View allAll Photos Tagged Remade

This church was built in the 12th century. The walls of the knave are still the old walls. The bell tower was built in the 19th century and the building was completely remade at that time. A new altar was consecrated in 1859. The best part of the exterior of this church (in my opinion) is today the old entrance that still shows the work of the 12th century. The inside of the church is very nice, though.

He did hear the sound of one hand clapping, indeed.

 

* remade image.

Kora Is an old favorite and therefor I had to fully revamp it.

- New leather texture added For The Fantasy Room

- Silk textures were all remade according to AtaMe's Palette

- Mesh was reviewed and fixed

- New bodies added

 

- Top is STRIPPABLE but as it is mod you can remove this feature

 

Fits Maitreya, Petite, Legacy, Perky, Reborn, Kupra Original, Hourglass

 

Pic by Quatamila and Shela

 

The Fantasy Room Starts at 1st June maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/SeraphimSL/125/197/23

You wander through the empty halls seeking the solace of the library only to find the librarian doing her own late night reading...

 

Featuring:

♥ AERTH - Ritual Bodypaint

These incredible tattoos come in 14 colors with 3 different opacity stages. It also includes Extra lines and a set of extra eyeshadows. They are BOM EVOX only and are copy/mod. Color used in photo: Magic 75

 

Available at Harvest of Souls until October 31st.

 

Aerth

Flickr | Main Store | Marketplace | Discord | Facebook | Twitter | Primfeed

 

♥ /Vae Victis\ - "Cernunnos" - Monarch Antlers

An elegant set of antlers adorned with cuffs and beads - a revisiting of an old design completely remade.They are unrigged and resizable, with 31 antler colours, 18 metal colours, and 17 gem colours.

 

Available at Harvest of Souls until October 31st.

 

Vae Victis.

Flickr | Main Store | Marketplace | Discord | Facebook | Primfeed

 

♥ Muse: Moonlit Secret

This gorgeous dress comes in 11 colors and fits Reborn/Mounds/Waifu, Legacy/Perky, Lara/Petite/Vtech, Freya, Hourglass, and Kupra/Kups.

 

Available now at the mainstore.

 

Muse

Flickr | Main Store | Marketplace | Twitter | Primfeed

 

Head: Cryptid - Agma

Backdrop: K&S Whispers in the Library

Glasses: Random Matter - Alminas Glasses black

Choker: Random Matter - Caithe Choker Cool Tones

Skin: SOMEONE Styx Body Skin & Evelyn Styx

Hair: DOUX - Dana Hairstyles

Eyes: Gloom - Isekai Collection - Sclera Black - Blue M

This is a pattern from the 2006 summer range. I've remade it in a pretty Liberty as a one-off.

 

Blogged here

The word of God is not bound. God speaks, and the world is made; God speaks, and the world is remade by the Word Incarnate. And our human speaking struggles to keep up. We need not human words that will decisively capture what the Word of God has done and is doing, but words that will show us how much time we have to take in fathoming this reality, helping us turn and move and see, from what may be infinitesimally different perspectives, the patterns of light and shadow in a world where the Word’s light has been made manifest.

-Rowan Williams, Luminaries: Twenty Lives the Illuminate the Christian Way, Thomas Cranmer 1489–1556 ‘The word of God is not bound’

❥ Unrigged.

❥ Resizer inside.

❥ Each Pack 220L$.

❥ Old gacha hair that has been retired for LL new policy about gachas.

❥ Acc pills included with hud, unrigged and mod.

❥ REMADE.

❥ Try demo before buy!

@ Event mainstore.

Decided to give my green & yellow S a makeover in the current colors. Most of the paintjob has been remade to add or improve details.

St Mary's, Tenby - ffenestr o'r 15fed ganrif, a ail-wnaed yn 1982 / 15th C window, remade in 1982

San Michele in Foro is a Roman Catholic basilica church in Lucca, Tuscany, central Italy, built over the ancient Roman forum. Until 1370 it was the seat of the Consiglio Maggiore (Major Council), the commune's most important assembly. It is dedicated to Archangel Michael.

