View allAll Photos Tagged barriers

free texture> this actually had legs and interlocking pegs.

I've made it like this so it ltiles across without looking too weird.

The Great Barrier Reef is truly spectacular. The amount of coral, the colors, the multitude of fish, is impressive. Too bad the water was somewhat cloudy, but it was worth. I´m sorry, picture quality is not very good but the hired camera was very bad, and is the first time I take pictures underwater.

Jersey Barriers on the Federal Building in Springfield, Massachusetts.

 

With flower boxes on them, you can scarcely tell they're there.

Continuing our tourist trip to Cairns on our last full day in Australia we visited the Great Barrier Reef. This shot was taken from a glass bottomed boat taking a tour over the coral. Obviously this was taken through glass so the quality isn't that great but hopefully you still get an impression of the coral and the seabed.

very lucky to have a friend who is an engineer at the Barrier. Light good, onsite views amazing. This is a different London . Cheers Ed!

Passage-à-niveau. Les Bordes (F-45).

Vicky Papageorgiou

Installation of vapor barrier around window.

Nikon Z30 ( I forgot lens model :с )

The Thames Barrier Park is in the Eastern part of London out past Canary Wharf. The barriers were built in the late 70's early 80's to help with tidal floods from the Thames into London. This is something that has been problematic for London since its development as a settlement years ago.

 

I first found out about the project while seeing pictures of it online while doing research for my thesis project in school. You can actually see a sketch I did while researching that i posted several years ago on Flickr (http://www.flickr.com/photos/wizum/67571559/in/set-1458801/).

 

It was really great to actually finally see this place and experience it first hand. And of course it was nice to show Jess just one more place she had never been to... in the city she lives in :)

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thames_Barrier

 

BLOG

 

WSM photography

Finally the underwater pictures of the Great Barrier Reef of Dezember '14

Kaiserlei / Offenbach am Main / Germany.

I left Medlands beach to hike to Tryphena over the hills and was rewarded with this magnificent view of Great Barrier

Crews are placing barrier along the new southbound SR 167 lane between I-405 and SW 41st Street.

I took this of the totem pole and the Karen Aim memorial bench looking down the first barrier in Holm, Orkney.

Barrier Free Fun at Roberts Regional Recreation Area, Oakland. East Bay Regional Park District. Built with sponsorship from the Oakland Rotary club.

 

Photo credit: EBRPD

Barrier Free Fun at Roberts Regional Recreation Area, Oakland. East Bay Regional Park District. Built with sponsorship from the Oakland Rotary club.

 

Photo credit: EBRPD

I think the animal barriers are a great idea and make boring construction sites a little more fun. What do you think. If you spot any others let me know, I'd love to see them.

 

By whatwhat - www.whatwhat.co.uk/

 

View more at tokyo.japantimes.co.jp/post/en/1409/Construction+barrier+...

F-16 serial 91-0462

On Barrier Lake looking south.

From the Great Barrier Reef off Cairns: taken using a disposable underwater camera while snorkelling.

Scuba Diving at the Great Barrier Reef, Dec 2011. High Contrast

This is a mosaic that stalled out for nearly a year as I tried to figure out how to finish it up...wanted to get it done for a challenge, and here it is freshly grouted. I am happy I changed the grout colors, I tried a few things and had to dig them out. Its called Barriers...stress and other emotional anxieties can build up barriers around us from those who try to help and love us. Its a smaller piece, only about 10 inches square.

A barrier to protect the bank, North Cray Meadows. Photographed using infra-red light.

A T-barrier wall provides security for residents of the Sadr City District of Baghdad, Aug. 2, 2008. The walls, which are typically a dull, gray color, were painted by residents to illustrate national themes of hope and unity. Photo by Maj. Michael Humphreys, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division Public Affairs.

Great Barrier Reef - Submarine Trip

The Thames Barrier Park is in the Eastern part of London out past Canary Wharf. The barriers were built in the late 70's early 80's to help with tidal floods from the Thames into London. This is something that has been problematic for London since its development as a settlement years ago.

 

I first found out about the project while seeing pictures of it online while doing research for my thesis project in school. You can actually see a sketch I did while researching that i posted several years ago on Flickr (http://www.flickr.com/photos/wizum/67571559/in/set-1458801/).

 

It was really great to actually finally see this place and experience it first hand. And of course it was nice to show Jess just one more place she had never been to... in the city she lives in :)

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thames_Barrier

 

BLOG

 

WSM photography

This radar image scares the pants off me kids. The fury that Dauphin Island all the way up to Mobile AL must be experiencing right now must be OFF the scale.

 

This can be found at: rss.wunderground.com/radar/radblast.asp?zoommode=zoom&..., AL&showstorms=31&map.x=408&map.y=237&centerx=400&centery=196

From the Great Barrier Reef off Cairns: taken using a disposable underwater camera while snorkelling.

The barriers might stop a landslide.

Santa Clara 2023

  

tech info:

Leica M10 Monochrom + Summarit-M 75mm f/2.4, blue 80a filter

ISO 200 @ f/2.8 @ 1/125

Camera + Lens : GF1 + VOIGTLANDER NOKTON CLASSIC S.C 35mm F1.4

 

Pont Alexandre III / Ave Winston Churchill, Paris

 

Looking onto Grand Palais and Petit Palais

 

Not sure why the barriers/railings were there - perhaps to protect people from bumping into those dangerous lamp-posts

The River Hull tidal barrier framing the new(isn) Premier Inn. It was the layered textures in the foreground mud that caught my eye here.

Continuing our tourist trip to Cairns on our last full day in Australia we visited the Great Barrier Reef. This shot was taken from a glass bottomed boat taking a tour over the coral. Obviously this was taken through glass so the quality isn't that great but hopefully you still get an impression of the coral and the seabed.

This was typical of the type of view Eric & I had most of the day as we only bought general admission tickets, as opposed to having any sort of seat.

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