View allAll Photos Tagged Resurrect
USA Opening. #keanu #keanureeves #neo #matrix #resurrections #matrixresurrections #premiere #castro #sf #sanfrancisco #movie
Cette photo a été réalisée en faisant une rotation de 180 degrés à main libre www.youtube.com/watch?v=qnRnVHb6y4Q&feature=related
This lens was removed from a dead Kodak Pony IV camera. It has a nice coating and a relatively fast f3.5 lens. Still looking for ways to mount this lens on the Sony A7.
Here's to the tireless effort of workers across the world this Labour Day.
If you like what you see, please join me here
Service 9U has been resurrected - but not for the general public.
The service has now restarted between Hillhead & ARI only on a limited stop basis for students and University of Aberdeen staff on presentation of university ID.
The bus now runs along times deemed by the university to fit with demand and it appears that Bluebird have registered the new 119 service to provide the driver with some work between university runs. The service is now double deck operated since the main term restarted due to the AM peak demand. This lunchtime run picked up a reasonable load for Hillhead, surprised the University did not chose to keep this as a registered service as they would have saved a fortune as the service would therefore qualify for Bus Service Operators Grant and gained some additional revenue from members of the public using the service.
The interwork with the 119 is very tight and this 9U run left ARI ten minutes late after the bus made it back from Culter. 19376 seen here on Ashgrove Rd West on its way to Hillhead.
Presumably the duty is :
0750 9U Hillhead to ARI
0810 dead to Hillhead
0830 9U Hillhead to ARI
0850 dead to Culter
0915 119 to Union Sq
0955 spare
1205 119 to Culter
1242 dead to ARI
1310 9U to Hillhead
1330 dead to ARI
1350 9U to Hillhead
1410 spare
1640 9U to Hillhead
1700 dead to ARI
1720 9U to Hillhead
1740 dead to Union Sq
Wonder if it does a school run in the afternoon between duties?
G-ARHA Air Products Forney F-1A Aircoupe at Biggin Hill (EGKB) in 1966/67. A classic 60's scene at Biggin.
RHA was previously N3030G on the US Register. Operated at Biggin by the Surrey & Kent Flying Club. Withdrawn from use Novemeber 1973 but was resurrected onto the UK Register in December 1989 as G-ONHH
Also in view is G-ASMW Cessna 150D ex N4247U on the US Register. I believe that the Cessna took over the training role at Surrey & Kent F.C. from the Aircoupe. SMW is still current on the UK Register.
Once communism was officially over, Russian Federation brought religion back in discourse albeit in an aesthetically appeasing way.
Detail of the east window designed by Sir Ninian Comper, c1950, also known as 'the Bride's Window' after newly weds at the church following the War were asked to contribute funds towards it's installation.
Holy Trinity would have been the star attraction in any other town or city, it is a majestic cruciform 15th century Perpendicular church with a tapering central tower and spire, the second of Coventry's famous 'Three Spires'. However it has always been overshadowed by larger neighbours, having been encircled by no less than three separate cathedrals through it's history, a unique distinction! Holy Trinity was founded by the monks of the adjoining priory to act as a parish church for it's lay tenants, thus it is ironic that it has long outlived the parent building.
The earliest part is the north porch, which dates from the 13th century, but the majority of the building dates from a more ambitious phase in 15th century Perpendicular style. The 15th century rebuilding has given us the present cruciform arrangement with small transepts and extra chapels on the north side giving an overall roughly rectangular footprint. These chapels were some of many in the church that served the city's separate guilds in medieval times.
The church has gone through much restoration, most notably the rebuilding of it's spire after it was blown down in a storm in 1665. The east end of the chancel was extended in 1786 (in sympathetic style) and much of the exterior was refaced in the early 19th century in then fashionable Bath stone (which clashes with the original red sandstone).
The church luckily escaped major damage during the Coventry Blitz in 1940, largely thanks to the vigilance of Canon Clitheroe and his team of firewatchers who spent a perilous night on the roof tackling incendaries. The main loss was the Victorian stained glass in the east and west windows, which were replaced with much more fetching glass in the postwar restoration.
