View allAll Photos Tagged SOUND
Taken at Miyama, Kyoto a traditional architectural preservation area. (京都府南丹市美山町)
Taken with Fujinon 55mm/f1.8.
Even though the Eurasian oystercatchers are a sign of spring where I live, I've grown up with their lovely sound as a sign of summer on the island I'm from.
Today I met a couple close to our home, who seemed anxious and probably had a nest or chicks nearby. (This is another couple on an early spring day.)
(Tjeld in Norwegian)
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Antony Gormley's Sound II sculpture in the crypt of Winchester Cathedral (one of my favourite pieces of art). Turning into a little bit of a Gormley fan!
Hello darkness, my old friend
I've come to talk with you again
Because a vision softly creeping
Left its seeds while I was sleeping
And the vision that was planted in my brain
Still remains
Within the sound of silence...
Milford Sound (Māori: Piopiotahi) is a fiord in the south west of New Zealand's South Island, within Fiordland National Park, Piopiotahi (Milford Sound) Marine Reserve, and the Te Wahipounamu World Heritage site. It has been judged the world's top travel destination in an international survey (the 2008 Travelers' Choice Destinations Awards by TripAdvisor) and is acclaimed as New Zealand's most famous tourist destination. Rudyard Kipling had previously called it the eighth Wonder of the World.
Early in the morning you can hear the sound of silence
This is the revised edition of an old shot. If you want you can search for the original - but it's not worth ;-)
In Silentio / Michel Nguie
Maison de la Photographie
Lille ( Fr )
March 5 - April 7 , 2019
www.maisonphoto.com/expositions/2019/nguie/
maisonphoto.com/so6278-ovh/2019/03/michel-nguie-in-silentio/
whenever i see this photo i remember this song from "The Sound of Music"
في الدروب هيا نغني في المسارح والساحات
في الحقول هيا نغني ينطلق لحن الحياة
هيا للافق البعيد ننشد اللحن الجديد
فوق اسراب الغيوم نهدي اقمارا ونجوم
صول مي ري
دو دروب ومعاني
ري ربيع الاغنيات
مي موسيقى واغاني
فا فجر الذكريات
صوتنا ملا الفضاء لم يزل فينا الوفاء
سوف تبقى يا غناء لنغني نغني لحن الحياة
and thats probably why i personally love it.
The Clachan Bridge is a simple, single-arched, hump-backed, masonry bridge spanning the Clachan Sound, 8 miles southwest of Oban in Argyll, Scotland. It links the west coast of the Scottish mainland to the island of Seil.
The bridge was originally designed by John Stevenson of Oban (and not by Thomas Telford as sometimes quoted) and was built between 1792 and 1793 by engineer Robert Mylne. The original design had two arches, but it was finally built with a single high arch, of roughly 72 ft span and about 39 ft above the bed of the channel, to allow the passage of vessels of up to 40 tonnes at high tide. The bridge is still in use today, forming part of the B844 road, and is in the care of Historic Scotland.
Because the Clachan Sound connects at both ends to the Atlantic Ocean, and might therefore be considered part of that ocean, the bridge came to be known as the Bridge over the Atlantic. Such an appellation has also been applied to certain other bridges having similar situations, such as the Brúgvin um Streymin in the Faroe Islands and between Lewis and Great Bernera in the Outer Hebrides.