 

History

The church is mentioned for the first time in 795 as ad foro (in the forum). It was rebuilt after 1070 by will of Pope Alexander II.

 

Notable is the façade, from the 13th century, with a large series of sculptures and inlays, numerous of which remade in the 19th century. The lower part has a series of blind arcades, the central of which includes the main portal. The upper part, built using plenty of iron materials to counter wind, has four orders of small loggias. On the summit, flanked by two other angels, is the 4 m-tall statue of St. Michael the Archangel. According to a legend, an angel's finger would have a huge diamond. On the lower right corner of the façade is a statue (1480) of the Madonna salutis portus, sculpted by Matteo Civitali to celebrate the end of the 1476 plague.

 

The church interior has a nave and two aisles with transept and semicircular apse; the nave is supported by arcades on monolithic columns. From the southern transept rises the bell tower, built in the 12th-14th centuries, with a series of single, double and triple mullioned windows. The last floor was demolished during the rule of Giovanni dell'Agnello (1364-1368), Doge of Pisa.

... ...

--- Wikipedia

NEW RELEASE @TRES BEAU

JULIE @GENUS

 

I finally remade Julie (which was first created for Catwa) for Genus! I hope you guys enjoy it! I really like her :D

 

Available at @MAINSTORE

 

Julie is available in 6 skins tones!

 

Included with purchase:

- SKIN APPLIER

- EYEBROWS On/Off

- SHAPE

 

This applier is compatible with the body skin by STUDIO EXPOSURE MAKEUP (which is not included with this purchase)

 

BUY DEMO BEFORE PURCHASING, PLEASE!

Taxi to our Mainstore!

Here is a not very good photo of the Five-Storied Pagoda of Sensoji Temple (showing four stories only), one of the most famous in Japan.

 

In 942, Taira-no-Kinmasa built the Five-storied Pagoda and the Main Hall of Senso-ji Temple. The pagoda met with destruction and fire several times during its history and burned to the ground in World War II. It was rebuilt in 1973 with a steel frame and reinforced concrete and is now 48m high (53m from the ground up). Relics of the Buddha received from Sri Lanka in 1966 are enshrined on the top floor.

 

Senso-ji:

Early in the morning on March 18, 628, when the capital of Japan was in Asuka, in what is now a part of Nara Prefecture, Hinokuma Hamanari and his brother Takenari were fishing in the Sumida River. Bringing in their net, they were surprised to see that it held one statue . When Haji no Nakatomo, village headman of what is now Asakusa, realized what they had was a statue of Avalokitesvara Bodhisattva (Sho Kanzeon Bosatsu),Kannon called usually.he devoted himself to Buddhism. He remade his house into a temple soon and devoted the rest of his life to worship and holding memorial services for this Kannon.

 

In 645, a Buddhist priest named Shokai came to this region and built a hall for the Kannon. Following a revelation he received in a dream, Shokai decided to hide the statue from view. Since that time, it has remained never unveiled.

 

Asakusa at the time was a small fishing village located in an estuary of Tokyo Bay in the vast wilderness of the area known as Musashino. It grew and flourished as people arrived in increasing numbers to worship. When Ennin (794-864), head priest of Enryaku-ji (the main temple of the Tendai School of Buddhism) visited Senso-ji in the mid-ninth century, he created a statue identical to the main image (absolutely Hibutsu) so that it could be shown rarely to the public.

 

During the Kamakura Period (1185-1333), the Shoguns demonstrated great devotion to Senso-ji. Gradually, other prominent figures, including military leaders and literati, followed their example, and the temple’s importance increased. In 1590 Tokugawa Ieyasu, the first Tokugawa Shogun, designated Senso-ji as the temple where prayers of the shogunate would be offered. After that the successive Tokugawa Shoguns had often visited Senso-ji and the belief in Kannnon of the Senso-ji had spread among common people during the Edo Period(1603-1867).