The most recent restoration involved the uncovering of the 15th century Doom painting over the chancel arch in 2004. Hidden under blackened varnish since it's rediscovery in the early Victorian period, it has now been revealed to be one of the most complete and important medieval Last Judgement murals in the country. There is further painting contemporary with this on the exquisite nave ceiling, painted a beautiful dusty blue with large kneeling angels flanking coats of arms on every rafter.
There are only a handful of monuments and most of the furnishings date from G.G.Scott's 1850s restoration (as does the magnificent vaulted ceiling high above the crossing) but there are some notable medieval survivals in the rare stone pulpit and the brass eagle lectern, both 15th century, along with a fine set of misericords originating from the former Whitefriars monastery church. Just a few fragments of medieval glass survive in the north west chapel.
The church is happily normally open and welcoming to visitors every day.
For more detail on this church see it's entry on the Warwickshire Churches website below:-
warwickshirechurches.weebly.com/coventry---holy-trinity.html
Model: Brittnee
This was a quick idea, we were originally going to go to the beach but I like shooting into the light and it would be behind us plus there wasnt a cloud in the sky to chop up the blue. So we ended up at a nature park. We had a victorias secret bag with two dresses and I carried the hoop to go under it separate. The ranger actually asked us if we were on a shopping trip when we left. So we got to this spot and started shooting amidst a whole bunch of bugs (I hate bugs haha). The sun slowly receded and I believe the main was the very last shot we took.
Oh and the dress and hoop skirt are from ebay, if you got a little extra cash try searching vintage prom gowns. I think I paid 50 for this one with shipping and everything. I have a whole bunch more that I plan on using in the future.
Dboys M4A1. Just finished adding in the new gearbox. Runs grrreeeaaat! Specs below:
*SCAR QD flash hider w/ thread for supressor
*Tactical PEQ box flashlight [cheap as hell and super effective!]
*Trijicon Law enforcement model ACOG scope [red/green cross-hairs]
*Flip-up CQB sight
*recently added full stock [instead of my Adj. stock it came with.] Courtesy of Specter217
*430 FPS w/ .20's
*3 hi-cap mags [one extended]
USA Opening. #keanu #keanureeves #neo #matrix #resurrections #matrixresurrections #premiere #castro #sf #sanfrancisco #movie
(Word is a series of designs for books of the Bible. This is Word: Resurrection. Find out more about Word.)
Jesus rode into Jerusalem cheered on by the people who a week later would be yelling "Crucify Him!" He was betrayed by one of his closest friends and denied by another. He was hung on a cross even though he was innocent. He speaks his last words and dies a horrible death. Crazy as it sounds, this is part of Jesus' plan to take over the world.
If I was Jesus, I'd mess you up!
Three days after he was crucified, Jesus stops being dead. He gets up, talks to his homies and even shows them the nail marks in his hands and feet for those who don't believe it's him. If I were Jesus, I would have laid down completely still in a room and then when all the disciples came in, jumped up and said:
Gotcha! I'm not dead, suckas! By the way, thanks a lot for all your support when I was going through that whole 'murdered while innocent' thing. In case you didn't notice, I just rose from the dead so I obviously have some super powers and I can assure you that I'm gonna use everything in my arsenal to exact my vengeance on you.
But instead, Jesus forgives, reinstates and encourages his followers.
I'm starting to think I may have something to learn from this guy.
Detail of window on the south side by G.E.R.Smith, 1951.
Of all Wren's City of London churches St Peter Cornhill is one of the least visited, being almost always locked outside services and only accessible by appointment. Fortunately a friend organised exactly that as part of a Flickrmeet in the heart of London, and the church was revealed to be a bit of an Aladdin's Cave of glass and furnishings.
The exterior is difficult to appreciate being tucked away in a courtyard beyond the street, whilst inside many furnishings survive despite the loss of the pews. One of the special qualities of this church is that it escaped the Blitz unscathed (unlike so many of its brethren) and even retains its Victorian glass (for good or for bad) which being so heavy and dark makes one realise how differently many of Wren's better known interiors must have looked prior to the almost wholesale removal of pre-war glass by wartime bombing elsewhere in the city.
