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Steven was actively soliciting folks on the Northeast corner of Randolph and Michigan. We shared the same name so we were laughing a bit about that. He's been homeless for a long time. He has a family and kids to feed. He said repeatedly "I need a job". That's his biggest need. He can cook and do janitorial work. Back in the 80's and 90's he got into some trouble and went to jail. That has hindered him from getting a job. He said he's involved in Alcoholics Anonymous. He said, "when you're having a tough day, trust in God". "I opened my eyes today--it's a good day". He was all about living today, because we don't have tomorrow. "Thank you God for food--thank you God for friends--Thank you God that I opened my eyes.!" This man knows the secret to life.
Created for Digitalmania and inspired by artist Steven Kenny. Inspired by "The Veil" created in 2012 by Steven Kenny.
Model entitled "Memento" by faestock on DeviantArt found here:
www.deviantart.com/art/Memento-352572163
Bird Brushes by ObsidianDawn at www.ObsidianDawn.com
Ripples, background and textures are from my stock.
Bloch Building designed by architect Steven Holl. Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Missouri.
just a little picture for fun : 3 details in link
yukisdiaryblog.tumblr.com/post/147055667314/steven-cospla...
cm nhìu nhìu lên nhé ! Ai chùa thì gd tan rã =)) có ng yu thì ct =)) chưa có ng thì ế =)) ... Mình k hề chùa fl ai thì mấy bn cg z nha :) ! ..
200cmt bn* :D [ đã bn*]
I Still Love You ! :)
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Kí ức về ngày đầu gặp e sẽ dần chết đi :) vòng quay của t.y đã dừng lại :) a sẽ ra đi và k bh trở về :) a sẽ để e đi :) a sẽ vứt bỏ tất cả sẽ buông xuôi tất cả a sẽ rời khỏi cuộc sống của e ! đừng tìm a :) mặc dù a đang đau đấy :) hãy để a dz qên e :) .. a sẽ tập qên e :) a sẽ trở nên tốt đẹp hơn nhất là những ngày qa e đã giữ cho mình qá nhìu bí mật :) để e ra đi thật sự rất khó khăn w a :) Hình bóng e đang dần nhạt nhòa :) và a k thể nắm zữ lấy nó ! những lời hứa ltrz biến mất r :) chĩ còn lại ánh mắt lạnh lẽo của a mỗi khi nhìn thấy e ! a k thể tin là 2 mình lại KẾT THÚC .. ước zì a có thể chết đi :)
Here is one that I took some time back, last year. Re-edited this one to see what if anything has changed. Hope you like this one.
This is my awesome friend Steven Vu. He was kind enough to pose for my portfolio I'm putting together of the people I work with. He and I and other co-workers are in the begining stages of writing a book about the awesome place we work at, The Basin. It's a great place to work. The food is AMAZING! And the work environment is like family. Not a bad daily grind. Thanks again Steven. And Happy Friday y'all!
Strobist info:
Canon 5D Mark III
24-70mm L
Einstein with octobox camera left high.
B800 in 86" PLM camera right for fill.
B800 in 7" reflector pointed at background.
B800 in gridded strip box on left of the subject for rim light.
Adobe Lightroom 4
Adobe Photoshop CS6
Check out my photostream here!
Like me on facebook to see behind the scenes work.
History of Stevens Pass
.Stevens Pass is named after John Frank Stevens, the first non-indigenous person to discover it. Native Americans familiar with the area knew of the pass, although very little is known about Native American routes through the mountains.
In 1890, Stevens conducted a thorough survey for the Great Northern Railroad. He had heard about a pass from natives, located the pass, and determined it to be the best suited for a railway crossing of the North Cascades.
He wrote that there was no indication that the pass was used — there was no sign of any trails, blazes, campsites, or old campfires, for at least ten miles (16 km) in either direction and that the area was thickly forested and covered with almost impenetrable brush. Stevens wrote, "the region promised nothing to the prospector, while Indians and Whites crossing the mountains used either Snoqualmie on the south or the Indian Pass on the north.
steven and sara's wedding was saturday. shot some photos for them with mr rash in downtown durham. I love these kids.
strobist - sb-600 in softbox behind couch aimed at the wall, reflectors CR and CL.
