View allAll Photos Tagged REMAINS
A short one-way unpaved road travels through colorful eroded badlands. Hiking a bit in the badlands reveals remains of mining trails and mines. Part of Star Wars: Return of the Jedi was filmed here.
Happy Saturated Saturday!
The remains of a once vibrant canalside industrial past reflect at dusk in the still waters of the Sheffield & South Yorkshire Navigation (Sheffield & Tinsley Canal), Attercliffe, Sheffield. The peace is disturbed momentarily as a Transpennine Express Class 185 speeds past with 1B90, the 19:18 Manchester Piccadilly – Cleethorpes.
24th August 2021
2021 represents a significant milestone in the history of the Phoenix Railway-Photographic Circle with the celebration of our 50th anniversary by publishing a book to showcase some of the members work, past and present, from 1971 to the present day.
The book contains 14 chapters and 144 pages of photographs depicting the work of over 50 accomplished railway photographers with many differing styles and approaches. It takes an alternative view on photographing the railway scene over the past 50 years.
The book, called 50 Years of Phoenix is now available-click on this link to order your copy:
www.mortonsbooks.co.uk/product/view/productCode/15554
Why not take a look at the PRPC web site at
Love doesn’t vanish.
It folds itself into the corners of things -
a scent, a song, the way light hits the floor at 4PM.
Loss is loud at first.
It rearranges the furniture,
leaves the windows open,
scatters the pages you meant to keep.
But love is patient.
It waits in the silence,
in the rituals you didn’t know were rituals
until they were gone.
And when you choose it again -
not because it’s easy,
but because it’s true -
that’s the win.
Not the kind with applause.
The kind with breath.
With grace.
With the quiet knowing:
you loved,
you lost,
and still,
you love.
BEAUTY REMAINS UNCHANGED
"YOUR BEST SHOT 2016"
FLICKR
SUNSET AT THE ANGLO MEAT PACKING PLANT FRAY BENTOS URUGUY DECLARED WORLD HERITAGE.
Canon PowerShot SX130 IS
FRIGORIFICO ANGLO
ANTIQUE
FRAY BENTOS
URUGUAY
WORLD HERITAGE (UNESCO) SINCE JULY 2015
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frigor%C3%ADfico_Angl
o_del_Uruguay
www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/destinations/south-america/uru...
www.facebook.com/FrigorificoAnglo/
es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frigor%C3%ADfico_Anglo_del_Uruguay
Frigorífico Anglo del Uruguay
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Frigorífico Anglo del Uruguay was a meatpacking plant located at Fray Bentos, Uruguay, on the Uruguay River bank.
In 1924, the Vestey group purchases the old installations of Liebig Extract of Meat Company and the production goes on under a new name.
During its peak period, El Anglo had 5,000 workers whose ranks included English, Belgians, Russians, Spanish and Italians. It finally closed in 1979 after Europe and the United States had cut back their purchases from Latin America. Small brick houses with thick walls running along the river's edge in Fray Bentos form the "Barrio Anglo," a city-within-a-city where meatpacking workers lived that featured a hospital, a school, a social club and a football squad.[1]
2/10/2024 2 A.M.
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The derelict remains of a house near Cregennan Lakes.
Agfa Isolette II (folding camera from the 1950's)
Fomapan 200
Anyone familiar with State Route 26 north of historic Princeton,IL. will recognize this survivor near the village of Kasbeer,IL. It is nestled in a farm field standing tall as the wind turbine farm to the north slowly approaches the area.I can remember other buildings on this farm years ago,but time,weather,and decay have taken their toll.Some say this is progress,weeding out the non-essential and what is no longer economically viable.
I say its losing our roots,a part that helped form today's society.
And you know what happens when you kill the root...
Exuviae of a dragonly (Odonata); found along a pond at Breeven (Bornem, Belgium, 28 June 2022).
Fieldstack based on 79 exposures; images assembled in Zerene Stacker (Pmax & Dmap).
Sony A6500 + Laowa 65mm f/2.8 2x ultra macro apo; ISO-200, f/4, 1/1000s, -0.7 step, diffused natural light.
Gear & method used: www.flickr.com/photos/andredekesel/8086137225/in/dateposted/
Nikon D70 with 18-55mm kit lens.
Crossed-eyes 3D (stereoscopic) viewing: View the two photos cross-eyed until a third image appears in the middle, which will be in stereo 3D. The brain nicely synthesizes a composite image with realistic depth and sharpness. Then put your two hands in front of your face to cover the photos on the left and right so only the middle one remains in your sight.
Uncovered by the recent winter tide rests the old shipwreck down on Middleton beach, Hartlepool.
On a new laptop so getting to grips with the colours/brightness etc.
If you like my work and are on facebook, then please feel free to like/share my page.
www.facebook.com/SteveClasperPhotography
Thanks for looking.
All images are © Steve Clasper Photography, 2016 - All Rights Reserved.
Here's an older photo found on my hard drive back in 2016 from my first photography trip. I still think back to when Trona Pinnacles gave us the best sunset light I have ever seen since I started practicing landscape photography 2 years ago. I would say this trip was a huge success. This was my final shot from that night and I still wish I ran around finding more compositions with this amazing light.
I've commented the featured image I captured that night below. It is still my favorite photograph to date because it's so unique to me.
Trona Pinnacles, California
The world, in its quiet unfolding, remains beautiful without striving; and war, being unnatural, shall dissolve like mist in morning light.
*366 photos for the 20's 02/28*
this year I will try to choose one photo a day for this pseudo-project, no matter the motive, style, colour or technique. encouraging myself to shoot everyday, even if I can't go outside.
from my garden...
Same flowers, different optic...
so I have disabled the comments...
Thank you to all who stopped by and took a look!!
The remains of the old pier in Swanage. A popular shot for local photographers in Dorset, but still one that I'm pleased to get. Its easy to see why this is so popular with the eerie feel of the old sticks exposed at low tide. Using a Lee Big Stopper to get an exposure of almost 4 minutes it was perfect for smoothing out the water and sky.