As from the end of the 18th century through the 19th century Edo city developed into the largest population city in the world , the culture specific to Edo flowered and Asakusa had become the cultural center in Edo.

In the modern times Asakusa has been the popular culture center such as theater,movie,music and vaudeville.

 

Senso-ji is the oldest temple in Tokyo and also called Asakusa Kannon because it houses the Kannon, It is known throughout Japan. This important center of worship draws 30 million visitors every year.

 

Asakusa, Taito-ku, Tokyo

The Patriarchal Cathedral Basilica of Saint Mark, commonly known as St Mark's Basilica, is the cathedral church of the Patriarchate of Venice; it became the episcopal seat of the Patriarch of Venice in 1807, replacing the earlier cathedral of San Pietro di Castello. It is dedicated to and holds the relics of Saint Mark the Evangelist, the patron saint of the city.

The church is located on the eastern end of Saint Mark's Square, the former political and religious centre of the Republic of Venice, and is attached to the Doge's Palace. Prior to the fall of the republic in 1797, it was the chapel of the Doge and was subject to his jurisdiction, with the concurrence of the procurators of Saint Mark de supra for administrative and financial affairs.

The present structure is the third church, begun probably in 1063 to express Venice's growing civic consciousness and pride. Like the two earlier churches, its model was the sixth-century Church of the Holy Apostles in Constantinople, although accommodations were made to adapt the design to the limitations of the physical site and to meet the specific needs of Venetian state ceremonies. Middle-Byzantine, Romanesque, and Islamic influences are also evident, and Gothic elements were later incorporated. To convey the republic's wealth and power, the original brick façades and interior walls were embellished over time with precious stones and rare marbles, primarily in the thirteenth century. Many of the columns, reliefs, and sculptures were spoils stripped from the churches, palaces, and public monuments of Constantinople as a result of the Venetian participation in the Fourth Crusade. Among the plundered artefacts brought back to Venice were the four ancient bronze horses that were placed prominently over the entry.

The interior of the domes, the vaults, and the upper walls were slowly covered with gold-ground mosaics depicting saints, prophets, and biblical scenes. Many of these mosaics were later retouched or remade as artistic tastes changed and damaged mosaics had to be replaced, such that the mosaics represent eight hundred years of artistic styles. Some of them derive from traditional Byzantine representations and are masterworks of Medieval art; others are based on preparatory drawings made by prominent Renaissance artists from Venice and Florence, including Paolo Veronese, Tintoretto, Titian, Paolo Uccello, and Andrea del Castagno.

Övedskloster is a village in the municipality Sjöbo.

 

After the stage of the city name comes from the monastery associated premonstratensorden based on the location of the 1160s. The monastery turned into secular hands years 1535th Övedskloster Castle, park and access roads with alleys and Ovid church is one of the biggest attractions Sjöbo.

 

This place used to be a convent, but after the Danish reformation it was remade into a more secular place owned by the Danish crown - before it was given to Otto Lindenow. When the Swedes got hold of Scania after the peace of Roskilde the castle changed owner to Carl Mauritz Lewenhaupt. In 1753 it was bought from the then current Lewenhaupt by his brother-in-law, Hans Ramel, who ordered the building of the current castle. This was made 1765-1776, in roccoco style after drawings made by the architect Carl Hårleman - but he was not alive to do watch over the building himself, that was instead made by another famous architect of the time: Jean Eric Rehn. The castle is still owned by the Ramel family.

 

An old-ish build gets remade and repurposed for greater things.

Övedskloster is a village in the municipality Sjöbo.

 

After the stage of the city name comes from the monastery associated premonstratensorden based on the location of the 1160s. The monastery turned into secular hands years 1535th Övedskloster Castle, park and access roads with alleys and Ovid church is one of the biggest attractions Sjöbo.

