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From my visit to the former concentration camp Theresienstadt (Terezin) in 2016.
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I was trying to get a stained glass effect on the block, and Mishka came over to see what I was doing.
I lengthened the ruffle and substituted more repeats of the 'organic' lace chart instead of going back to the 'rigid' lace in the last section of blossoms.
Ron and Maria's apartment is in Block A of Borovets Hills, which is about 3 km out of Borovets further up the mountains.
getting back to strobes this afternoon while my daughter played this great Blocks of letters, numbers, and things in it.
shot using: YN 467 1/8th 5 feet left triggered by PT-04 and just window light front.
f/6.3 @ 1 sec
An old blocked bridge near a school. It was used to deliver tinplate from Rasselstein to Boesner.
The deliver stopped and this bridge was mainly used by pupils to cross the river Wied.
Now its been blocked the pupils have to walk 2 km more to come to school.
Annual card making, year 9. We decided to create cards using the same process as last year except that Ben carved the image on a latex block rather than lino. It's softer, so easier, but didn't ink as well.
Originally built with agatized wood blocks and mud mortar, Agate House likely housed a single family sometime between 1050 and 1300, during the Late Pueblo II - Pueblo III Periods. The scarcity of artifacts suggests a relatively brief occupation. Due to its relatively large size, Agate House may have served as a central gathering place.
Indeed, Agate House was a part of a much larger community. When first recorded by archeologists in the 1930s, the petrified wood construction of Agate House was thought to be unique. Since then, hundreds of similar petrified wood structure sites have been found in the park, indicating a history of humanity as colorful and diverse as the building blocks of Agate House.
Agate House @ Petrified Forest National Park, Arizona
This illustrates a good reason not to go hiking in slot canyons alone. The tremendous force of the flash floods that carve slot canyons can roll quite large boulders into places where they can get wedged. The top of this one in Wire Pass was about 5 ft high ... simple enough to get down but with its overhang and smooth surface, not so simple to get back up. I would not have made it up had it not been for the help of a delightful young couple from Britain that I fell in with while in the giant chamber of Buckskin Gulch.
the blocks I've received so far from my bee peeps in the bee beautiful bee.
As soon as Foz saw me laying them out in the grass, he sauntered over and layed at the edge for a few minutes. Then the attack was on. He went through and smelled each and every one of them and in the end, approved of them all.