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@ Art Screamer
The beautiful work of Claudia222 Jewell
Je viens d'un monde pur, issu d'un seul et même langage universel, un monde qui n'est pas intéressé, dans lequel il n'y a pas de compétition, ni de désir de pouvoir, hormis celui de pouvoir être ce qu'il est.
Un monde où l'amour n'a pas de frontières, où seul l'équilibre conduit à sa splendeur, un monde éperdument pur de générosité et de liberté.
Un monde qui sommeille à l'automne en se nacrant des plus chaudes couleurs d'abandon, celles qui crépitent ardemment dans les cheminées dès que les températures commencent à descendre, envers les premiers froids, lorsqu'ils s'imposent, sous les lueurs roses et bleues des gelures matinales, quand vient l'hiver, et la douceur caressante de sa neige qui permet d'absorber toutes les résonances, quand il étend sa couverture d'argent, et qu'ensuite, quand du sommeil figé et profond jaillit, dès les premiers rayons du printemps, quand il arrive à s'imposer, à faire exploser en de multiples et variables combinaisons possibles, en teintes, couleurs et parfums, dans une conjugaison de giboulées et de bourrasques, dans les couleurs de l'arc en ciel, ce monde qui semble vouloir finir par s'enflammer, s'embrase finalement sous les vents d'été, sous les torpides heures méridionales, quand le solstice atteint son apogée. Et quand l'été décline, alors de ses cendres, il parvient miraculeusement à renaître.
Karro Lean
A CN ore train passes by searchlights near Ramshaw Minnesota with 2 IC SD40-2's, CN SD40u, and a BLE SD40T-2
"Like many landmarks in Whitby this passage has become linked to Dracula. The ‘Screaming Tunnel’ is said to
be the Count’s hideout, where his victims scream as they meet their fate. In truth it has a different kind of dark
history. Looking at the ‘Screaming Tunnel’ does it remind you of anything?
Though fishing was important in Whitby for centuries, poor roads over the surrounding North York Moors meant
catches could only be traded short distances. Few Whitby goods passed York, 46 miles away. But in the 1830s a
young entrepreneur identified a solution for expanding Whitby’s trade – the railway.
George Hudson built many of Yorkshire’s early railways and he completed a line and station in Whitby in 1839.
Hudson’s railway helped to transform the town. Trains improved Whitby’s trade links and encouraged new visitors.
People from across North Yorkshire, East Riding and beyond now chose Whitby as a holiday destination.
Hudson quickly saw Whitby’s potential as a seaside resort. He began building hotels and houses on the cliff top,
including Bram Stoker’s haunt the Royal Crescent. To speed up the job, Hudson built a small railway to carry
building materials up the cliff. The line (now a road) is still called The Khyber Pass, after a railway in India. The
‘Screaming Tunnel’ was part of it, which is why it looks like a mini railway tunnel.
By the 1860s, Hudson controlled railway companies across Britain. But “the Railway King” had a secret. Irregularities
were found in Hudson’s accounts and in 1865 he was jailed for corruption. In Whitby the Royal Crescent was left
half built while the ‘Screaming Tunnel’ became a shortcut to reach the harbour. [...]" (
Fish, fangs and fossils - Discover Yorkshire Coast
Another promo image for musician Craig "Screamer" Powell.
Large octa camera right at about 45º. Collapsed umbrella camera left and behind for rim.
Reykjavik, Iceland
I'm not sure what the artist is saying with this piece, but it's hard to ignore. For me the cross is a symbol of hope. The cross overcomes the fear on the face.
Cover image for my Scream animation.
THANK YOU ALL MY KIND FLICKR FRIENDS.
YOUR FAVS, COMMENTS AND INVITATIONS ARE VERY MOTIVATING AND APPRECIATED.
If you go down to the woods today... you're in for a big surprise!
It seems like everyone is doing these blurry-forest shots these days... where you set a slow shutter speed and then pan the camera vertically while the shutter is open. The results are very much hit and miss... the secret is finding the right balance between the panning and shutter speeds... and moving the camera smoothly and perfectly vertically. You also need to find a forest scene with lots of contrast... side-lighting is ideal... but not essential.
Ever since I first read about this technique... I've been wanting to try one of these myself. But I wanted to try something slightly different... something a bit more sinister.... a blurry-forest shot with a twist. I'm not quite sure if I've pulled this off... but I had a lot of fun trying. :)
This one is much better when viewed large.
Nikon D300, Sigma 18-200mm at 25mm, aperture of f25, with a 1/6th second exposure.