 

This place used to be a convent, but after the Danish reformation it was remade into a more secular place owned by the Danish crown - before it was given to Otto Lindenow. When the Swedes got hold of Scania after the peace of Roskilde the castle changed owner to Carl Mauritz Lewenhaupt. In 1753 it was bought from the then current Lewenhaupt by his brother-in-law, Hans Ramel, who ordered the building of the current castle. This was made 1765-1776, in roccoco style after drawings made by the architect Carl Hårleman - but he was not alive to do watch over the building himself, that was instead made by another famous architect of the time: Jean Eric Rehn. The castle is still owned by the Ramel family.

 

Övedskloster is a village in the municipality Sjöbo.

 

After the stage of the city name comes from the monastery associated premonstratensorden based on the location of the 1160s. The monastery turned into secular hands years 1535th Övedskloster Castle, park and access roads with alleys and Ovid church is one of the biggest attractions Sjöbo.

 

This place used to be a convent, but after the Danish reformation it was remade into a more secular place owned by the Danish crown - before it was given to Otto Lindenow. When the Swedes got hold of Scania after the peace of Roskilde the castle changed owner to Carl Mauritz Lewenhaupt. In 1753 it was bought from the then current Lewenhaupt by his brother-in-law, Hans Ramel, who ordered the building of the current castle. This was made 1765-1776, in roccoco style after drawings made by the architect Carl Hårleman - but he was not alive to do watch over the building himself, that was instead made by another famous architect of the time: Jean Eric Rehn. The castle is still owned by the Ramel family.

 

.

The Torre del Mangia is a tower in Siena, in the Tuscany region of Italy. Built in 1338-1348,[1] it is located in the Piazza del Campo, Siena's premier square, adjacent to the Palazzo Pubblico (Town Hall). When built it was one of the tallest secular towers in medieval Italy. At 88 metres (289 feet), it is third tallest after Cremona's Torrazzo (112 m (367 ft)) and the Asinelli tower in Bologna (97 m (318 ft)).

The name (meaning "Tower of the Eater") derives from its first guardian, Giovanni di Balduccio, nicknamed Mangiaguadagni for his tendency to spend all his money on food.

The upper part was realized by Agostino di Giovanni under design by one Mastro Lippo pittore, probably identifiable with Lippo Memmi.

The marble loggia, known as Cappella di Piazza, was added in 1352 as a vow for the Holy Virgin by the Sienese survivors from the Black Death. The pilaster were remade in the current form in 1378, the sculptures decorating them being executed in 1378-1382 by Mariano d'Angelo Romanelli e Bartolomeo di Tommé. The simple wooden ceiling once covering the loggia was replaced by the current Renaissance marble vault in 1461-1468 by Antonio Federighi, also author of the bizarre decorations of the coronation. In 1537-1539 Il Sodoma painted a fresco over the altar, now housed in the Town museum in the Palazzo Pubblico.

The clock was added in 1360. There are three bells, the greatest one is called the "Sunto".

The tower is visible from all parts of Siena and is adjacent to the Gothic Palazzo Pubblico.

The tower was built to be exactly the same height as the Duomo di Siena as a sign that the church and the state had equal amounts of power.

The walls of the tower are approximately 3 m (9.8 ft) thick on each side.

  

The mountains are calling and I must go. John Muir

 

Sveti Stefan stone houses hold the warmth of many summers while keeping sweet memories of those, who once visited this magnificent place...

Roofs glow like quiet embers against a wide blue sky. The village leans into the rock as if listening to the slow breath of the water.

 

Time moves here like a tide that never hurries, polishing thresholds, softening voices, inviting silence to stay. A gull draws a white comma across the day and the story pauses; you can almost hear the echo of nets being folded, footsteps fading into alleys scented with thyme.

 

What seems small from afar becomes boundless at the edge of the sea: each window a heartbeat, each wall a memory, each path a decision made and remade.

 

The greenery behind stands as a gentle witness, keeping shade for those who rest, hope for those who leave, and welcome for those who return.

