View allAll Photos Tagged REVOLUTION

You say you want a Revolution

We all want to change the World

*Be Careful what you wish for. The minute you change history, erase where we have come from, you change everything you have today. You change everything our ancestors fought for, you change freedom** Tune....♪

The clocks turned - Earth reassuringly continued to rotate, and apparently "Seconds" even leapt.

Regardless - 2017 arrived right on time.

▽ CREATiCA goggles

▽ Revoul hairbase

▽ Osmia top, jacket, choker

▽ Scandalize skirt, belt, shoes

 

More info and landmarks: UGLLYDUCKLING BLOG

"Life is a revolution"

Dotonbori, Osaka

2019

14Juy2015.

Our National Day in France !

The firework was shooted from Carcassonne Castle. Try once, you won't be disappointed :)

A deserted bar, probably due to heavy rain - Forman Street, Nottingham. © All Rights Reserved.

... finally reaches the woods :)

None of my work is Ai assisted and is copyright Rg Sanders aka Ronald George Sanders.

Zero shopping days left ... www.youtube.com/watch?v=fkZ9sT-z13I

 

Why are phone photos always oversharpened?

 

- Praia Grande, Portugal -

 

Nikon D700

14.0 mm f/2.8

ƒ/13.0

14.0 mm

1/40

Iso 200

 

One of the reasons I live on a 7,000 foot saddle between Utah and Colorado is that the winter sun shines longer than in the valleys I've lived in most of my adult life. We don't get the deep winter shadows and temperature inversions that plague Moab or Logan that caused cabin fever.

The sound interrupted by unknown armies

They make the petals of the now closed flowers tremble

The once free branches

They descend tangled to the ground, touching the unsafe ground

Ravens in love have left the nest that, naked,

he remains defenseless without a voice

the light that filters still asks in confusion why

so much fear and so much silence

someone, but I don't know who, answers in a weak but clear voice

indignant: the Revolution!

(my)

Cromford Mill, the world’s first successful water powered cotton spinning mill, was built in 1771 by Sir Richard Arkwright.

 

From then until around 1790, he continued to develop the mills, warehouses and workshops, which now form the Cromford Mills site. Considered as a whole, it presents a remarkable picture of an early textile factory complex.

 

Sir Richard Arkwright’s invention of the waterframe to spin cotton transformed the manufacture of cotton into England’s major industry and created a system of factory production that spread throughout the world. The cotton industry was a cornerstone of the industrial revolution.

 

Arkwright took out a patent for his waterframe in 1769 and moved from Preston to Nottingham to set up a horse powered mill to run his machines. Driven by the need for more power he searched for a site to build a water powered mill and settled upon Cromford, using the Bonsall Brook and the Cromford Sough. In 1771 he set about building the first mill here.

 

In the next few years, the site grew rapidly, and Arkwright needed to attract more workers to the area; he expanded Cromford Village with the building of Derbyshire’s first row of planned industrial housing on North Street in 1776. Arkwright later built the marketplace, the Greyhound Hotel, and further housing for his growing workforce to create the village you see today

A celebration of Hungary's 60th year since the revolution in 1956.

An amazing-looking supercell in Kansas, taken on this years storm chase.

Museum Grimaldi, Cagnes-sur-mer

Cuban Revolution Square

May 1, Happy Labor

Canon Sure Shot Z135

Kodak Gold

Lab developed. Home scanned and converted with Negative Lab Pro.

Syria Revolution

Caía la tarde en la marisma y la orilla del estero ya estaba en sombra. Este correlimos menudo ( Calidris minuta) venia de bañarse en la zona soleada. La poca luz de la orilla me obligaba a disparar con mucho menos velocidad de obturación para poder retratarlo pero las sacudidas son increíblemente rápidas, incluso para buenas condiciones de luz. El resultado me pareció curioso.

 

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Evening was falling on the marsh and the shore of the estuary was already in shadow. This little stint (Calidris minuta) came from bathing in the sunny area. The low light on the shore forced me to shoot with a much slower shutter speed in order to capture it, but the shake is incredibly fast, even for good lighting conditions. The result seemed curious to me.

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