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Rotten Island Lighthouse is another beautiful hidden gem of engineering on the Irish coast, and lies at the mouth of Killbegs Harbour in County Donegal. The name is a English corruption of the Irish name 'Naomh Rotain' (Saint Rotain), a monk reputed to have lived as a hermit on the small island. The island measures 150m by 50m and its dangerous location led to the construction of the granite lighthouse in 1838, which stands 20m high. The lighthouse was designed by George Halpin who also designed it's sister lighthouse on the adjacent headland on St John's Point. The robust boundary wall around the structure creates an imposing military character, but was built to protect the lighthouse keepers dwellings. The Island was occupied until the early 1960s, when the last lighthouse keeper left following conversion to an automated electrical system.
The whole scene seemed kind of allegoric for the way in which synthetic waste takes its toll on the natural environment. I guess the banana skins are alright, but not so much the polystyrene and plastic bottles.
This was taken during one of Toronto's garbage strikes. I'm guessing (hoping) the city isn't usually like this.
Rotten Banana bits in a kitchen sink Triptych. Constructed for the Smile On Saturday group's theme Triptych.
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“There was something delightfully intimate about the relationship between predator and prey.”
― Nenia Campbell, Horrorscape
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Bound Lady Compliments of Silversmith Publications. Specializing in pulp Damsel In Distress, and Fetish magazines. In addition to books, and magazines, also a budding photographer. In addition to this page, I have a Deviant Art page that I update regularly. Stop by, and visit.
karensilversmith.deviantart.com/
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Shots of this series, interiors and exteriors, were taken at Graylady Sedgewick Mansion,
Bunyip
i try to get photos of what i think is the most impressive graffiti on a regular basis because people peel it off after a few days and paint something else. such a shame.
* full credit belongs to evndahm, the actual artist behind this. thanks!
From my archives. - Ford Mercury Monterey 1958
The fullsize Mercury was redesigned for 1957 and grew considerably larger as well, riding on an exclusive 122 in (3,099 mm) wheelbase. A new frame design allowed a lower floor which made the car look lower and longer. The station wagons were divested from the Monterey series, with the Commuter, Voyager, and Colony Park lines. The 312 Ford Y-block gained 20 horsepower to go with the added weight, and the 290 hp (220 kW) 368 cu in (6.0 L) Lincoln Y-block V8 became an option.
1958 brought quad headlamps, as well as an all-new engine: the 383 cu in (6.3 L) MEL V8. With the new engine came the Multi-Drive three-speed automatic transmission.
Hasselblad 500 C/M
Carl Zeiss Distagon 40mm 1:4
Kodak Portra 160, C41
Oilers69_Haiming_Tyrol_Austria
Please view on flickriver:
www.flickriver.com/photos/105795038@N03/
It looks better :-)
A friend of Jack Sparrow I met recently in a corn field, thanks to some textures of Skeletal mess (thanks)
Please View On Black to appreciate the textures.
Bulldog 4x5 with Fuji 150mm W f5.6, 1 sec at f11, Fomapan 100 30 min semi stand development in Rodinal 1 to 200 @ 20C
Canon Eos 6D, Canon EF 16-35mm f/4 L IS USM
Mehr Bilder findest du hier/ More pictures can be found here
Camera: Agfa Isolette III MK II (6x6 cm)
Lens: Solinar f/3.5 75 mm
Film: Kodak Ektar 100
Exposure: 1/8 sec and f/16, tripod
Film developed and scanned by MeinFilmLab
Edited under Adobe Lightroom
And under there are lying some stones, looking like a bones. I got scarred a little bit couse i thought one is a skull
Lewes' version of the flatiron building on the junction of Rotten Row and Highstreet at the Western end of the 'Bottleneck'.
It was in 1883, when reports of clowns attempting to lure children into woods first emerged. Since then, there have been sightings of clowns behaving in menacing ways around the world.
Rotten the Clown was thought to be nothing more than a child's fever dream. He became the bogeyman of every child's nightmare.