 

Standing here, you learn the geometry of calm: rock for steadiness, water for forgiveness, and light for beginning again.

 

It is inspiring to observe this gorgeous place and enjoy refreshing water of Adriatic sea and amazing view of red roofs.

 

Coastal Breeze · James Patrick Taylor

IMG_1218r2

The first garden of the Palais was planted by Cardinal Richelieu in 1629, where the Court of Honor is today. In 1633, Richelieu obtained authorization to extend the garden northeast into the land occupied by the obsolete medieval city walls of Paris. He also received permission to sell forty-five building sites around the garden. The new garden site was 170 meters by 400 meters, making it the third largest garden in Paris, after the Tuileries Garden and Luxembourg Garden. The new garden featured long alleys shaded by trees, elaborate parterres and flower beds, a fountain in the center, and a circular water basin at the north end. The master hydraulics engineer Jean-Baptiste Le Tellier designed the fountain, which, like the Louvre Palace, took its water from the La Samaritaine pump on the Seine.

 

The garden was redesigned several times, notably in 1674 by André Le Nôtre, and his nephew Claude Desgots in 1730. In 1817, under Charles X of France, the main water basin was enlarged to twenty-five meters in diameter, and the longitudinal parterres were remade in 1824. In 1992 the landscape gardener Mark Rudkin created new lawns and flower beds, termed "Salons of greenery", with seasonal flowers enclosed by grills covered with climbing plants. The garden was classified as a French historical monument in 1920, followed by the rest of the Palais-Royal in 1994..

 

A small cannon was installed in the middle of the bowling green at the north end of the garden in 1786. It fired a shot each day at noon, regulated by an ingenious mechanism that used a magnifying lens pointed at the sun's noontime position to light the match which fired the gunpowder. Between 1891 and 1911, the official noontime in France was defined by the cannon shot. It was stolen in 1998 but recovered and returned to its place in 2002.

 

The two major alleys of the gardens are named for two of the famous 20th-century residents of the neighboring buildings, the writers Colette and Jean Cocteau.

(source: Wikipedia)

The title is a slightly remade quote by Stephen Chbosky (from the novel "The Perks of Being a Wallflower").

Be careful in the bushes ...

 

Orchard spiders construct webs using silk secreted from spinnerets at the tip of the abdomen. All long-jawed orb weavers are orb webs, so named for their circular shapes. The shape is created by numerous sticky spirals surrounding an open central area. Irregular strands of silk can be found below the web, forming a structure known as a barrier web. The main web is about a foot in length. The spider waits upside down beneath the web and monitors for trapped prey. Immature spiders often build their webs near the ground, while the adults build higher off the ground.

 

Orchard spider webs are extremely effective at catching small flying or jumping insects. The webs are remade each morning. When prey is abundant, many webs may occur together in the same location.

 

Orchard spider densities can be high in small areas. They are useful predators in the garden, helping to manage nuisance insects and plant pests. They are not harmful to humans and, therefore, control is not advised.

 

Orchard spiders also serve as food for other organisms, such as other spiders, birds, small reptiles, bats and rodents. (BugID, WIKI)

 

Nikon D7100

Tokina 100mm f/2.8 AT-X AF Pro D Macro

100mm - f7.1 - 1/125 - ISO 100

 

Övedskloster is a village in the municipality Sjöbo.

 

After the stage of the city name comes from the monastery associated premonstratensorden based on the location of the 1160s. The monastery turned into secular hands years 1535th Övedskloster Castle, park and access roads with alleys and Ovid church is one of the biggest attractions Sjöbo.

 

This place used to be a convent, but after the Danish reformation it was remade into a more secular place owned by the Danish crown - before it was given to Otto Lindenow. When the Swedes got hold of Scania after the peace of Roskilde the castle changed owner to Carl Mauritz Lewenhaupt. In 1753 it was bought from the then current Lewenhaupt by his brother-in-law, Hans Ramel, who ordered the building of the current castle. This was made 1765-1776, in roccoco style after drawings made by the architect Carl Hårleman - but he was not alive to do watch over the building himself, that was instead made by another famous architect of the time: Jean Eric Rehn. The castle is still owned by the Ramel family.

