View allAll Photos Tagged Vendetta
Pictured is Vendetta Vain performing a vintage burlesque routine at the Blitz Party Burlesque Show at the Jailhouse.
The Jailhouse in Hereford hosted a Blitz Party burlesque show on the 24th September 2011. The event featured swinging big band tunes, swing dance perfomances from the 2Faced Dance Company, 40's style roller girls from the Hereford Roller Skating Club and fantastic vintage burlesque perfomances from Vendetta Vain, Danny DeMilo and Adelina La Shay. The event saw many of the audience dressed in 40's style clothing and costumes.
Otra persona anónima de espaldas con la famosa máscara frente a las luces policiales en el día de reflexión.
Pictured is Vendetta Vain performing a vintage burlesque routine at the Blitz Party Burlesque Show at the Jailhouse.
The Jailhouse in Hereford hosted a Blitz Party burlesque show on the 24th September 2011. The event featured swinging big band tunes, swing dance perfomances from the 2Faced Dance Company, 40's style roller girls from the Hereford Roller Skating Club and fantastic vintage burlesque perfomances from Vendetta Vain, Danny DeMilo and Adelina La Shay. The event saw many of the audience dressed in 40's style clothing and costumes.
Voilà! In view, a humble vaudevillian veteran cast vicariously as both victim and villain by the vicissitudes of Fate. This visage, no mere veneer of vanity, is a vestige of the vox populi, now vacant, vanished. However, this valorous visitation of a bygone vexation stands vivified and has vowed to vanquish these venal and virulent vermin vanguarding vice and vouchsafing the violently vicious and voracious violation of volition! The only verdict is vengeance; a vendetta held as a votive, not in vain, for the value and veracity of such shall one day vindicate the vigilant and the virtuous. Verily, this vichyssoise of verbiage veers most verbose, so let me simply add that it's my very good honour to meet you and you may call me "V".
Pictured is Vendetta Vain performing a vintage burlesque routine at the Blitz Party Burlesque Show at the Jailhouse.
The Jailhouse in Hereford hosted a Blitz Party burlesque show on the 24th September 2011. The event featured swinging big band tunes, swing dance perfomances from the 2Faced Dance Company, 40's style roller girls from the Hereford Roller Skating Club and fantastic vintage burlesque perfomances from Vendetta Vain, Danny DeMilo and Adelina La Shay. The event saw many of the audience dressed in 40's style clothing and costumes.
Pictured is Vendetta Vain performing a vintage burlesque routine at the Blitz Party Burlesque Show at the Jailhouse.
The Jailhouse in Hereford hosted a Blitz Party burlesque show on the 24th September 2011. The event featured swinging big band tunes, swing dance perfomances from the 2Faced Dance Company, 40's style roller girls from the Hereford Roller Skating Club and fantastic vintage burlesque perfomances from Vendetta Vain, Danny DeMilo and Adelina La Shay. The event saw many of the audience dressed in 40's style clothing and costumes.
Door on the left is where the tour exited. There's a door/ office in the middle which was active for staff.
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I guess like many night photographers, the idea of finding, exploring and shooting a great tunnel really appeals. This tour, organised by TfL (Transport for London), could've gone a long way to addressing that but for their insane decision to ban DSLRs from the station.
You might already have read about it, it's been trending on twitter and there's a lot of negative stories on various photography forums.
Here's the tale, with a little bit of opinion thrown in.
TfL uses the location for training and alongside that they manage to fit in some film location work. Like, it's the station that appeared in V for Vendetta and Die Another Day. Generally, though, it's closed to the public.
When the idea of tours was thrown around in the TfL office, someone obviously twigged that tours without photography would be a non-starter. The visitors on location backed that up, with every couple- and it was mostly couples- on our tour carrying at least one imaging device. At the same time, the corporate bods must've figured that with photo sharing at a high, lots of high quality images floating around the web would do harm to future tours. Why does that matter? £20/ ticket x 2500 tickets (TfL stats) makes quite a compelling argument.
So, what to do? A ban on DSLRs is the only option that's logistically possible to enforce but with very capable compact-looking cameras available like the M9 (haha) or the more realistic X100/ PEN/ GF1 units it doesn't stack up.
On location, the notices (and staff) gave little away, claiming the DSLR ban was due to "their combination of high-quality sensor and high resolution". A TfL employee I spoke to after the tour said it was due to them wanting to disallow urbexers from high quality images which could provide information about access points for illicit entry.
Subsequently, in a statement to The Verge TfL has expanded their actions saying: "there was not a ban on taking photos during tours. However, there were restrictions on professional cameras and tripods because we were concerned that people using them could delay the tours for others, as it was a very tight schedule."
Smacks of an excuse to me.
First of all DSLRs are de rigeur these days, used as an everyday imaging device by countless people. That doesn't mean that every DSLR user is an avid photographer seeking to get the cleanest possible shot at great lengths.
