View allAll Photos Tagged case.
Savona. 13-01-2019
YASHICA FX-3 Super 2000
Yashica Lens - ML 50 mm 1:1,9
Pellicola: KODAK Color Plus 200 ASA
Scanner: EPSON V600 - 2400 dpi
Camera: Leica M6 2022
Lens: Leica Summilux 50mm f/1.4 Black Chrome
Film: Kodak Portra 400
Developing: Cinestill C41 104f for 4:10 (Chemistry getting to end of life)
Scanning: Valoi Easy 35 on Nikon Z9 and Z 105mm f/2.8 at f/8 and +1 exposure comp. Valoi set to full brightness and cool light temperature. Negative Lab Pro and Lightroom.
Carl McCloud on his Case combine. Wolfum Vadams driving the Case tractor. Carl McCloud's writing on the back of this picture states it was purchased in 1932. Hendricks County, Indiana
There were some very nice displays in the cases lined up against this back wall of the Live Oak Civic Center building at the SWGMS gem and mineral show this year.
For the sake of completeness, here's my full lineup of Tales of the Space Age. I don't think there will be more in a foreseeable future - I'm very happy with the seven pictures as is and enjoy having them on the wall of my home office.
And just in case you'd like to build some of them, 21340 Tales of the Space Age is still available in LEGO S@H. For the additional ones, you can get the instructions from my Rebrickable page: rebrickable.com/users/john.carter/mocs/
The Casements is a mansion of American oil magnate John D. Rockefeller, famous for being the winter residence. It is currently owned by the city of Ormond Beach and is used as a cultural center and park.
A day of much coming and going as Louise has her last official day of VCE. She had to be at the college by 6:15 am for breakfast and 'muck up' day activities. She is home now getting cleaned up before their graduation ceremony later this morning. Then back home to get get her hair done for tonight's Valedictory Dinner.
I spotted this Case Moth up near the college. You can see part of the caterpillar where the case is attached to the twig.
Will catch up as and when I can.
Féria de Nîmes. Matador: El Juli
A much-disputed "art," bullfighting has been outlawed in many places but still takes place in Nîmes where some 20k spectators gather twice a year.
My intention here is to record what I saw, leaving it up to you to decide what seems admissible. I saw this but once, seven years ago...and I only looked at these photos in recent months, photos which were probably taken to avoid watching the fight itself.
The bull, if he wins (sometimes the judges spare his life), retires to pasture and sires new calves. If he doesn't, the meat is immediately transferred to butchers' vans, waiting at the exit to the arena. In some cases, the meat is given to the poor.
This photo struck me for the almost symmetrical body language in the matador which mirrored that of the bull.
Molnár u. , Belváros-Lipótváros, (V Circoscrizione) Budapest
Premendo L, l'immagine sarà più bella :-)
Pour une plus belle expérience, appuyez sur L
For a better experience press L
pencil cases made of scraps, some of the scraps are free-motion-quilted and the seams are decorated with different machine stitches.
2 of the cases have a little pocket outside.
The Casal family has owned and operated their store since 1946. They are still very much in business. Uvalde,Texas. 9.29.2016.
“I have found that anything that comes out of the South is going to be called grotesque by the Northern reader, unless it is grotesque, in which case it is going to be called realistic.”
~Flannery O'Connor
Strobist: AB1600 with gridded 60X30 softbox camera right. AB800 with gridded 7 inch reflector camera left. AB800 with diffused HOBD-W overhead. Triggered by Cybersync.
How the plague began! Foster Yeoman's General Motors Electro-Motive Division SW1001 'switcher' at Merehead Quarry during the quarry company's 75th Anniversary celebrations on 28 June, 1998. The impressive reliability of this rugged little loco led to the purchase of the privately-owned Class 59 fleet from EMD, which in turn inspired the Class 66 series which has dominated UK freight haulage for a quarter of a century, replacing hundreds of former British Railways locos dating from the 1950s and 1960s. Note that this location is within the quarry site and not usually accessible to the public.
I spent some time this past summer trying to learn how better to secure images of pollinators of all kinds. That project was motivated by my sunrise walks down an abandoned road southeast of Ottawa, where overgrown wildflowers grew in thick and deep bunches on the sides of the road, and where butterflies and moths and bees and wasps spent the first light re-energizing for the new day.
The subjects of the photographs had a lot more freedom to drift away from the road to the wild meadows than I had - old fences and thick vegetation kept me pretty hemmed in. That meant having to get creative in most cases, which was part of learning how to manage the situation. I really liked this image, shot through a wall of vegetation to find the Skipper - not an especially exotic one for people who know these creatures - who was drinking from the wildflower.
This activity and the many early mornings it entailed was a response to the impact of the pandemic on birding and bird photography. Most of my usual places had not adjusted particularly well to the changed circumstances, and so the solitary mornings were just what the public health officials ordered.
I really hope everyone is safe and has a great holiday break. I now know people (healthcare workers) who are scheduled to be vaccinated shortly in Ottawa so things are slowly moving forward - please take care.
And many sincere thanks to the people who look at, like and/or comment on my images. I really appreciate the connection. I spend a lot of my free time looking at and learning from others, but this is an amazing community, and it offers a lot to me in different ways - especially with the superb images people are posting. So: many thanks, and stay safe.
Siglo XVI con modificaciones posteriores.
Fue la residencia del veguer y hacia el año 1730 dejó de pertenecer a la familia de los Desclergue para pasar a manos del doctor en derecho Antón Tomàs. En la segunda mitad del siglo XIX se convirtió en un popular café y en la década de 1970, ante la amenaza de desplomarse, se hizo una rehabilitación necesaria. Actualmente es sede de las oficinas de BBVA.
16th century with later alterations.
It was the residence of the ‘veguer’ and in 1730 it passed from the ‘Desclergue’ family to a lawyer called ‘Anton Tomàs’. In the second half of the 19th century it was a popular café and in the 1970’s, as it was going to collapse, it was restored. At present it is the central office of BBVA.
Segle XVI amb modificacions posteriors.
Fou estatge del veguer i vers el 1730 deixà de pertànyer a la família dels Desclergue per passar a mans del doctor en dret Anton Tomàs. En la segona meitat del segle XIX es convertí en un popular cafè i la dècada de 1970, davant l'amenaça de desplomar-se, es va fer una rehabilitació necessària. Actualment és la seu de les oficines de BBVA.
Montblanc (Tarragona/ Catalunya/ Spain)