View allAll Photos Tagged alfresco
Sitting down for a good pint.
City of Decatur (Decatur Square), Georgia, USA.
4 May 2024.
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▶ Photo by: YFGF.beer.
▶ For a larger image, type 'L' (without the quotation marks).
— Follow on Facebook: YoursForGoodFermentables.
— Follow on Instagram: @tcizauskas.
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▶ Camera: Olympus OM-D E-M10 II.
— Lens: Olympus M.45mm F1.8.
— Edit: Photoshop Elements 15.
— Monochrome rendering via Nik Collection (2016).
▶ Commercial use requires explicit permission, as per Creative Commons.
Dining in the street in The North Laine, Brighton.
Everybody seems happy.
Candid Shot.
Brighton. Sussex. England.
66 230 draws 6O30 Castle Bromwich Jaguar to Southampton onto the bi-directional Up Derby Slow, business looks a little slow at the Self Storage's alfresco Cafe.
I know its not the best image but we went out to Micheldever yesterday to see how the bluebells are coming along and when we were walking along one of the paths we came across this youngster foraging for food in the distance. With the mist in the background I thought it made a very atmospheric image....
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As the COVID 19 lockdown is relaxed in London, alfresco dining becomes popular across the capital. Little House Mayfair, London, UK. August 20, 2020. Photo: ©Edmond Terakopian
Colour street photography candid abstract windows reflections coffee shop portrait. Southend on Sea.
Unusually for me a couple of black and whites...
This one from the Nomadic Community Gardens in Shoreditch, where there is always something a little unusual to see and photograph..
With gold taps no less!!
This photo was taken at our local garden allotments, where plot holders use old baths to collect water. Although plugs are essential, it is not usual to leave the taps on ;-)
Spent a very enjoyable afternoon and evening in the city yesterday with a great friend and fellow photographer, Mark Kinsman. If you want to see some beautiful and original work, take a look at Mark's photostream: www.flickr.com/photos/mbkinsman/
Every time I go into the city with my camera, I always wonder why I don't do it more often. It seems there is something beautiful to photograph almost everywhere you look. And if you stay until after dark, it takes on a whole new personality. This looked like a fantastic place to have a meal.
Enjoying a hefeweizen on the brewpub's patio.
Washington, D.C. (Navy Yard neighborhood), USA.
30 March 2013.
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▶ A 'friends and family' pre-opening visit to the brewpub.
▶ Address: 100 M St SE, Washington, D.C. 20003
▶ The beer patio wraps around two sides of the pub.
▶ UPDATE:
Open for seven years, the brewpub closed in March 2020, when the holding company, Craftworks Holdings, liquidated its assets in bankruptcy.
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▶ Photo and story by Yours For Good Fermentables.com.
▶ For a larger image, type 'L' (without the quotation marks).
— Follow on Facebook: YoursForGoodFermentables.
— Follow on Instagram: @tcizauskas.
▶ Camera: Olympus Pen E-PL1.
---> Lens: Lumix G Vario 45-200/F4.0-5.6
---> Focal length: 45 mm
---> Aperture: ƒ/4.0
---> Shutter speed: 1/100
---> ISO: 320
▶ Commercial use requires explicit permission, as per Creative Commons.
Our resident blue tits with 8 hungry mouths to feed they were busy decimating the local population of bugs and caterpillars - 20th May 2014
Brancion is a very nicely preserved Mediæval village in southern Burgundy, with its cluster of low houses nested around haughty castle ruins and its network of very narrow, paved or grass-covered streets that only a handful of small cars belonging to residents can navigate. I had of course been there before, but the Romanesque parish church that sits on a nearby hilltop had so far managed to elude me; this time, on a very windy and slightly rainy September afternoon, I devoted a good two hours to its visit. Here are the photographs I brought back, I hope you will enjoy them.
Built by the lords of Brancion around 1100 and dedicated to Saint Peter, this very interesting church is quite large for such a small village (the nave is 30 meters long and 14 wide with the aisles), even though the locale had more importance back then than now. The church was listed as a Historic Landmark in 1862. It is very pure and nicely appareled, although originally almost entirely devoid of any decoration. Alfresco paintings were added around 1250. We will also see the recumbent statue and tomb of Josserand III of Brancion, who died during the 7th Crusade, at the battle of Mansourah in Egypt in 1250, where he defended King Louis IX (Saint Louis).
The façade of the church is very simple, understated and unadorned. Yet it avoids being plain and manages to be harmonious and inviting, in a “come-and rest-into-my-womb” sort of way.