View allAll Photos Tagged Wisconsin

posing in another dress of which only memories (and a few pics) remain

Lake Loons in the Northwoods of Wisconsin.

Lake Loons in the Northwoods of Wisconsin.

Taken during a heavy snowstorm several months ago at Tenney Park in Madison, Wisconsin. It was a beautiful night and the snow was so soft!

 

Please feel free to visit my portfolio to see more of my photography or to purchase prints.

Wisconsin State Patrol Ford Crown Victoria Slicktop unit.

Three SD60Ms lead Wisconsin & Southern train T002 thru downtown Madison, Wisconsin on April 20, 2024. T002 is a very rare ID for a train in Madison.

Went shooting today, not much of a sunset because it was overcast but I stuck around to see what dusk would bring. Clouds were booking, so I think the blue came through in the long exposure (obviously boosted but not as much as you'd think). HDR 3xp.

 

Low lying clouds here turned a dark pink for a while, barely shows here.

NL151JT North American P-51D Mustang FF-943 Was That Too Fast 412943 USAF 44-12943 N151JT

Photo taken at EAA Airventure Wittman Regional Airport Oshkosh Wisconsin USA July 2025

HAC_67491

An autumn sun rises over Lake Michigan and radiates onto the rocky shore near Cave Point County Park in Door County, Wisconsin. Made with a Sony A7rii and a Nikon 14-24 lens. For more go to www.elviskennedy.com

Milwaukee Police Department, Wisconsin

Chevrolet Tahoe

Vehicle #121

 

Picture Date: 05/13/2015

 

A Milwaukee Police Department Chevrolet Tahoe is spotted parked in Washington D.C. during Police Week 2015.

Wisconsin & Southern 4053, the "Grow Wisconsin" unit, pulls a train of sand cars long-hood forward along John Nolen Drive in Madison, Wisconsin on June 6, 2016. Wisconsin's beautiful state capitol building can be seen in the background.

Wisconsin & Southern unit 3928 leads a boxcar and a string of sand loads as it has just crossed Monona Bay in Madison, Wisconsin on July 26, 2016. The Wisconsin state capitol building can be seen in the distance.

A summer lightning storm is reflected in the calm waters of Kelly Lake, Wisconsin. Made with a Sony A7Rii and Zeiss 25mm lens. F/11, ISO 100 and 3.2 seconds was the exposure. For more go to www.elviskennedy.com

I was heading for the door to go out, and then --What do you know? Another photo op :)

Red-bellied Woodpecker

a cool early fall day, just right for me to delve into my closet and come up with a different ensemble

My tulips survived several chilly mornings, and will enjoy the warmer weather this week.

 

58 degrees F (14 C)

Jefferson, Wisconsin, USA

In Olbrich Botanical Gardens, Atwood Avenue, Madison, WI

Ford Police Interceptor Utilities with the Wisconsin State Patrol.

the lady knows how to dress

💖 Essenz - Wisconsin Heels 💖

 

- Requires Body: Maitreya, Lara X, Legacy or eBody Reborn

 

Available in: available in 18 Colors available in Single, 3 Color pack or Fatpack

 

Included in your purchase

- 3 Rigged pair of shoes

- Shoebase

- Texture change HUD

- This information notecard

  

Find Essenz at the following locations.

 

♥ Main Store ♥

 

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Essenz/128/128/23

 

Subscribe at the mainstore or join the Essenz VIP group with weekly giveaways, group gifts and promo codes.

 

♥ Marketplace ♥

 

marketplace.secondlife.com/en-US/stores/44190

 

♥ Facebook ♥

 

www.facebook.com/senzation.domenitzo

  

♥ Flickr ♥

 

www.flickr.com/photos/essenzsl/

  

♥ Instagram ♥

 

www.instagram.com/essenz.sl/

Amtrak 40th Anniversary commemorative unit 184 leads the westbound Empire Builder as it departs Columbus, Wisconsin on April 11, 2016.

Pepin County, Wisconsin

Come on up and smell our Dairy Air!

(Current Wisconsin State Motto)

Boat dock at campground. Site of the Bad Axe Massacre. South of Victory Wisconsin

Wisconsin State Patrol Dodge Charger.

Wisconsin State Patrol Ford Police Interceptor.

A warm summer evening on the Pecatonica River (near Browntown, Wisconsin)

Platteville has a population 11,224 and is the largest city in Grant County.

Along Hwy 29 in rural Northern Wisconsin. Passed by them the first time, but found the next nearest exit and doubled the car around up to their stand.

 

::You selling corn, ha? How much a dozen?

 

2 bucks a dozen but these bags I'll give for $10 .

 

::Ok, a dozen then, mind if I take some photos of you? Am from Minneapolis, heading to Sheboygan. And by the way corn is $7 bucks a dozen in that city.

 

Why Sheboygan, boy?

 

::Salmon fishing.

 

Yeah ok take your pictures... You know, I built that house there across the street, and built it with my bare hands. Bought the land for $500 bucks and there we sit right now, raised a family in that house over there.

