View allAll Photos Tagged Transitional
from green, to yellow, to gold, to brown, to red! Transition from Summer to Winter. Transition from what is, to what will be.
The American Goldfinch male is a vibrant yellow in the summer and an olive color during the winter months. Taken in February, as the transition begins.
This effect was done in camera by using a long exposure. I did a little post-processing in Lightroom to adjust the contrast but that's about it.
Terrafugia Transition Roadable Aircraft on display at the Palo Alto Airport of Santa Clara County, Palo Alto, CA on November 16, 2010.
December 15, 2017 - Washington, DC, USA: Transition Trucking Kenworth truck giveaway. Photo by Ian Wagreich / © U.S. Chamber of Commerce
December 15, 2017 - Washington, DC, USA: Transition Trucking Kenworth truck giveaway. Photo by Ian Wagreich / © U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Ages 10-12
Ages 10-12, week-long summer workshop in Scottsdale, AZ. Go to www.orho.org for more info!
My entries in Jennifer's book entitled 'Transitions'
marumanx.blogspot.com/2008/08/jennifers-book-transitions-...
December 15, 2017 - Washington, DC, USA: Transition Trucking Kenworth truck giveaway. Photo by Ian Wagreich / © U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Photo by Brian J. Sesack
The Transitions image was photographed from downtown Pittsburgh looking toward the UPMC Tower.
Dating back to 1678, then known as Morris, the plantation was used in 1780 during the American Revolutionary War by British General Sir Henry Clinton as his headquarters while planning to invade and occupy nearby Charleston, with many enslaved workers assisting in the effort and being granted their freedom by the British. The present house was built in 1858 in the Greek Revival style, with two one-story porches on the front and rear of the building. The grounds also contain a cotton gin house, barn, carriage house, outhouse, kitchen, dairy, and slave cabins that all date to before the civil war. During the Civil War, the main house was utilized by Confederate forces occupying the area as a hospital, with the house in 1865, upon the occupation of Charleston by the Union army, becoming the headquarters of the 55th Massachusetts Volunteer Regiments, made up of free people of color. Following the war, during reconstruction, the house was home to a branch of the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, with many newly freed formerly enslaved people camping and living on the grounds during this time. As a result of this part of the land’s history, the site has gained a large amount of significance to the local Gullah-Geechee people. Between 1910 and 1926, under the ownership of a descendant of the McLeod family whom had built the house, the house was renovated with the addition of a one-story wing containing a kitchen and butler’s pantry to one side, and a substantial two-story portico on what had formerly been the rear of the house, giving the house a grander appearance more befitting of the idea of what a proper “plantation house” was supposed to look like in the minds of people living at the time. The house was lived in by the McLeod family until 1990, when it was given to the Historic Charleston Foundation. In 1993, about half of the remaining land at McLeod plantation was set aside in perpetuity for the cultivation of sweetgrass, which is used by Gullah-Geechee craftspeople, allowing them to benefit from a place where their ancestors were once exploited. In 2011, the rest of the land was sold to the Charleston County Park and Recreation Commission, with the portion of the land along Wappoo Creek on the far side of Country Club Drive being set aside as a public park, while the house and grounds immediately surrounding it have been converted into a historical house museum that interprets the history of the site in a comprehensive manner. The remaining plantation buildings and land were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974, and the site is one of South Carolina’s state-designated African-American historic places.