 

The Adora jewerly set is the next of our Revisited jewerly sets, updated and remade exclusivly for the Deisgner Showcase. The set features a beautiful necklace, Earrings, rings and bracelets. It's all controlled with the easy to use Moondance Boutique Hud. It will be for sale on May 5th @ the Designer's Showcase maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Corrupted%20Innocence/149/...

 

SLURL MOONDANCE BOUTIQUE: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Comhar/208/60/23

Marketplace:

marketplace.secondlife.com/stores/99772

Flickr:

www.flickr.com/groups/2304918@N24/

Website:

moondanceboutique.wordpress.com/

Facebook:

www.facebook.com/MoondanceBoutique/?fref=ts

 

My Blog:

melindabaynsl.blogspot.com/2019/05/mb-3972019_12.html

This church was built in the 12th century. The walls of the knave are still the old walls. The bell tower was built in the 19th century and the building was completely remade at that time. A new altar was consecrated in 1859. The best part of the exterior of this church (in my opinion) is today the old entrance that still shows the work of the 12th century. The inside of the church is very nice, though.

📢 Dear Valued Customers, 📢

 

️🌈✨ Celebrate Pride with the Remade Rainbow Sangria Set! ✨🍷

 

Just in time for Pride Month, we’re reintroducing a vibrant favorite — now freshly remade!

This updated version includes a new fruit jar and refined glass set to match the joy and color of the season. 🌈🍓🍍

 

✨ Already purchased the old version?

You can receive this updated version via redelivery!

 

💸 Now 50% OFF for a limited time at the Seraphim Outlet!

 

Let’s toast to love, color, and community! ️🌈💖

 

🚕Taxi

The We're Here group visit Remake This! today. As if you hadn't guessed I've remade the poster for American Beauty.

  

And welcome everyone to Cassie's rebuild after the horrific mess that was the corruption of the .esp I used for Cassie's custom race and thus? I remade it through the wonderful Ningheim race and I actually really like how it came out.

 

And this is what happened when I finally got the right textures in there, replacing them with my own and then giving it a good go with the sliders and I had to step back for a moment to admire how she came out looking a hell of a lot better than the original...

  

Remade an older pirate based MOC, added more steampunk elements and color to it.

 

Criticism is welcome!

 

On my way home...not feeling very inspired today!

 

Project365, DAY 280, 31st Jan 08

The Patriarchal Cathedral Basilica of Saint Mark, commonly known as St Mark's Basilica, is the cathedral church of the Patriarchate of Venice; it became the episcopal seat of the Patriarch of Venice in 1807, replacing the earlier cathedral of San Pietro di Castello. It is dedicated to and holds the relics of Saint Mark the Evangelist, the patron saint of the city.

The church is located on the eastern end of Saint Mark's Square, the former political and religious centre of the Republic of Venice, and is attached to the Doge's Palace. Prior to the fall of the republic in 1797, it was the chapel of the Doge and was subject to his jurisdiction, with the concurrence of the procurators of Saint Mark de supra for administrative and financial affairs.

The present structure is the third church, begun probably in 1063 to express Venice's growing civic consciousness and pride. Like the two earlier churches, its model was the sixth-century Church of the Holy Apostles in Constantinople, although accommodations were made to adapt the design to the limitations of the physical site and to meet the specific needs of Venetian state ceremonies. Middle-Byzantine, Romanesque, and Islamic influences are also evident, and Gothic elements were later incorporated. To convey the republic's wealth and power, the original brick façades and interior walls were embellished over time with precious stones and rare marbles, primarily in the thirteenth century. Many of the columns, reliefs, and sculptures were spoils stripped from the churches, palaces, and public monuments of Constantinople as a result of the Venetian participation in the Fourth Crusade. Among the plundered artefacts brought back to Venice were the four ancient bronze horses that were placed prominently over the entry.