Discount the guys who bought a DSLR because that's what the man in the shop said they should buy and you're left with those who bought one consciously, to record great pictures. Within that group there will be users who are unable to approach a situation pragmatically; who don't see the potential in live documentary or abstraction, but these guys will be far outnumbered by those who can quickly line up their shot in the knowledge that an errant leg, arm or head can be dealt with in PP.
In the absence of owning a compact I had it in mind to take the D300 w/ 35mm f/2 and bluff 'n' blag my way through. Mother-in-law came to the rescue (how often can you say that?) with her Sony CyberShot thingy, the results from which are what you're seeing here.
Given their inferior quality, I felt compelled to upload my images in their highest resolution... also thought it might be a good time to experiment with the whole Creative Commons licensing model...
Feel free to download and share as you deem fit - know any urbexers? :)
One of Two in the army, my Vendettas provide all of my anti-tank firepower! They also transport a squad of heavily armed Veterans into battle!
Once basecoated in Desert Yellow, the metallic areas were painted in Boltgun Metal. The red engine covers were painted in a 1:1/2 mix of Macherite Red and Chaos Black.
Once painted the vehicle was heavily weathered using the techniques found in the Imperial Armour Masterclass book. It makes the Vendetta look like its just been through a hot LZ!
Sala Caracol (Madrid, 05/05/2017)
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▁ ▂ ▃ [VENDETTA ] SKIN ▃ ▂ ▁
✓ Shape EON GIFT
✓ 4 Tones available ( T3-T4-T5-T6 )
Model is wearing Tone 05
✓ no Brows / Classic / Neck Fix included.
☆ body skins sold separately ☆
▓ DEMO ▓
People usually shoot right behind where I shot this shot from. I'm not sure why, I think this side makes for a more compelling picture, and I always wanted to shoot it since a long time ago. But somehow, whenever I passed by there would be someone happily placed in the light, and I really wanted this to be devoid of people, like most of my shots. The other day I got lucky.
Processed with Urban Acid action from atncentral.
Pictured is Vendetta Vain performing a vintage burlesque routine at the Blitz Party Burlesque Show at the Jailhouse.
The Jailhouse in Hereford hosted a Blitz Party burlesque show on the 24th September 2011. The event featured swinging big band tunes, swing dance perfomances from the 2Faced Dance Company, 40's style roller girls from the Hereford Roller Skating Club and fantastic vintage burlesque perfomances from Vendetta Vain, Danny DeMilo and Adelina La Shay. The event saw many of the audience dressed in 40's style clothing and costumes.
Pictured is Vendetta Vain performing a vintage burlesque routine at the Blitz Party Burlesque Show at the Jailhouse.
The Jailhouse in Hereford hosted a Blitz Party burlesque show on the 24th September 2011. The event featured swinging big band tunes, swing dance perfomances from the 2Faced Dance Company, 40's style roller girls from the Hereford Roller Skating Club and fantastic vintage burlesque perfomances from Vendetta Vain, Danny DeMilo and Adelina La Shay. The event saw many of the audience dressed in 40's style clothing and costumes.
College Street, Burlington, Vermont USA • One of a series of four-feet tall, black & white wall murals along the College Street wall of the Roxy Movie Theater. This one is of the character "V", played by Hugo Weaving, in the 2005 movie V for Vendetta.
☞ Part of a series of photos documenting my new home & neighborhood, in the heart of Vermont's largest town: Burlington 05401. • After almost a dozen years in rural Cornwall, 40 miles to the south, I have moved to one of the true outposts of optimism, on the eastern shore of Lake Champlain (the 6th Great Lake).
Tela com o tema "V for Vendetta" feita com tinta acrilica, caneta permanente e aplicação de jornal em todo o fundo.
Feita para a minha querida amiga Tuany Fraga.
Ventured down the street yesterday evening for drinks with old friends. We decided upon the new Vendetta, a bar in Boise Elliot off N. Skidmore and Williams. The space is pretty cool, open and inviting. They have incorporated a garage door to open the place up to the sidewalk and welcome people in. There is a huge patio area where after about 7pm, the shade of the building makes it a great place to hang out. Also, it's a defacto location to store the bike instead of locking it on the street.
Vendetta offers the usual bar drinks with local beers on tap and the ubiquitous Rainier and Pabst in cans. They have cocktails and wine also, but I opted for a Roots Brewing Heather.
The food menu looks good, but my dish was disappointing. I had opted for the Pesto Mac and it didn't have that creamy cheezy goodness I was hoping for. Everyone else seemed to enjoy their food, so I must have just ordered the wrong item.
By the time we were leaving, the place was packed and I think it gets even busier as the night goes on. More proof that the neighborhood is aching for local watering holes.