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Map drawn by Edward, Prince of Wales, illustrating the French lines in January 1915. The map was sketched by the Prince during his attachment to Sir John French’s General Headquarters in France.
© Royal Archives
I've recently been working with Lift Interactive to redo my photography website... a fortuitous partnership as they have just recently launched a new portfolio management tool designed for photographers and creative professionals.
Parade is a web based intuitive portfolio management tool that provides stunning, thoughtfully designed, fully editable Flash website templates that allow for easy instant edits. Right now they offer a selection of templates, but I believe that in a few months they will also be launching a custom design service that is based on the same backend system so that photographers or creative professionals will still have control over the content of their site.
Some of my images are being used in one of the demo sites, but make sure to check them all out. It's a really cool and useful service for photographers.
This drawing has never before been seen in public.
It is the ink and watercolour perspective prepared by Jock Fraser of the City Architect’s office to illustrate Liverpool City Council’s proposals to redevelop the Pier Head transport hub in the mid 1960s. This drawing dates from around 1962 when Jock would have prepared it for presentation at committee meetings, etc.
The architects’ brief primarily called for an improvement in passenger safety and facilities. These had to include new sheltered waiting areas and links, toilets, shops, an enquiry desk, a “rest garden” and a promenade roof deck. Provision was to be made for 39 bus bays including 9 in a central island reached by a new pedestrian subway.
The design drawn here was duly approved. Construction began in 1963 and was completed in 1965. It has all since been demolished but many people still have fond memories of this generation of buildings at the Pier Head. The largest building in the new development became the “Berni Inn River Rooms" restaurant.
see
www.flickr.com/photos/townerassociates/6226330675/in/phot...
for a view of this area in 1957
Text and photography COPYRIGHT © Towner Images
Här tyckte jag det var lite roligt att texten är sann som den är skriven, men att det skrivna genom efterbehandlingen görs till lögn.
Bidrag till Fotosöndag, tema röd.
Contribution to Picture Sunday, on the theme of red.
Here I thought it was somewhat funny that the text was true when writing it, but made into a lie by post-processing.
Piece from my solo exhibition Stuff I've Seen @ Land Gallery. Original charcoal drawing on black paper.
Available here
...
slick photo by Pat Castaldo
high drama / 1940s children's book - although the rhyme itself is from the 1860s if not earlier (published as music: "The Country Cousin" by Harry Hunter[1841-1906] & T. Vincent Davies in 1870)
Appears to be a second-hand store in Springfield, Oregon USA with a very clever and fun sign, great play on the words of a famous movie "The Little Shop of Horrors"
(DSCN9819LittleShopofHoardersflickr010216)
Mehrere Dutzend Mitglieder des Begegnungschores und syrische Aktivisten singen vor der russischen Botschaft in Berlin, um sich für Frieden in Syrien einzusetzen. Hintergrund ist die jüngste Eroberung der Stadt Aleppo durch russische Truppen, den Iran gesteuerte, libanesische Milizen und dem regimetreuen, syrischen Militär. Es werden Massaker an der Zivilbevölkerung befürchtet.
Der Name der Stadt Aleppo wird von den Aktivisten mit Kerzen und in arabischer Schrift auf dem Boden gebildet. Beim Berliner Begegnungschor singen alteingesessene Berliner und Geflüchtete gemeinsam.
CD artwork for Christian rock band Commonroy.
As new members entered the band and old ones left the original cover (that had a press shot of the band at the current time it was first released) became obsolete. I was asked to create a new “killer” cover that reflected the bands mission to be a light but not emphasis the members themselves.
The idea was to make the text “Commonroy” be the light source for the cover… and thus revealing the album title “The Passionate Ones”, which is the underlying message of the band, that they are passionate about what they do, what they believe and that they try to shed some light on what they are passionionate about, in hopes that other people would share the same passion as well.
Woman lit by her phone screen.
This portrait is part of an ongoing series I wish to create documenting the pub.
The use of black boarder is inspired by the incredible work of Benoit.P .
(shot using a Nikon D90 with Nikkor 50mm 1.8 (non-AF) lens set to 2.8)
Thoughts - comments - critiques - always welcome
This sign has been up for a while (as a joke) but the "Goat 4 Sale" was a new addition yesterday. :)