The interior of the domes, the vaults, and the upper walls were slowly covered with gold-ground mosaics depicting saints, prophets, and biblical scenes. Many of these mosaics were later retouched or remade as artistic tastes changed and damaged mosaics had to be replaced, such that the mosaics represent eight hundred years of artistic styles. Some of them derive from traditional Byzantine representations and are masterworks of Medieval art; others are based on preparatory drawings made by prominent Renaissance artists from Venice and Florence, including Paolo Veronese, Tintoretto, Titian, Paolo Uccello, and Andrea del Castagno.

A recently remade oldie.

 

Calderdale, Yorkshre, UK

 

Rosie's art studio is a quintessential creative space - messy and productive. She is suspicious of anybody that works too neatly.

 

Blythe a Day - Quintessential - 3/8/25

 

Rosie Red Blythe

Clothes - Etsy

most miniature art supplies - made by me

tiny silver paint bottles, wooden art box - Ebay

miniature water color paintings - images I printed from the internet

Easel, chair - Barbie art set repainted

Tall chest - flea market find repainted ($2)

Chest in foreground - thrift store trinket box repainted

cabinet in back - wooden frame that I remade into a doll cabinet

Decided to give my green & yellow S a makeover in the current colors. Most of the paintjob has been remade to add or improve details.

Hace poco fue mi cumple en Flickr y en honor a ello, aquí pongo una edición diferente a la primera foto que coloqué en este espacio.

 

This is a remade of my first upload on Flickr, three years ago.

Ok first things first, this isn't a Civil War spoiler. It's an inspired figure. This was originally made by Jacob Carlson, and I remade it, but changed the parts. I really love how this fig turned out, but this wouldn't be made if it wasn't for his.

I am very happy to show you the new color of bodyfy. The logo has been remade to give a new look to Bodyfy for it new year of existence that begins.

This look is more modern and more current than the old one. I hope you like

 

Thank you all for being here last year and the new year starts with this new look.

 

Remember that the next round begins on June 8th and applications are open.

 

Form : docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdQ6Js3c_A_uHNU-Zm4DDjl0...

Övedskloster is a village in the municipality Sjöbo.

 

After the stage of the city name comes from the monastery associated premonstratensorden based on the location of the 1160s. The monastery turned into secular hands years 1535th Övedskloster Castle, park and access roads with alleys and Ovid church is one of the biggest attractions Sjöbo.

 

This place used to be a convent, but after the Danish reformation it was remade into a more secular place owned by the Danish crown - before it was given to Otto Lindenow. When the Swedes got hold of Scania after the peace of Roskilde the castle changed owner to Carl Mauritz Lewenhaupt. In 1753 it was bought from the then current Lewenhaupt by his brother-in-law, Hans Ramel, who ordered the building of the current castle. This was made 1765-1776, in roccoco style after drawings made by the architect Carl Hårleman - but he was not alive to do watch over the building himself, that was instead made by another famous architect of the time: Jean Eric Rehn. The castle is still owned by the Ramel family.

 

Old door.

 

Övedskloster is a village in the municipality Sjöbo.

 

After the stage of the city name comes from the monastery associated premonstratensorden based on the location of the 1160s. The monastery turned into secular hands years 1535th Övedskloster Castle, park and access roads with alleys and Ovid church is one of the biggest attractions Sjöbo.

 

This place used to be a convent, but after the Danish reformation it was remade into a more secular place owned by the Danish crown - before it was given to Otto Lindenow. When the Swedes got hold of Scania after the peace of Roskilde the castle changed owner to Carl Mauritz Lewenhaupt. In 1753 it was bought from the then current Lewenhaupt by his brother-in-law, Hans Ramel, who ordered the building of the current castle. This was made 1765-1776, in roccoco style after drawings made by the architect Carl Hårleman - but he was not alive to do watch over the building himself, that was instead made by another famous architect of the time: Jean Eric Rehn. The castle is still owned by the Ramel family.