Fort Stevens (Oregon)
Visited Fort Stevens State Park on a very rainy day.
Wiki -"Fort Stevens was an American military installation that guarded the mouth of the Columbia River in the state of Oregon. Built near the end of the American Civil War, it was named for slain Civil War general and former Washington Territory governor, Isaac Stevens. The fort was an active military reservation from 1863–1947.[1] The fort is listed on the National Register of Historic Places." Was also upgraded and used during the second world war, decommissioned in 1947.
Mercedes 1644 F271CSK, Volvo f12 B722WSK, Scania 142 B327WSK and Scania 82M USK27Y. D Steven & Son Wick.
Romanian postcard by Casa Filmului Acin. Photo: publicity still for How to Save a Marriage and Ruin Your Life (Fielder Cook, 1968).
American comedienne Stella Stevens (1936) starred as a voluptuous platinum blonde with a deep sultry voice in many Hollywood films of the 1960s. During the decade she was one of the most photographed women in the world.
Stella Stevens was born Estelle Caro Eggleston in Yazoo City, Mississippi, in 1936. While attending Memphis State College, Stella became interested in acting and modelling. While performing in a college production of Bus Stop, Stevens was discovered and offered a contract with 20th Century Fox. Her film debut was a bit part in the musical Say One for Me (Frank Tashlin, 1959), but her appearance in Li'l Abner (Melvin Frank, 1959) as Appassionata Von Climax is the one that got her noticed. In 1960, she won the Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year. Then her centerfold spread in Playboy was one of the most popular issues. The following years, she co-starred with Bobby Darin in Too Late Blues (John Cassavetes, 1961), Elvis Presley in Girls! Girls! Girls! (Norman Taurog, 1962), Glenn Ford in The Courtship of Eddie's Father (1963), Jerry Lewis in The Nutty Professor (Jerry Lewis, 1963), and Dean Martin in the Matt Helm spy spoof The Silencers (Phil Karlson, 1966). One of her best parts was as Glenn Ford's drum-playing girlfriend in The Courtship of Eddie’s Father (Vincente Minnelli, 1962). On TV, she appeared in the series Surfside 6 (1960), Ben Casey (1961) and the soap opera General Hospital (1963).
By the late 1960s, Stella Stevens' career had leveled off and she was appearing in roles based on her looks. Hal Erickson at AllMovie: "Despite consistently good work, Stevens never achieved the full stardom that she deserved: When she posed again for Playboy in 1968, she admitted that it was purely to get people to attend her films." One of her best performances was opposite Jason Robards in Sam Peckinpah's The Ballad of Cable Hogue (1970), where she played Hildy, and showed that her talent was more than physical. In 1972 she starred in Irwin Allen's The Poseidon Adventure with Gene Hackman, Ernest Borgnine, Roddy McDowall, and Shelley Winters. Stevens played the role of Linda Rogo, the "refreshingly outspoken" ex-prostitute wife of Borgnine's character. She also starred in Blaxploitation films like Slaughter (Jack Starrett, 1972) with Jim Brown as a black Vietnam Veteran and Cleopatra Jones and the Casino of Gold (Charles Bail, 1975) opposite Tamara Dobson. Notable is also the comedy Nickelodeon (Peter Bogdanovich, 1976), starring Ryan O'Neal. In the 1970s and 1980s, Stella became a fixture in movies made for television and appeared in a number of television series. Her big screen career slowed during that time, but she continued to appear in a number of straight-to-video films. Stevens produced and directed a documentary profiling a variety of women from many walks of life, entitled The American Heroine (1979). She also directed the inexpensive Canadian feature The Ranch (1989). On TV, she appeared in the critically acclaimed miniseries, In Cold Blood (Jonathan Kaplan, 1996), based on Truman Capote's book of the same name. Her television career continued into the 2000s when she appeared in an episode of the sitcom Twenty Good Years (2006). In 1954, the 16-years-old Stella Stevens had married electrician Noble Herman Stephens and the couple had a son, actor Andrew Stevens. They divorced in 1957 but Stella and her son retained a variation of her ex-husband's surname as their own professional surnames.
