View allAll Photos Tagged RECOGNITION

Her: Be quick, we need to get out of here!

Him: Wait this is heavy!!

 

Photo taken for The Main Event photo contest.

 

Taxi to Fall-o-ween

 

Recognitions

This snapshot was made cover of the groups:

- Wonderful SL world in Oct 2021

- Second Life Give me all your pics! in Oct 2021

 

Pose coming soon at MomentuM

 

♪ Rebels

I know how you feel...

 

Avatars shouldn’t be so self-aware.

  

Jacket: Gabriel

Head: Akeruka

Hair: Dura

 

0:399

Thanks for your time and recognition. Appreciate all kind of feedback.

 

Website | Instagram

“In the recognition of beauty, the eye takes the most delight in color.”

Joseph Addison

 

DSCN5464-001

When experimental becomes just mental, it is time to take a few steps back, return to the solid ground, collect the confidence and try again. To achieve happiness requires work, but it is possible. Maybe more difficult is to recognize it...

Colour photos suit the times when Ivy (my Mum) briefly recognises me. It may last seconds, maybe two minutes then its gone. She goes back into another World, her private World.

 

www.flickr.com/photos/robbber1/sets/72157603310620816/

Fixed my blog! Yay! Here is the link to this post: threadsandtuneage.com/recognition

 

The server my blog is hosted on is having issues so I will add the link a little later to this when we can resolve the problem. For now… here are the credits:

 

POSE: Recognition by Le Poppycock ~ Available at The Liaison Collaborative {Dec 7 to Dec 30}

DRESS: Short Prom Dress {snow} by Zenith ~ Available at Collabor88 {December 8 to December 31}

FUR: Faux Fur Muffler by Zenith ~ Available at Collabor88 {December 8 to December 31}

BAG: Purse by Zenith ~ Available at Collabor88 {December 8 to December 31}

HEELS: Las Vegas by Essenz ~ Available at Shiny Shabby {Nov 20 to December 15}

SKIN: Opal by the Skinnery ~ Available at Tannenbaum {November 25 to December 25} flickr.com/prismeventssl

HEAD: Tumble by CATWA

HAIR: Sparkle by Magika {on sale}

TIGHTS: Holiday Stockings by Izzie’s maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Izzies/115/125/31

 

DÉCOR:

BIKE: Ravenghost

FENCE: New Snow Bolt on by Studio Skye

FLOWERS: Snow Drifts by Cube Republic

  

I am so honoured to be presented with a certificate of recognition from sorority Delta Theta Nu. This means so much to me!

 

I was so shocked and very blown away to be told "You are seen". It brought tears to my eyes as life is not easy. Yet we still make the best of every situation and push through trying our best to sprinkle positivity. Thank you once again to the ladies of DTN! I appreciate you all so much ♥

Thanks for your time and recognition. Appreciate all kind of feedback.

 

Website | 500px | Instagram

Excerpt from historicplaces.ca:

  

Description of Historic Place

The Navy Hall stands alone in a carefully manicured park setting just below Fort George National Historic Site. Designed with clear, clean lines, it is a low, rectangular, stone-clad structure with a hipped-roof clad in copper, and with a symmetrical organization of its windows and entry points. The designation is confined to the footprint of the building.

 

Heritage Value

 

The Navy Hall is a Recognized Federal Heritage Building because of its historical associations, and its architectural and environmental values.

 

Historical Value:

 

The Navy Hall is a very good example of a building associated with the beginnings of the heritage movement in the first half of the 20th century. It illustrates changing approaches to the management of important historic buildings over time. In particular, it illustrates the role of aesthetics in conservation in the 1930s. Originally a commissariat storehouse, regular troops, the militia and also the Boy Scouts used the building, built in 1815. In the 1930s, the building was taken over by the Niagara Parks Commission.

 

Architectural Value:

 

The Navy Hall is valued for its good aesthetic design. The exterior fabric of the structure, the stone cladding, the copper clad roof, and the enhanced symmetry of the fenestration are features of the 1930s intervention. These features, clearly of a later era and philosophy, reflect the classical revival tastes of the period and the design idiom of the Niagara Parks Commission. Good functional design is evidenced in the placement of doors and windows, and in the spatial arrangement and planning of the interior.

 

Environmental Value:

 

The Navy Hall reinforces the landscaped parkway that runs along the Niagara lakefront and is a familiar landmark to residents and to visitors.

 

Character-Defining Elements

The character-defining elements of the Navy Hall should be respected.

 

Its good aesthetic, good functional design and good quality materials and craftsmanship, for example:

-the simple, rectangular massing.

-the low-pitched hipped roof, the copper roof cladding, and the symmetrically placed chimneys.

-the stone cladding of the exterior walls, the small multi-paned windows and large entrances.

-the interior spatial arrangement of the principal rooms.

 

The manner in which the Navy Hall reinforces the landscaped setting and is a familiar landmark, as evidenced by:

-its simple design and materials that harmonize with the landscaped parkway consisting of well-maintained lawns and walks, all introduced as part of the Niagara Park Commission’s parkway landscaping in the 1930s.

-its visibility and recognition by those frequenting the parkway and the National Historic Site.

Sitting on the window-sill and enjoying the low afternoon sun. Illuminated and in sharp focus is the "good" eye, the one I use for photography. The other one plays second fiddle. However, none of them was really involved in taking this self-portrait. It was the artificial eye of the camera in connection with a clever algorithm (automatic eye recognition) that kicked in when I pressed the shutter release (via a long cable). This is one of the situations where camera technology enables me to do things with ease that, if done manually, would have been quite difficult to achieve.

