View allAll Photos Tagged Vision
Unedited shot of a biker reflected in a puddle in Amsterdam. Taken with my Sony HX1. No editing, no magic tricks, no Photoshop :)
It's Saturday, it's weekend, it's gray, rainy and cold outside, so I've decided to spend this day in a blissful state of haziness...this entails massive amounts of not-doing-anything-useful combined with utter laziness being incorporated into the day, resulting in an overlordish, retardation-resembling state of wicked, willful uber-relaxation, leading towards a lush, dazed and confused evening, topped of with inhuman hours spend lounging around in bed while realizing that not a single F*ck has been given at all before taking off to dreamland, a perfect day, lol :P
Have a wicked weekend!
I've made a wicked reflection movie of this puddle too, check it out on my YouTube channel, thank you :)
'Like' me on Facebook :)
Picture taken at a protest for Palestine where I randomly ended up, in front of the Syndicate of Journalism in Cairo.
Gunnebo slott / Gunnebo castle, Mölndal, Sweden, 25/4.
Holga 120 CFN and Tri-x 400 b&w film. Toned in Silver Efex Pro.
VS10 ONS
VDL Futura 2
Vision Coach Services of Taunton
Location: Whitestone Corner Roundabout, Shepton Mallet
Date: 01/07/2019
Advertisements for Vision Dieter glasses in the 1970s boasted that “you won’t believe your eyes,” and claimed that by wearing the “special” glasses, consumers could reduce both their hunger and food intake. The Arkansas inventor of the glasses originally set out to create a product to deter shoppers from buying food packages simply because they were colorful. The lenses in the glasses distorted the colors, creating a disincentive for shoppers.
However, the product’s inventor soon discovered that pitching to consumers who were interested in losing weight was a far more lucrative business. He claimed that the combination of blue and brown colors was a “secret European color technology” that tricked the user’s mind into reducing hunger pangs. That claim was, of course, wholly false, as the product didn’t work at all. In fact, the only accurate part of the advertisements was its claim that there were no side effects from wearing the glasses (twice a day for an hour at a time) and that a single pair lasted for months. In the 1970s, FDA seized the glasses for “misbranding” under the provisions of the 1938 Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act. Since a claimant did not come forward, the case did not go to court and most of the glasses were destroyed.
366/2020 - 2020 Vision ~ 230/366
Treasure Hunt #22 ~ Caravan or Trailer
First day of my Hampshire holiday and after travelling, unpacking and catching up with family I almost forgot my PotD
Stay safe and well everyone.
Thank you to everyone who pauses long enough to look at my photo. Any comments or Faves are very much appreciated
Vision Travel of Waterlooville: (VIL 2915; ex P104 GHE) an Irizar Century bodied Scania K113CRB, painted in this white livery and captured here parked up at South Mimms services just off the M25 motorway.
© Christopher Lowe.
Date: 23rd September 2006.
Ref No. DSCF05847/CL.
... with rain on my lens and a lion over troubled the water. ;-)
Aus Sehnsucht wird Weitblick. Ulm, Stadthaus.
Vision looks inward and becomes duty.Vision looks outward and becomes aspiration.Vision looks upward and becomes faith.
Photo of a painting of a painting... shame Merseyside Development Corporation is no more... one of the Thatcher Government's better ideas using EU money...
/G\ \ / ift.tt/1T6PZhl /G\ \ / ift.tt/1T6PZhl ift.tt/1S7m1on IFTTT, Instagram March 23, 2016 at 05:12PM
Inspired by and Reimagined
"From the embers of ruin, she rises eternal."
Forged in the ashes of a dying world, Nyxira Dreadveil stands as a vision of beauty entwined with dread. Her horned helm, carved from ancient bone and shadowed steel, marks her as both warrior and sovereign of the unseen. The embers that swirl in the darkness around her do not burn her flesh—they bow to her will, casting a glow upon armor etched with forgotten runes.
Her eyes, pale and piercing as moonlight reflected on black water, tell of endless vigilance and unyielding resolve. To meet her gaze is to feel both temptation and terror—an invitation into the void where secrets lie buried in fire and blood.
This portrait is a glimpse into one of her many incarnations—neither her beginning nor her end, but a chapter scorched into eternity.
Vision Art album in 9x12 horizontal size. From a San Francisco wedding at St. Ignatius Catholic Church and the Cliff House restaurant.