Sources: Tony Fontana (IMDb), Hal Erickson (AllMovie), Bright Lights Film Journal, Wikipedia and IMDb.
Stevens No. 1 Troy Stanich earned a first-period fall to spark a run of three consecutive pins as the seventeenth-ranked Stevens Institute of Technology Wrestling team won the first six bouts in downing the United States Merchant Marine Academy, 29-21, Wednesday evening in a Centennial Conference dual at Canavan Arena.
125# - Joey Borai (SIT) over Jace Garza (USMMA) (TF 19-0 6:50); Stevens leading 5-0
133 - 1 Troy Stanich (SIT) over Brennan Dizon (USMMA) (Fall 1:43); Stevens leading 11-0
141 - 4 Brett Kaliner (SIT) over Daniel May (USMMA) (Fall 3:34); Stevens leading 17-0
149# - Dylan Van Sickell (SIT) over Chad Puglio (USMMA) (Fall 1:16); Stevens leading 23-0
157 - 4 Zach Wilhelm (SIT) over Kieran Duggan (USMMA) (Dec. 6-5); Stevens leading 26-0
165# - Josh Smith (SIT) over Christian Willoughby (USMMA) (Dec. 4-3); Stevens leading 29-0
174# - Joshua Glantzman (USMMA) over Carl Vasti (SIT) (Dec. 6-0); Stevens leading 29-3
184# - Collin Keil (USMMA) over Ryan Jachin (SIT) (Fall 4:17); (Stevens leading 29-9
197# - Blake Bunce (USMMA) over Colin Myles (SIT) (Fall 2:28); Stevens leading 29-15
285# - Victor Raigoza (USMMA) over Joe Moreno (SIT) (Fall 4:15); Stevens leading 29-21
Exhibition Matches
165# - Stephen Friedman (SIT) over Travis Ahrens (USMMA) (MD 13-4)
184# - Matthieu Dupuy (SIT) over Joseph Fiore (USMMA) (Fall 4:45)
Rankings are NWCA
A few days ago I had the urge to train my portrait photography skills. Fortunately my good friend Steven volunteered for an impromptu photo shoot.
Sketchy Steven for JKPP...all sketchbook on the old iPad ,from scratch while looking at a great photo reference on the iPod touch.
I had just photographed Amelia, my previous subject, when I photographed this man who I met with Amelia. He had patiently waited his turn and was eager to contribute to my project. Meet Steven.
I suggested we move a few meters down the covered walkway to make his photo. I didn’t want to draw him too far away from where we met but I did want the background to be at least a little bit different from Amelia’s portrait.
Steven is 24 and in talking to him I learned that he and Amelia weren’t together at all but had just met a couple of minutes before I met them and assumed they were a couple. He referred to Amelia as a “street sister.” When I asked what he would like to tell me about himself he said he has led a rough life on the streets and used to be part of a “gangster” lifestyle. I asked if it was ok for me to mention that in my story and he didn’t mind at all. He said he has been clean from drugs for 6 years and I complimented him on that. He indicated that he is an open book. I asked how he got off drugs and he said he owed it in large part to a “street brother” he named but whose name I have forgotten. His goals in life are to have a residence of his own and to have a marriage and family. He said he was currently in a relationship that he was optimistic about.
Steven was hoping that I could provide a small donation to help him get a cup of coffee and we parted with mutual thanks and a friendly fist-bump. I wished him well in life and encouraged him to remain drug free. He smiled and said he would. He told me that he had friends who would be glad to see his photo online as he took my card.
I was still trying to make sense of the connection between Steven and Amelia when I saw that she was disappearing down the block with someone else. Street friendships indeed. Like ships passing in the night (well, in the daytime). Steven headed his own way, giving me a friendly wave over his shoulder.
This is my 841st submission to The Human Family Group on Flickr.
You can view more street portraits and stories by visiting The Human Family.