All female crew of KC-10A Extender ‘87-0119’ on the ramp at Travis AFB, California after a successful mission in recognition of Womens’ History Month. 22nd March 2022

 

www.fulldiscaviation.com/stories/2022/5/10/humet65-cleare...

Lost in the awakening beauty

 

A few of my China images were featured in the April issue of the luxurious lifestyle magazine 品 Prestige, Singapore.

 

© All rights reserved Anna Kwa. Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit written permission

Recent research in Cambridge has shown that sheep can recognise human faces when encouraged by a wee treat, such as Baa-rack Obama’s and Emma Watson’s. Our neighbours may of recognized me, but they were not used to me jumping into their space in order to shoot the setting sun.

 

A Cokin diffuser filter was used on camera.

“Everyone needs recognition for his accomplishments, but few people make the need known quite as clearly as the little boy who said to his father: "Let's play darts”

- Anonymous

Glaub nicht dais ich werbe.

Engel, und wurb uch duch aych! Du kommst nicht. Denn mein

Anruf ist immer voll Hinweg; wider so starke

Stromung kannstdu nicht schreiten. Wie ein gestreckter

Arm ist mein Rufen. Und seine zum Greifen

oben offene Hand bleibt vordir

offen, wie Abwehr und Warnung.

Unfislicher, weitauf.

Could it be / that with loss of recognition / of structure and function / the sense of beauty grows? / or not?

We are not people experiencing spirituality, but souls experiencing humanity - Father Stuart Long

I went to see my Brother today.

 

He later admitted that he didn't recognise me when he answered the door. I'm not sure whether that's a good thing or a bad thing...

1.26 was an installation by Janet Echelman at the Signal Festival in Prague. The festival as a whole was really impressive and a great way to see the city in a new light (pun intended...). With this picture there was a fairly boring foreground from where I had set up my camera, so I waited for a tram to pass and had a relatively long exposure in order to make the pic a bit more interesting. This is one of my favourite photos from 2015.

 

A description of the installation taken from the festival website is as follows:

 

This spectacular seven-meter installation by American artist Janet Echelman creates an expansive net that floats in an ethereal manner over the heads of the viewer. This combination of monumental forms with apparently light materials creates an unconventional conceptual canvas for a play of light created by variable waves of contrasting colours.

 

The concept of the work is inspired by the interconnectedness of terrestrial phenomena and systems. The artist used data from NASA laboratories (the National Aeronautics and Space Administration in the USA) and NOAA (the American National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) related to the effects of the 2010 earthquake in Chile, which caused the shortening of Earth days by 1.26 microseconds. The shape of the net is defined by the various heights of Tsunami waves across the ocean.

Visually and conceptually this engaging installation invites not only festival visitors but passing pedestrians to pause and contemplate.

 

American artist Janet Echelman excels in all categories and definitions. Her unique sculptures and installations on a monumental scale change depending on the effects of wind, water or light. Echelman became inspired in India by the lives of local fishermen, and she began using unusual materials for her installations, such as fishing nets. In her work, she combines traditional crafts with the latest technology, and she cooperates with experts from various fields, ranging from aviation engineering to rural architecture and light design.

 

She has been awarded several times for her work by the professional public. She earned the prestigious Guggenheim and Fulbright scholarship as well as several other important prizes and recognitions, in recent years, for example, from the Smithsonian Institute, the Society of Architects in Boston and the Aspen Institute.

 

www.signalfestival.com/2015/en/installation/1-26-2/

 

The reality of naïve art.

Still life with oil heater, 1944, by Sipke Houtman (1871-1945). From the exhibition Naïve Realism in Museum MORE Gorssel NL.

 

More Naïve Realism at my Blog:

johanphoto.blogspot.com/2023/10/naief-realisme-naive-real...

  

A certificate of achievement in calligraphy waiting to be awarded.

The Vietnam Traveling Memorial Wall is a 3/5 scale replica of the Vietnam Memorial in Washington DC. It stands six feet tall at the center and covers almost 300 feet from end to end. 58,195 names of fallen servicemen and women are inscribed on it.

 

This Traveling Memorial stands as a reminder of the great sacrifices made during the Vietnam War. It was made for the purpose of helping heal and rekindle friendships and to allow people may not be able to make the trip to Washington DC the opportunity to visit and honor loved ones in their home town.

 

We're Here! : War Memorials

 

Need inspiration for your 365 project? Join We're Here!

  

The golden opportunity you are seeking is in yourself. It is not in your environment, it is not in luck or chance, or the help of others; it is in yourself alone.

 

-- Orison Swett Marden (among many, many others)

 

(Note: Typically, I immediately eliminate any photo w/a sun flare. In this case, slight as it is, it seemed to serve an appropriate accent. Comments, of course, welcome...)

 

[Large more detail]

New container ship ONE Recognition at Container Terminal Tollerort in the port Hamburg, Germany.

 

ONE Recognition seems to be one of the ten 7000 TEU container vessel Ocean Network Express plans to operate on a long term charter from Seaspan. Like her sister ship ONE Readyness ; ONE Recognition was likely also built on Shanghai.

 

ONE Recognition [IMO 9952701] (2024)

 

Propulsion: 32970 kW

Length: 272.5 m

Width: 42.8 m

Capacity: 7000 TEU

"When the people of the world all know beauty as beauty,

There arises the recognition of ugliness.

When they all know the good as good,

There arises the recognition of evil. "

Lao-tzu

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