 

:: (looking over across the street) That's a solid house. Nice land you got here, . . But what's up with this busted down van you sittin in front of?

 

That's my son. I don't wanna talk about it.

Built in phases between 1911 and 1959, this Prairie and Organic Modern-style house and office were designed by Frank Lloyd Wright to serve as his family residence and studio, with two fires leading to substantial reconstruction of the house in 1914 and 1925. The house, which is named “Taliesin”, Welsh for “Shining Brow” or “Radiant Brow”, referring to the hill upon which it is situated, is a long and rambling structure with multiple sections built at different times, with the building serving as a living laboratory for Wright’s organic design philosophy, as well as growing with Wright’s family, wealth, and business. The house sits on a hill surrounded by fields, but is notably located below the top of the hill, which Wright saw as being such a significant feature of the landscape that it should remain untouched by the house’s presence. The house’s westernmost wings served as the home of livestock and farm equipment, as well as a garage, later becoming housing for the Taliesin Fellowship, where aspiring architects apprenticed with Frank Lloyd Wright. The central wing served as the Frank Lloyd Wright studio, where Wright and his apprentices and employees worked on projects for clients, as well as where Wright often met with clients. The eastern wing served as the Wright family’s residence, and was rebuilt twice, in 1914 and 1925, after being destroyed by fire, and is overall the newest section of the complex, though some portions of the west and central wings were added after the main phase of construction of the residence was complete.

 

The house is clad in stucco with a wooden shingle hipped and gabled roof, with stone cladding at the base and on piers that often flank window openings, large casement windows, clerestory windows, outdoor terraces and balconies, stone chimneys, and glass french doors, all of which connect the interior of the building to the surrounding landscape. The interior of the buildings feature vaulted ceilings in common areas, stone floors, stone and plaster walls, decorative woodwork, custom-built furniture, and multiple decorative objects collected by Wright during his life. The exterior of the house has a few areas distinctive from the rest of the structure, with a cantilevered balcony extending off the east facade drawing the eye towards the surrounding landscape from the living room of the residence, next to a large set of glass doors that enclose the living room and adjacent bedroom from a shallower cantilevered terrace, while to the west of the residence, and south of the central wing, is a landscaped garden, which rests just below the crest of the hill.

 

The building was the full-time home of Wright from 1911 until 1937, when Wright began to spend his winters at Taliesin West in Phoenix, Arizona, due to the effects of the Wisconsin winters on his health. For the rest of Wright’s life, the house was the summer home of Wright and the Taliesin Fellowship, and following his death, the house was deeded to the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, which operated and maintained the house as a museum and the home of multiple programs until 1990. Since 1990, the house has been under the stewardship of the nonprofit Taliesin Preservation Inc., which operates the house in conjunction with the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation. The building is a contributing structure in the Taliesin Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973, and designated a National Historic Landmark in 1976. Taliesin was one of eight Frank Lloyd Wright buildings listed as The 20th-Century Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 2019. Today, Taliesin is utilized as a museum, offering tours and interpretation of Frank Lloyd Wright’s life and work.

as of last Sunday, I was still in the process of decorating the tree

Wisconsin & Southern train L469 crosses Wingra Creek in Madison, Wisconsin on November 29, 2016.

Built in 1927-1929, this Classical Revival-style building was designed by James A. Wetmore to serve as the United States Post Office and Federal Courthouse for the city of Madison, Wisconsin, though it today serves as an annex to Madison City Hall, known as the Madison Municipal Building. The building replaced an earlier structure from 1867 that served as a US District Courthouse and the city’s main Post Office. In the 1980s, the post office and US District Courts moved out of the building, with the building subsequently becoming the Madison Municipal Building, home to offices for the city of Madison. The building is rectangular at the base, becoming U-shaped on the second and third floors, and clad in limestone with rustication on the first floor, casement and double-hung windows, entrance doors with transoms featuring decorative metal screens, decorative lampposts outside the entrance doors, an ionic colonnade in the central bays of the second and third floors of the front facade, flanked by doric pilasters, with metal spandrel panels between the windows and an architrave and cornice with dentils above, colonnades with doric pilasters rather than ionic columns on the side facades, arched windows at the outer bays of the second floor with decorative keynotes, reliefs with festoons below the third floor windows of the outer bays, and a parapet with balustrades above the windows in the central bays enclosing the building’s low-slope roof. The interior includes former courtrooms with wooden paneling and ceilings with wooden beams, original staircases, the original lobby with a coffered ceiling, decorative chandeliers, and quarry tile floor, and fully modernized office space, service areas, systems, and meeting rooms. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2002, and presently houses offices and meeting rooms for the government of the City of Madison, supplementing Madison City Hall across the street.

We peek through the fence along Torrence Ave. at the Pontiac unloading in Wisconsin Steel in 1975. Taken by my Dad.

Wisconsin Amish Community

Bottle of frozen water in my car. I like iced water but...

Located in Dodge & Columbia Counties with a population of 1811. NBA player Greg Stiemsma is from Randolph.

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