineyards in November.2022.

Second is Forests ,,Water, ,Trees and Leaves in February 2023.

Third "Light Eating Objects" in May 2023.

Forth will be another B&W . August 2023.

On top of all that every month will feature a small set of 4 pics with different themes.

As you can see I shall be a busy Bunny!.

Hope you like the stuff!!!!!!!.

Biarritz : Musée de la Mer

(Voyage autour du Monde - USA)

 

- PLEASE, DON'T USE ON WEBSITES !

- SVP, pas de copies de photos sur Pinterest, et autres sites.

 

This project does not look even close to what I would like it to look like but Ok this is a first trial

I'll keep working on it and the one from 2009 will be better :)

1. 01, 2. 02, 3. 03, 4. 06, 5. 07, 6. 08, 7. 09, 8. 10, 9. 11, 10. 12, 11. 14, 12. 15, 13. 16, 14. 17, 15. 18, 16. 19, 17. 20, 18. 23, 19. 25, 20. 26

A frame from a film of double exposures. A collaboration between myself and Maria Bovor

Mission - Santa Barbara

Voigtlander Color Skopar 25/4 + Leica M8

Small suspension bridge in the tropical section - not a real necessity, more a touristic attraction.

Pavement, Lisbon 2019

This is a continuation of the current project of an Image a day.

This will take a year to complete. It will be a "Colour Project"....numbered 731 to 1100 and it will begin on September 1st 2022..

I will also include an additional 4 Sets that will last a month each.

First will be Vines and Vineyards in November.2022.

Second is Forests ,,Water, ,Trees and Leaves in February 2023.

Third "Light Eating Objects" in May 2023.

Forth will be another B&W . August 2023.

On top of all that every month will feature a small set of 4 pics with different themes.

As you can see I shall be a busy Bunny!.

Hope you like the stuff!!!!!!!.

Early morning waves rolling in to Lucky Bay.

The right side of the diorama is ready.Appart from the vegetation I added some distinctive scenes.

Fujifilm X-T3; Fujifilm XF 80mm f/2.8 R LM OIS WR Macro Lens.

Macro Mondays Theme Kitchen.

Studio from Project BTS, my first picture, take easy on me guys haha

 

☠☠☠ OUTFIT ☠☠☠

- Gabriel White line Baseball

- CLASS:b / Couple Hoodie

- Phedora ~ Zion Sneakers

 

☠☠☠ AVATAR ☠☠☠

- Lel EvoX Kane

- Legacy Classic Body

- Red Raven Shape

- Avarosa Min Skin

- Gloom Body Skin

Cab ride with 18 201.

Travel from West to East...

My son at the end imitates the sound and the horn of the locomotive...

The town, the tramway and part of the tunnel mouth.

The chimneys on the roof and a side pipe on the vertical tank will be added later soon...

challenge proposed by Keira Seerose here: slstyledirectory.com/2010/12/a-not-just-for-bloggers-chal...

 

I know I said I loved myself too many times-.. but this is project positivity and not project modest. :P

All was handwritten so if there's any mistakes never mind. :D

 

Hugsssss and make yours. Love yourself a lil.

 

lesclairsdelunederoxaane.blogspot.com/2022/05/project-bts...

 

Photographer : Roxaane Fyanucci

Model : PROJECT BTS - JK -

 

Fashion Style| ✈︎ Gild @ Witchcraft & Wizardry ╰☆╮Beyond sadness ╰☆╮

 

Hair Style| ✈︎ DURA @ ACCESS╰☆╮B119╰☆╮

Final version of my part of the Project Tatooine.

 

More photos: bricksafe.com/pages/Liwnik/space/sw-project-tatooine

This is a continuation of the current project of an Image a day.

This will take a year to complete. It will be a "Colour Project"....numbered 731 to 1100 and it will begin on September 1st 2022..

I will also include an additional 4 Sets that will last a month each.

First will be Vines and Vineyards in November.2022.

Second is Forests ,,Water, ,Trees and Leaves in February 2023.

Third "Light Eating Objects" in May 2023.

Forth will be another B&W . August 2023.

On top of all that every month will feature a small set of 4 pics with different themes.

As you can see I shall be a busy Bunny!.

Hope you like the stuff!!!!!!!.

Project Babymetal Concert

Saturday, August 13 2022

2:00pm SLT

 

LIZY ISLAND, the former Big Playground, invites to our fully choreographed sync-to-music tribute show to the Japanese kawaii metal of BABYMETAL!

 

Jewel of Paradise (77,66,22)

 

PBM brings the METALVERSE to Second Life

Another droid .

Have a great time.Thank you for visit.

 

My DeviantART - noro8.deviantart.com/

My ArtStation - www.artstation.com/noro8

1 2 4 6 7 ••• 79 80