2022_CLondon52w1: Setting Goals
From the C.London website: "In the next year we will challenge ourselves as photographers and artists. Setting goals is the first step in that journey. Right now in this moment think about what you’d like to achieve. Are you hoping to get better at portraits? Maybe you want to be able to document your travels more coherently? Maybe you just want to give yourself a new hobby and artistic outlet.
For our first week, set a goal and make a photograph which demonstrates that goal. We will revisit this midway through and at the end of the year."
Since just revisiting my 2021 photography goals in Week 52 of last year’s challenge, this week kicking off the 2022 challenge with photography goals forced me to think about subjectivity and objectivity in goal setting; how do know when a goal is met? With this in mind, here are three goals for 2022:
1. Story Telling. Continue to become a better visual storyteller. “Every picture has a story. It may be factual. It may be fictional. It may be intentional. It may be accidental. It may be superficial or it may be deep. But it’s there, somewhere.” The difference in 2022 is that I want to do this with more than just single images and put some focus on small “series” or “projects”. My son’s girlfriend, an art professor and accomplished artist (reganrosburg.com), has helped me articulate my “voice” in words - “The visual storyteller of unseen objects and occurrences.” Chelsea has helped me find my voice through her coaching and critique sessions. Sean Tucker’s new book (The Meaning In The Making) is providing inspiration to keep creating…and to do it for me. This goal is fluid, not truly measurable, and will likely never be finished…but that’s okay as long as progress is made.
2. Organize. This is a measurable goal. I want to digitize old slides, negatives and snapshots to bring all of my images under the LRC catalog umbrella. As I get older, it’s important to have my entire collection of photos in one place.
3. Website. I have been posting my images to a Blogspot site for over 10 years. It’s a running blog of almost entirely single images and is not very conducive to posting series or projects as noted in Goal #1 above. Establishing a domain and creating a website that better supports the presentation of creative storytelling is therefore another measurable goal.
The image for this week's challenge conveys Goal #2 in progress. The scanned slide is a self-portrait from 1968 while on a high school ski trip. It’s been a ton of fun reacquainting with these old treasures.
Ricoh GRIIIx @ f3.5 1/80 40mm equiv ISO 400
Photographed 1/1/22
Our 2rd winery was Yalumba and we watched them making the oak barrels for the wine and of course tasting the wine! Barossa Valley, September 4, 2013 Australia.
Yalumba is a winery located near Angaston, South Australia in the Barossa Valley. It was founded by a British brewer, Samuel Smith, who emigrated to Australia with his family from Wareham, Dorset in August 1847 aboard the ship 'China'. Upon arriving in Australia in December, Smith built a small house on the banks of the River Torrens. He lived there less than a year before moving north to Angaston where he purchased a 30-acre (120,000 m2) block of land on the settlement's south eastern boundary. He named his property "Yalumba" after an indigenous Australian word for "all the land around". In 1849 Samuel Smith, along with his son Sidney, planted Yalumba's first vineyards, beginning the Yalumba dynasty. Today Yalumba is Australia's oldest family-owned winery.
Yalumba is part of Australian wine alliance Australia’s First Families of Wine a multi-million-dollar venture to help resurrect the fortunes of the $6 billion industry highlighting the quality and diversity of Australian wine. The 12 member alliance includes Brown Brothers, Campbells, Taylors, DeBortoli, McWilliam’s, Tahbilk, Tyrell’s, Yalumba, D'Arenberg, Howard Park, Jim Barry and Henschke. The main criteria are that the family-owned companies need to have a “landmark wine” in their portfolios as listed under Langton’s Classification and/or 75% agreement by group that a wine is considered “iconic”, must have the ability to do at least a 20-year vertical tasting, have a history going back a minimum of two generations, ownership of vineyards more than 50 years old and/or ownership of distinguished sites which exemplify the best of terroir, and be paid-up members of the Winemakers Federation of Australia.
Fro More Info: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yalumba