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you can see the tide come in and go out again
Have a good weekend everyone
This is also dedicated to Charlie who said some really nice things about my photos this week...thanks again Charlie :)
Miscellaneous; Greenwich Audubon; Greenwich, Connecticut; ©2008 DianaLee Photo Designs; Selected for "EXPLORE"
Esterházy Mansion and Artists' Studio (Esterhazy-kastély, Alkotóház), Szigliget.
The classicist palace was built in the early 18th century. In 1953 it became home to the Writers' Studio (Irók Alkotóháza), later of musicians and painters. Many of the nearby manorial buildings are listed heritage.
After Count Pál Esterházy bought the palace and its estates in 1912 it was given its final form. It was through extensive architectural redesign that its current, unified form was achieved. The results of this work are the terraces and the rooms below them, the small towers, the mansard roof, and the formation of the roofline and the overall view of the front facade. The vernacular Baroque and Classicist segments of the house are well separated. Later renovations were made in order to suit the needs of the Studio.
The park is a nature reserve and is open to visitors.
2011. 04. 30-ig a Magyar Alkotóművészeti KözalapÃtvány Alkotóháza volt.
Este senhor foi muito legal com toda a turma do workshop. Posou para todos.
Vejam também a foto do Bernardo: www.flickr.com/photos/berna_gt/38687329/
Madrid, Spain.
CONVERSACIONES EN SILENCIO
TALKING IN SILENCE
SERIES
Please, do not use this photo without permission
Por Favor no usar esta fotografÃa sin permiso
Well presented little window seal from sunny Scotland .People making the effort to grow some flowers ,simple and very effective .
Man Uncle Andy really has some beautiful cabeese. The 92846 at the time was assigned to the West Hazleton Fast Freight and was sitting out the morning along the former LV Sheppton Branch awaiting a move west further into the industrial park.
Worn and rusty windows in Cinque Terre, Italy. Photos available for purchase at Wits End Photography. Follow my blog Traveling at Wits End for ways to create travel adventures everyday.
This photo is one of the windows in the abandoned warehouse. It's so weird how in a place with no human life there could be so much plant life. Adobe Photoshop CS5 was used to edit this photo.
As they were demolishing the Muir Building these windows were made visible for the first time in over fifty years. In the name of greed and progress these windows and the building are no longer.
I don't even know the name of the town. I do remember it was in Northern Italy above Milan and close to the border with Switzerland. Near the very old town's round village fountain and down a narrow alley, there in the middle of a block-length 2 story high wall was this single tiny window. Across the window, set into the foot deep walls, was a handmade twisted iron bar. Tied to the bar with string was this pot and it's three lovely geraniums.