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- Desde otro ángulo el Palacio de las Artes en la ciudad de Valencia.
- From another angle the Palace of the Arts in the city of Valencia
The Department of Modern Art in Gdańsk Poland seen on a rainy day with its fuzzy reflection on the asphalt path.
My take on this wonderful statue.
Zeiss 55mm / 1.4 Otus Distagon. Focus stacking of two total exposures. Not HDR. Not cropped.
Zoom in :)
The setting sun, as seen through a crack in the wall of the Forum of Augustus, draws attention to the Vittoriano - a monument in honor of the first king of unified Italy - while illuminating the magnificent Via die Fori Imperiali on one side and casting a glow on the Domus Romane and Trajan's Market as they peek from behind the ruins. The majestic Church of Saint Mary of Loreto in the middle, rounds out a scene that likely has no parallel in the world.
Rome, Italy
St John’s Anglican Church at Sorrento was built of local Limestone in 1874. It was used by the Presbyterian and Anglicans for services and other community functions and later, solely by the Anglican’s. The transepts were built in 1889 by George Morse who was the original architect/builder of the church.
The “Prince Consort” stained glass window, made by the Ferguson & Urie stained glass company of North Melbourne, was installed in the South Transept at this time. The window was originally installed in St Paul’s Anglican Church on the corner of Swanston and Flinders street Melbourne which was demolished in 1889 to make way for the new St Paul’s Cathedral. Canon Chase was the original Donor of the stained glass window for St Paul’s and when it was decided that the original stained glass was not applicable for the new Cathedral it was returned to him for his decision to donate it elsewhere as he saw fit. Despite the intimations of the tabloids that it would be installed in the “Working Men’s College”, he eventually chose St John’s Anglican Church at Sorrento where it has resided for the past 125 years. Sorrento, Victoria, Australia.
This photo was originally posted in the fall of 2014 but it was deleted in error. It was re-posted in January, 2015. Previous Views-320, Faves-7.
St Catherine's Church was built in 1872 with monies raised by locals as a Chapel of ease for those of the St Lawrence Parish who were unable to attend the church in St Lawrence. The land was donated by the Vicar of St Lawrence, Rev. G. W. Sicklemore. There is a war memorial on the village green to those who served and died in the two world wars of the twentieth century.
The RAF station is about half a mile away and served as a fighter station during World War 2, it has also served as a USAF base during the 1950’s and was home to the Air Sea Rescue helicopters of 22 Squadron, it was then a main diversion airfield (1 of the longest runways in the country) then for a little while was a civilian airfield but that closed. It has now after years of standing still, been used as a lorry park, a Covid 19 test centre and now there are plans to turn it into an air freight hub.
MY THANKS FOR ALL VISITS IT IS APPRECIATED
«¿Dónde estará mi vida, la que pudo haber sido y no fue, la venturosa o la de triste horror, esa otra cosa que pudo ser la espada o el escudo y que no fue? ¿Dónde estará el perdido antepasado persa o el noruego, dónde el azar de no quedarme ciego, dónde el ancla y el mar, dónde el olvido de ser quien soy? ¿Dónde estará la pura noche que al rudo labrador confía el iletrado y laborioso día, según lo quiere la literatura? Pienso también en esa compañera que me esperaba, y que tal vez me espera. » (Lo Perdido, Jorge Luis Borges).
Monasterio de Tarlac is a popular tourist attraction in the Philippines. It has a 30-foot concrete statue of Jesus Christ overseeing the town.
It’s a monasterio on top of Mount Resurrection, a part of Zambales mountain chain in San Jose, Tarlac county.
It says that in the monastery it can be found a relic of the True Cross.
The Monasterio de Tarlac sits on a 278-hectare eco-tourism park developed by the former congressman Jose «Aping» Yap.
Camera: GW670iii
Lens: Fujinon 90mm f3.5 at f16 - 1/8 sek
Filter: Hoya R72
Negative scan, R09 1:25 5min
A Japanese Maple leaf macrophotography done in the end of a day, using the last light of the sunset...