After discovering how badly expired my last roll of Rollei IR 400 was, I remade this image again, on a fresh roll. And yes - up in the right corner is a hint of rainbow - in IR!

Made with my Minolta Autocord - one of the best TLR's ever made. Can't afford an f2.8 Rolleiflex? Find yourself a good Autocord. Sharper lens, in my experience, and built to last.

Old door.

 

Övedskloster is a village in the municipality Sjöbo.

 

After the stage of the city name comes from the monastery associated premonstratensorden based on the location of the 1160s. The monastery turned into secular hands years 1535th Övedskloster Castle, park and access roads with alleys and Ovid church is one of the biggest attractions Sjöbo.

 

This place used to be a convent, but after the Danish reformation it was remade into a more secular place owned by the Danish crown - before it was given to Otto Lindenow. When the Swedes got hold of Scania after the peace of Roskilde the castle changed owner to Carl Mauritz Lewenhaupt. In 1753 it was bought from the then current Lewenhaupt by his brother-in-law, Hans Ramel, who ordered the building of the current castle. This was made 1765-1776, in roccoco style after drawings made by the architect Carl Hårleman - but he was not alive to do watch over the building himself, that was instead made by another famous architect of the time: Jean Eric Rehn. The castle is still owned by the Ramel family.

Decided to give my green & yellow S a makeover in the current colors. Most of the paintjob has been remade to add or improve details.

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Sardinia is one of the few places in Italy where the light pollution is really low. Night sky is amazing there, and the landscape offers a lot of nice foreground for night photography. I can understand why my friend Ivan Pedretti loves taking night pictures there. :-)

 

Fusion of 3 different photos: 2 for the foreground and one for the Milky Way.

 

I uploaded this photo a while ago, but since I wasn't happy of the development, I remade it from scratch...

The Renaissance-style castle, built in about 1550, was remade into a monastery for the Pauline friars in 1663. Later it was owned by the Counts of Attems and since several decades the monastery has been managed by Minorite monks.

 

The church was added In the years 1665-1675. On the ground floor of the tower in the middle of the image is the monastery's greatest treasure: a 17th-century pharmacy painted with religious and medical scenes.

 

The picture was taken from the entrance to the herb and vegetable garden, where medicinal herbs are still being cultivated.

people basically remade this character in less than a week lolol

Övedskloster is a village in the municipality Sjöbo.

 

After the stage of the city name comes from the monastery associated premonstratensorden based on the location of the 1160s. The monastery turned into secular hands years 1535th Övedskloster Castle, park and access roads with alleys and Ovid church is one of the biggest attractions Sjöbo.

 

This place used to be a convent, but after the Danish reformation it was remade into a more secular place owned by the Danish crown - before it was given to Otto Lindenow. When the Swedes got hold of Scania after the peace of Roskilde the castle changed owner to Carl Mauritz Lewenhaupt. In 1753 it was bought from the then current Lewenhaupt by his brother-in-law, Hans Ramel, who ordered the building of the current castle. This was made 1765-1776, in roccoco style after drawings made by the architect Carl Hårleman - but he was not alive to do watch over the building himself, that was instead made by another famous architect of the time: Jean Eric Rehn. The castle is still owned by the Ramel family.

Crawling out from suffering

Now, dead, now cold.

 

Murderous light.

I've felt life.

I give up.

I give up.

 

Faces fade,

With our curse.

Blind sights.

But it burns,

But it burns.

 

My spit throne.

More faces fade and wither.

 

Murderous light.

I've felt life.

I give up.

I give up.

 

This fades.

 

The Music: Advent Sorrow - Skin to Suffer In

 

Click the music, to see the inspiration.

 

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I didn't like the other one after I stared at it for a while. So, I remade it.

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