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Hi everyone, this is another fast photo I made yesterday ^_^ I just feeled like uploading it :D Thank you all for your sweet comments and favs on my previous photo! ^_^ It makes me so happy to get all those lovely comments in just a day!! Thank you so much everyone!! <3333
Chu chu xx
I can't resist this beautiful flower... another favorite I love. And especially in these color tones.
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Another shot from my office window.
5 exposure HDR taken with Pentax K7 + Sigma 30mm f/1.4 and CPL filter.
I happened upon another Charley Brown style tree that I couldn't pass up. Now that I am out looking for them, they are getting harder to find. It appears that Mother Nature prefers "good" looking tress ;-)
Another day another otter.
This looks a lot smaller than the one I saw yesterday so I am assuming it is a youngster. No way of determining the sex though. A slightly longer version on youtube as flikr limit is three minutes.www.youtube.com/watch?v=NlJjo_NRJfU
Another Place is a piece of modern sculpture by Antony Gormley.
Now permanently erected on Crosby Beach, England, it was due to be moved to New York in November 2006, but there was a controversial proposal to retain the work at Crosby. It was stated in the local paper, the Crosby Herald, that they may stay for a decade, but at a meeting on 7 March 2007, Sefton Council accepted proposals that would allow the sculptures to be kept permanently at Crosby Beach.
Cast iron figures which face out to sea, spread over a 2 mile (3.2 km) stretch of the beach between Waterloo and Blundellsands. Each figure is 189 cm tall (nearly 6 feet 2½ inches) and weighs around 650 kg (over 1400 lb).
In common with most of Gormley's work, the figures are cast replicas of the artist's own body. As the tides ebb and flow, the figures are revealed and submerged by the sea. The figures were cast at two foundries, Hargreaves Foundry in Halifax, West Yorkshire, and Joseph and Jesse Siddons Foundry in West Bromwich.
Another Place was first exhibited on the beach of Cuxhaven, Germany, in 1997 and after that in Stavanger in Norway and De Panne in Belgium.
Gormley has produced other works using similar life-size iron statues.
A second set of the same 100 figures were cast in 2006 for a new installation called Time Horizon installed amongst a grove of olive trees at the Archaeological Park of Scolacium near Catanzaro in Calabria, Southern Italy. Since the figures are set into the ground, facing a variety of directions, the effect of the piece is very different from that of Another Place.
LIVERPOOL 2013
Anthony Gormley's sculpture "Another Place" found it's final home on Crosby Beach, Lancashire, 10 or so years ago. It consist of 100 casts of the artist's own body staring out to sea. Most of them are still standing.
This photograph was taken on the occasion of Mrs yateleyart's most recent visit to them.
This is my 29th image in Yateley Camera Club's 2018 "52" project.
PORKERI.
Porkeri is a village in the Faroe Islands, situated north of Vágur on Suðuroy's east coast. As of 2004 it had a population of 332. It is located at61°28′59″N 6°44′36″W / 61.48306°N 6.74333°W / 61.48306; -6.74333.
Porkeri has been inhabited at least as early as the 14th century.
The wooden church is from 1847 and contains things donated by seamen who survived lethal storms on the sea, maintaining the tradition of almissu (seamen in danger promised - according to Nordic tradition - to donate churches, the material or such to God if they got back home alive).
In 1984 a new school was built in the village. It is built in a modern Faroese style and has grass on the roof. The old school in Porkeri was built in 1888. It was used as such for 96 years. It is now owned by "Porkeris Bygdasavn" which is a museum. The village also has a church, Porkeri Church with a graveyard.
Tradition says that once in the old days a dispute of field boundaries between Porkeri and the neighbouring village Hov was sorted out by a walking-race between one man from each village.
www.visitsuduroy.fo/index.asp?pID={73D54A4D-C1A6-4EA5-B35F-96F47E05F95A}
Summer 2011 display window, with a miltary-themed top & short shorts, at Another Edition on Cat Street in Harajuku.
in the 'adams' block beyond the gym. these used to be science labs, they are now in the 'new' building below te sixth form common room
Rangoli, also known as Kolam, is an artform from India in which patterns are created on the floor in living rooms or courtyards using materials such as colored rice, dry flour, colored sand or flower petals. It is usually made duringDiwali (Deepawali), Onam, Pongal and other Indian festivals. They are meant to be sacred welcoming areas for the Hindu deities. Designs are passed from one generation to the next, keeping both the art form and the tradition alive. Similar practices are followed in different states of India: Rangoli in Karnataka, Kolam in Tamil Nadu,Mandana in Rajasthan, Chaookpurna inChhattisgarh, Alpana in West Bengal,Aripana in Bihar, Chowk pujan in Uttar Pradesh, Muggu in Andhra Pradesh, Golam kolam or kalam in Kerala and others except in North eastern states.[1]
The purpose of rangoli is decoration, and it is thought to bring good luck. Design depictions may also vary as they reflect traditions, folklore and practices that are unique to each area. It is traditionally done by women. Generally, this practice is showcased during occasions such as festivals, auspicious observances, marriage celebrations and other similar milestones and gatherings.
Rangoli designs can be simple geometric shapes, deity impressions, or flower and petal shapes (appropriate for the given celebrations), but they can also be very elaborate designs crafted by numerous people. The base material is usually dry or wet powdered rice or dry flour, to which sindoor (vermilion),haldi (turmeric) and other natural colours can be added. Chemical colors are a modern variation. Other materials include colored sand, red brick powder and even flowers and petals, as in the case of flower rangolis.
Having lost a hat on a gale-strewn day in Wales, I bought another. The family decided I needed a spare
Sun just above the foothills and I heard the unmistakable call of the "Fish Hawk." Their eyes are just intense.
Emigrant Lake - Jackson County - Oregon - USA
Another perspective…
The Bay of Somme is magical as she reveals her sculpted paintings.
Its changing lights offer us surprising landscapes, sometimes unreal, the contrasts are stunning.
Another glass building nears completion by Euston Tower and Warren street station this area is gradually filling up with these modern glass structures and they don't take long being built either.During the daylight hours they act as perfect mirrors but at night they can be seen through if the lights are on inside.