View allAll Photos Tagged Ship
IMO: 9326782
MMSI: 538006043
Call Sign: V7JF2
Flag: Marshall Is (MH)
AIS Type: Cargo - Hazard A (Major)
Gross Tonnage: 54809
Deadweight: 67247 t
Length × Breadth: 295m × 32m
Year Built: 2005
"MV Horizon is a cruise ship operated by Pullmantur Cruises It was operated by Croisières de France from the spring 2012 until 2017. She was built in 1990 at Meyer Werft in Papenburg, Germany for Celebrity Cruises as MV Horizon." (Wiki)
This is a macro shot of a part of the coaster, so your drink doesn't make the stain on the wooden table.
"I KNOW THIS GREAT...", TIME OUT LONDON & LONDONIST if you use my photo can you please put the credit link to my Facebook Page rather than my Flickr Account. Thank you.
All pictures in my photostream are Copyrighted © Umbreen Hafeez All Rights Reserved
Please do not download and use without my permission.
No private group or multiple group invites please!
Ningún grupo privado o grupo múltiple invita por favor
Aucun groupe privé ou groupe multiple ne vous invite
Geen privégroep of meerdere groepsuitnodigingen alstublieft
Keine private Gruppe oder mehrere Gruppen laden bitte ein
Nenhum grupo privado ou grupo múltiplo convida por favor
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and if you look on the map to see where photos are taken
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Name:Costa Fascinosa
Owner:Carnival Corporation & plc
Operator:Costa Crociere
Ordered:October 2007
Builder:Fincantieri, at Marghera, Venice
Cost:510 million euro
Laid down:3 September 2010[1]
Maiden voyage:6 May 2012
In service:2012
Identification:
IMO number: 9479864
MMSI number: 247313500
Callsign: ICPO
Status:Operational
General characteristics
Class and type:Modified Concordia class cruise ship
Tonnage:114,500 gross ton
Capacity:3,780 passengers
Well that was just a little special tonight!
Some days you plan everything out and it all comes off... plus a little bit more! Be sure to look up tonight.
Based on someone's concept art.
Took a few days to do but I'm glad I did it, did my best with the stripes and angles 😅😅
8K=7680x4320 FOV=3 Intensity=2 Samples=1024 UVD=0.15-0.5 Pieces =54,000
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So I know I haven't been that active lately, and I apologize. The reason is that I've been very busy with Google plus. I'm VERY active there, so if you want, go check me out!
And due to gaming, this space ship has taken way too long, but it'll be finished today. :p
The container ship Zim Mount Elbrus heads out into open water in the Chesapeake Bay after leaving Norfolk, VA. Canon 1DX with 100-400mm f4-5.6
This was one of my contributions to the Isles of Aura InnovaLUG layout at Brickworld this year. While trying to come up with ideas for how to make an island that was a little different than just your average floating rock, a flash of inspiration hit. Why not make a shipwreck island? I mean, with all these rocks and boats just floating around in the sky, it seems like the odds are pretty high that it would happen eventually. So now I had a good idea! But having an idea and building it are two different matters. I wanted the ship to have split the island, so that each side was at an angle. To achieve this, I made an extremely solid technic frame, and then built out from there. I’ll be doing a build log for this in the near future, so I won’t spoil all the details, but let’s just say it was quite a challenge at times. The buildings here were extremely fun to build however! I pretty much just tried to see how many balconies I could fit on one building with the taller one. Got to put some our MDF tiles to use too. Anyways, thanks for looking, and I hope you enjoy the build – as always, C&C is very welcome!
Lots more pictures on Brickbuilt!
Tutorials | Creations | Featured Tutorials | Build Logs | Commissions
Social housing cooperative Eigen Haard ("Our own hearth") asked architect Michel de Klerk in 1919 to design and build 102 houses. It is a beautiful example of the Amsterdamse School style of architecture.
Pakistani ship captain of a traditional wooden dhow, transporting textile and other goods from Dubai to Iran. Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Garden Island, Sydney.
Taken on a Canon EOS-M6 MkII, with the EF-M 55-200mm IS lens. I am impressed with the IQ of this little powerhouse.
An unidentified coaster.. My restoration and digital hand colorization of an image in the J. Robert Boman´collection in the Swedish Maritime Museum archive. Date, location and name are not known. Her name seems to begin with the letters Fre, and the home port could be Hamburg. Maybe someone is able to identify this beauty? I would like to suggest that Boman took this photo in the early 1950s.
PS
Arne Jürgens provided this additional information:
"The pic shows the former german coaster FRIEDA, built in 1911 by Conrad Lühring at Hammelwarden. By the way, the picture was taken in the Kiel canal."
Some additional information from Ships Nostalgia:
1911 Conrad Lühring/ Hammelwarden as FRIEDRICH (No112) for F. Stutz, Brake - L*B= 26,68*5,82m, GT 103/ NRT 57
1914 ADELE, J.H. Winter, Hamburg
1924 vessel get a new motor/ 110hp (2 Cyl)
1935 KATHARINA, Dorothea Schneider, Hamburg
1936 FRIEDA, F. Pott, Hamburg
1936 vessel get a new motor/ 110hp (4 Cyl)
1952 lengthened, 34,24*5,82m/ GT 156/ tdw 250ts
1962 rebuilt and elevated: GT 175/ tdw 270ts
1971 in February sold to a dutch scrapyard
I have colorized a number of J. Robert Boman´s photos. This is how the Swedish Maritime Museum describes the man and his collection:
"The collection consists of approximately 15,000 photographs of cargo ships, especially smaller ones for coastal and inland waters. The photographs were taken by, or collected by, J. Robert Boman (1926-2002). Boman was born in Lugnvik in Ångermanland and graduated from Härnösand. After studying law and working as a civil servant, he eventually became a professor of procedural law at Uppsala University from 1972 to 1991."
These spectacular sculptures by Antony Gormley are on Crosby beach in Liverpool. Another Place consists of 100 cast-iron, life-size figures spread out along three kilometres of the foreshore, stretching almost one kilometre out to sea.
The Another Place figures - each one weighing 650 kilos - are made from casts of the artist's own body standing on the beach, all of them looking out to sea, staring at the horizon in silent expectation.
Having previously been seen in Cuxhaven in Germany, Stavanger in Norway and De Panne in Belgium, 'Another Place' is now a permanent feature in the UK, at Crosby Beach.
According to Antony Gormley, Another Place harnesses the ebb and flow of the tide to explore man's relationship with nature. He explains: The seaside is a good place to do this. Here time is tested by tide, architecture by the elements and the prevalence of sky seems to question the earth's substance. In this work human life is tested against planetary time. This sculpture exposes to light and time the nakedness of a particular and peculiar body. It is no hero, no ideal, just the industrially reproduced body of a middle-aged man trying to remain standing and trying to breathe, facing a horizon busy with ships moving materials and manufactured things around the planet.