Clearing out the Hard drive, finding old shots, This was from a while back with Tim and Paul, Good times
The Southern Screamer ('Chauna torquata') is a large, gray marsh bird, which despite its bill shape, is related to geese and other waterfowl.
They can be 83 to 90 cm (33 to 35 in) long and weighing about 4.4 kg (9.7 lb). They mate for life and their loud calls may be heard up to 3 km (2 miles away).
In this image you can see the carpal wing spurs which males use to fight for females and both sexes can use them for defense against predators.
I most often saw them perched in pairs at the tops of trees or flying in the sky while calling.
Image created near Porto Jofre, Matto Gross, Brazil on October 27, 2024.
Perfect timing, fast on the trigger--that is all. We named this handsome cat Perro, which means dog in Spanish. His sister, may she rest in peace, was named Gato, which means cat in Spanish.
© 2018 Brian Xavier
Photo taken: Saturday, March 17, 2018
Do not use my photos on websites, blogs, or in any other media format without my explicit permission.
our youngest son Steve in colour.....we have worked together for over 14 years, sometimes I make him want to scream!
I sat on the bank of our little lake watching this bullfrog and it never made a sound. I make one little move and it screamed like a girl. Scared us both.
Cuiaba River
The Pantanal
Brazil
South America
Bird photo taken from a boat on the Cuiaba River.
Scientific name: Chauna torquata
The Southern Screamer is the southernmost member of one of the most distinctive families of neotropical birds, the screamers (Anhimidae). It is also one of the largest birds found in its range and is easily identifiable by its large size, disproportionately small head, and predominantly gray plumage. Other distinctive features include two bony wing spurs, a lack of feather tracks, and incredibly light bones. The Southern Screamer is common in a variety of marshy and agricultural habitats from Bolivia and southern Brazil south to central Argentina. In Argentina it is locally known to as 'chaja,' in reference to its double-noted trumpeting call, an extraordinarily loud vocalization than can carry for long distances.
The Southern Screamer is rated as a species of Least Concern (BirdLife International 2010), due to its large geographic range and a population that appears to be stable.
Southern Screamers can be domesticated. They make very good guard animals because of their loud deafening call. Farmers consider them a pest species because they gather in crop fields. By draining the wetlands, Southern Screamers have a reduced breeding ground. However, the species seems able to compensate fairly well.
This species lives in tropical and subtropical wetlands, such as lakes, marshes, and flooded fields and meadows, usually with scattered trees.
For a long time skateboarding was the most important thing in my life. For years my board was never out of reach. I ate it all up: the mags, the videos, the dress style, the attitude, the art. With this MOC I wanted to pay tribute to that.
The Screaming Hand is one of the most iconic images associated with skateboarding, drawn in 1985 by the most influential artist in the realm of skateboarding, Jim Phillips. Among so many things, he also created my favorite board, the Santa Cruz Natas board pictured.
I strongly urge you to check out this three minute video to learn more.
Skateboard Graphic Icon | Jim Phillips, A Brief History
One of my favorite photo experiences happened this summer when this bug fella crossed a meadow and walked within 10 feet of my screaming all the way. Gotta love a bugling bull.
After a lengthy delay to work the yard at Effingham, A408 is back on the move and wasting no time as it screams through the little town of Farina, IL, with 108 cars for Centralia.
I made the Scream by Edvard Munch using LEGO bricks. Please click Support on the LEGO Ideas website to make it a real LEGO set!
ideas.lego.com/projects/cfd88aaa-be60-432d-bd3a-d88516b68387
I made the Scream by Edvard Munch using LEGO bricks. Please click Support on the LEGO Ideas website to make it a real LEGO set!
ideas.lego.com/projects/cfd88aaa-be60-432d-bd3a-d88516b68387
In the movies, dramatic scenes are often embellished by an emotional, equally dramatic musical score. Like a fire, for example. Looking beyond this frame, a grown man sobs silently, families watch as a neighborhood restaurant burns furiously, and firemen battle valiantly - not to the tune of a lone trumpet, violin, or choral arrangement, but rather to a deafening, surreal, almost eerie silence.
Aside from the occasional whir of the firemen's ladder pivoting into position, or the low hum of water shooting off into an abyss, it's so quiet that a benign whisper (or the subtle splash of the captain's boots as he marches around the scene) can break your concentration on a shot. Even the fire itself screams - like the rage of a mute dragon. I think that's what I like about shooting these kinds of moments: the unfolding of raw drama and emotion that simply cannot be scripted or scored...