View allAll Photos Tagged casioexilim
Nessa fotinha, minha esposa e eu no ônibus de passeio do Parque Nacional do Iguaçu, pegando rumo às Cataratas. Foto feita pelo meu primo Marcelo.
After so much tonemapping, photoshopping and HDRing lately I thought it's time for a straight from the camera shot. Although it looks a bit like taken with a wide angle lens I actually my small casio exilim digicam. The building in the back is called the "Gasometer" in Vienna. I just love how small it looks against those stairs. Of course they don't lead into that window, it's just the perspective :-) The building in the back is about 100 feet (30 meters) away from the stairs
© Jonny Jelinek
26/07/07
T-Mobile hosted a special streetgig at the car dump in Cologne. ~1.200 people, tickets could only be won.
Pra voltar para o centro, resolvemos ir de taxi mesmo, pois eram quase 5 quilômetros até lá e depois de tanta caminhada na cidade, as pernas não permitiam mais tal passeio. Detalhe que o motorista está dormindo dentro do carro. =D
Nathan's old exilim. Yeah it doesn't work anymore, but I suppose this is where it all started... for both of us really.
My new point and shoot is even smaller than this.
Now that I have a job (YAY), I'm thinking about saving up for my dream camera...
Tracy has this odd anti-photogenic property. By this I am not talking about the way she looks in photos, really, but the way she always manages to either be talking, so her mouth is distended, or to have her eyes all the way or mostly closed, rendering all photographs of her unusable.
She also has another anti-photography property, whereby once you take one photo of her, always given the "this won't keep" treatment, she can magically be behind someone for the rest of the evening, no matter where you are standing relative to her.
She must hate being photographed, but I don't know why. She's beautiful, and she has amazing skin. I remember the birthday party at which all of her friends gave her girly stuff. I gave her lip gloss. I wonder if she ever used it.
É um sítio arqueológico que foi destinado ao culto à água. Este lugar também é denominado "Banhos do Inca".
É composto de uma série de aquedutos, canal e várias cascatas de água que correm pelas rochas.
Diz uma lenda Inca, contada pelo guia Carlos, que quem lava o rosto nessas águas, o rosto demora muito mais para envelhecer.