View allAll Photos Tagged Wakeup
Here they are, Boots160. Same position as when I kicked them off the night before.
These B&W's getting nice and warm from the sun at dawn. Oh Yes - Chucks like to snuggle too. But they like being laced even better.
Rio Mendoza, Cordillera de Los Andes.
parece ser un simple recorrido en bus el viaje de Mendoza a Chile pero si te fijas bien es un recorrido por el corazón e la cordillera de los andes que merece ser tomado en cuenta como un paseo increíble entre montañas de mas de 6000 metros, dios glaciares y pueblos de montaña. wakeup y mira por tu ventana no te lo pierdas.
hello !!
i would like to introduce you to lil ms.noisy.
she wakes me up every morning with her awful singing !
and wont stop until am entirely awake!
the true story: its my brother's glass and he thinks its a cute one,
he asked me to take a picture of it ;p
Dress made by me (a commission). Photos by my friend - kari.com.ua
The doll and the diorama also belong to her, we did a collaboration photoshoot yesterday =)
If you struggle waking up in the morning, you are not the only one. The problem is connected to bad diet, too much stress, not enough sleep, etc. You will need to work on getting your life in order, as a whole, and by doing that you will automatically start waking up early:
www.todolisthacks.com/why-is-it-so-hard-to-wake-up-in-the...
So, remember how I had trouble naming this girl? And "we" finally settled on Camelia? She managed to change it to Camilla... Fine, I say...
I have never had a doll so bossy. It's unsettling, because I thought I call the shots with dolls, you know? As a human?
O_O
Anyway, she picked this outfit.
Hat, arm-warmers, and top made by me. jeans are Barbie, socks are Glam Girl, and boots are Mama Told Me stock.
Friday night I'm going nowhere
All the lights are changing green to red.
The first 2 lines of David Gray's song "Babylon" were strangly correct at the moment. Except it was Friday at noon...
This is a flexi hair product for Second Life (move along with your motion and look best when dancing).
As with all our hair products, the package bundled in a All Colors pack with 11-12 colors x 19-20 filter variants. This gives you over 200 possible options.
DrLifeGen3 In-world Store:
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Fashion%20Boulevard/84/131/1949
SL marketplace:
marketplace.secondlife.com/stores/204933
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Photo Style Card & Info:
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Hair : DrLifeGen3Hair Mei-wakeup
Eyes : DrLifeGen3 Eyeball
Skin : DrLifeGen3 skin series
Shape : DreamShape for DrLifeGen3 series
Strobist:
Sb600 behind camera and right at 1/8th shoot through reflector, and an sb16 shoot through umbrella behind me at 1/8th triggered with cheapo cactus vs2's
1/200th
F 3.5
ISO 100
Trio of kittens that showed up on our deck last night. This morning they were still here when I opened the door. Sigh.
One night after a round or two of drinking, I stumbled across this while looking for some FAST "food".
Wake Up Momoko is wearing a Dressmaker Details top and knit cardigan, over the knee socks from Chill Factor Dynamite Girls, and Randal Craig shoes.
My Momoko dolls now sport a v2 Dynamite Girl body, with Fashion Royalty hands.
(Tulip table in the photo is from Mary Quant Daisy doll, and Tulip chairs were bought loose on ebay)
My first real wakeup call about trash in the modern world came when I visited the dump community, Payatas, in the Philippines.. I was, by that time, no longer a stranger to the breath-taking frankness of the hard knocks life in the so-called third world. But my visit to Payatas shocked me to the core. Metro Manila has several large (and I mean gigantic) municipal dumpsites, the largest of which is Payatas. It is not simply a landfill – a large hole in the ground where trash is deposited until its filled and which is then sealed over and planted with grass and forgotten. Payatas is the site of a large informal recycling community. Hundreds of families live around and on the dump and earn their living by waiting on top of the pile as the trucks come in and then sorting through the waste in search of valuable items.
Some basic facts: 150,000 people work on the dump, picking through their share of the 6,700 tons of garbage that Metro Manila produces daily. The city has ten such dumps, all over flowing, of which Payatas is the most widely known, due to a collapse in 2000 that killed 200 people. More than 400 trucks come to the 100 foot high mountain of trash every day bringing in 1.800 tons of trash in a 16 hour work day.
Payatas is the successor to Smokey Mountain, a still larger dump on the island of Luzon, which was home to the largest slum in Asia until it was forcibly cleared and the landfill closed by the Filipino government in November 1995. After the landslide at Payatas, the government attempted to close it too, but it was reopened at the demand of its workers, who are dependent on trash picking for their livelihood.
What happens to all that trash? “The bounty of the trucks is sifted and sorted by the scavengers, who pass it on to scrap shops specializing in copper wire, old newspapers, aluminum cans, plastic, cardboard bits of machinery, box springs, raffle tickets, tires, broken toys – virtually all the infinite components of civilized life.?
The people of Payatas were able to find a use for nearly everything that came off the trucks – all of it going off to be reused, melted down, composted, or who knew what – except the plastic bags.So in the end as you step across the ‘ground’ on the dump mountain looking down stories and across blocks to see the edges, what you’re standing on is mostly plastic bags. Bear in mind Manila is home to a society almost pathologically obsessed with plastic bags. If you buy something in a store, all other things being equal, you will walk out with at least three bags. In a grocery store all produce comes plastic wrapped, then is double bagged for you by a smiling attendant – who’s happy demeanor will turned to semi-horrified puzzlement should you attempt to refuse a bag. It seems to represent the pinnacle of modern, sanitary, western style living. So consequently they figure largely in the city’s trash. The man-made mountain of bags covers 22 hectares of land. It is awe inspiring. It is awesome. It is awful.
Visiting that dump community certainly made a big impression on me.
The trash community at Payatas in the Philippines is not an isolated incident. Similar “recycling? systems are in place all around the globe – anywhere the daily average wage is low enough to make garbage picking a viable livlihood. In Mexico City, these pickers are known as pependadores. In Cairo they are called Zabaline. The zabaline collect around a third of their city’s trash, of which they are able to redirect around 80%