View allAll Photos Tagged Reflection

Reflections of nature in a River

Original home of Mateus Wine

Nea Artaki ~ A walk by the port

Available for licensing on Getty Images

 

Don't use my photo's on websites, blogs, other media or any other purpose without my permission.

Reflections on the windows of a greenhouse, Papplewick Pumping Station, Nottinghamshire.

© All rights reserved.

52 weeks - 2016 edition

week 8 theme: reflections

In the Reflection Garden at Vergelegen Estate

Another of my takes at Emsworth Harbour on my early morning visit last month.

Reflections of Nature in a pond at Warley Place, Nature Reserve, Brentwood, Essex, UK

Reflections of the Goldfield Mountains, Lower Salt River, Arizona.

Happy crazy Tuesday.

Reflection (s).

 

From the old days.............

   

Reflections on the water at Abersoch beach.

 

Abersoch is home to one of the most popular beaches in the Llyn peninsula.

at the entrance of the Joan Miró Foundation, Palma de Mallorca

@Inokashira Park

 

HPPT!!

N’est-on pas devenu si prompt à choisir un camp

qu’on en oublie ce qu’il y a entre ?

N’est-on pas sommé de se définir,

quitte à s’abandonner à ce qu’on n’est pas ?

 

Et si la plus grande liberté

était justement de ne pas appartenir ?

Ni aux extrêmes,

ni à certaines attentes.

Mais à cette zone trouble,

où l’humain se pense,

se cherche,

et parfois… se trouve.

 

Personnellement, je suis dans l’entre-deux.

Ce refus de la binarité, du choix forcé.

  

--

 

Have we not become so quick to choose a side

that we forget what lies in between?

Are we not being forced to define ourselves,

even if it means giving up what we are not?

 

And what if the greatest freedom

was precisely in not belonging?

Neither to extremes,

nor to certain expectations.

But to that troubled space,

where the human reflects,

searches,

and sometimes… finds itself.

 

Personally, I am in the in-between.

This refusal of binarity, of forced choice.

  

youtu.be/fatfDUPiJ5U?si=nhzAXp6qf_r_awG5

 

Thank you everyone for your visit, favorites and comments.

Hasselblad 503CW

Carl Zeiss Planar 80mm F2.8

Film: Kodak TXP 100

Dev: D-76 Stock 1+1, 20c 10 mins

Fix: 5 mins

© All Rights Reserved

Leica M10, Voigtländer ULTRON 35mm / F 1.7

Iritxu Photos Network

Riserva Naturale Torbiere del Sebino

torbieresebino.it/

Reflections of a female Northern Shoveler. Female resembles small Mallard hen with over-sized bill and orange eyes.

Reflections of Cathedral Rocks in Yosemite Valley appear in a seasonal pond along the loop road. This is a small turnout with room enough for only 3 vehicles, so when there's water in the pond and room to park, plus awesome clouds in the sky, how can you go wrong!

Conwy Castle

DMS

Decimal 53° 16′ 48″ N, 3° 49′ 32″ W

53.28, -3.825556

 

Conwy Castle (Welsh: Castell Conwy, English: Conway Castle) is a medieval fortification in Conwy, on the north coast of Wales. It was built by Edward I, during his conquest of Wales, between 1283 and 1289. Constructed as part of a wider project to create the walled town of Conwy, the combined defences cost around £15,000, a huge sum for the period. Over the next few centuries, the castle played an important part in several wars. It withstood the siege of Madog ap Llywelyn in the winter of 1294–95, acted as a temporary haven for Richard II in 1399 and was held for several months by forces loyal to Owain Glyndŵr in 1401.

Following the outbreak of the English Civil War in 1642, the castle was held by forces loyal to Charles I, holding out until 1646 when it surrendered to the Parliamentary armies. In the aftermath the castle was partially slighted by Parliament to prevent it being used in any further revolt, and was finally completely ruined in 1665 when its remaining iron and lead was stripped and sold off. Conwy Castle became an attractive destination for painters in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Visitor numbers grew and initial restoration work was carried out in the second half of the 19th century. In the 21st century the ruined castle is managed by Cadw as a tourist attraction.

Click the pic to view large!

Taken at the canal at Aylesbury.

Leica M10, Voigtländer ULTRON 35mm / F 1.7

Iritxu Photos Network

A dramatic roadside view to the Red Cuillins.

With a main line of 127¼ miles, the Leeds and Liverpool Canal is easily the longest canal in Britain built by one company. (The Grand Union Canal is 10 miles longer but was a later amalgamation of a number of canals.) It links the north west seaport of Liverpool with the Aire and Calder Navigation at Leeds, forming a through route between the Irish Sea and the North Sea. The Millennium Ribble Link now provides a link via the River Ribble to the Lancaster Canal. Extension of the western end past Liverpool Pier Head to join up with the main Dock system & River Mersey was completed in 2008.

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