View allAll Photos Tagged coffeeshops
Again the manager of the coffeeshop made me laugh. He is a very humourous gentleman who always welcomes me with special attention.
Karneval der Kulturen 2018, Straßenfest, Berlin
Es gibt jedes Jahr mehr dieser Oldie-Autos, die als Imbiss genutzt werden. Die meisten haben ein Kennzeichen, dass sie wirklich als alt ausweist.
Me and Don sat at the coffeeshop to sketch. The 2 old men next to us was just enjoying the peace and quiet and talking about everything under the sun. The tranquility was a nice change for us especially for me.
Đến Antique vào một ngày quán đang sửa. 3 đứa ngồi phòng ngoài được kê rất nhiều đồ. Phủ kín xung quanh là những đồ cũ kĩ - máy may, radio, máy đánh chữ, bản đồ trái đất hình cầu bằng gỗ, những chiếc đèn đủ màu sắc. Đồ uống không quá đặc sắc nhưng cũng ko quá tệ. Ngồi lút sâu trong những chiếc ghế đệm cảm giác không muốn nhấc người lên.
Antique Cafe - số 10 Dã Tượng
Coffeeshops are establishments in the Netherlands where the sale of cannabis for personal consumption by the public is tolerated by the local authorities (in Dutch called gedoogbeleid). Under the drug policy of the Netherlands, the sale of cannabis products in small quantities is allowed by 'licensed' coffee shops. The majority of these "coffeeshops" (in Dutch written as one word) also serve drinks and food. Coffeeshops are not allowed to serve alcohol (although in the past some coffeeshops in central Amsterdam have transgressed this law without reproach)[citation needed] or other drugs, and risk closure if they are found to be selling soft drugs to minors, hard drugs or selling alcohol without a license. The idea of coffeeshops was introduced in the 1970s for the explicit purpose of keeping hard and soft drugs separated. In the Netherlands, 105 of the 443 municipalities have at least one coffeeshop. Many at the borders sell mostly to foreigners (mostly from Belgium, Germany and France), who can also buy marijuana in their own countries, but prefer the legality and higher product quality of Dutch coffeeshops. In 2010 a bill was proposed banning sale to foreigners; however, the local government of Amsterdam opposed the bill, because of the expected increase of illegal street trade. Dutch coffee houses not serving marijuana are called koffiehuis (literally "coffee house"), while a café is the equivalent of a bar.
Smoking joints has been common in cannabis coffee shops. However, since 1 July 2008 there is a tobacco smoking ban in the Netherlands which allows smoking joints containing tobacco in a separate smoking room only. Bongs and pure cannabis joints can still be smoked inside the premises. However, most coffee shops still sell mixed joints/ spliffs, i.e. those with tobacco mixed with marijuana, and have made customers smoke in upstairs or downstairs rooms. In some shops, however, the separation room rule is only as 'separate' as the smoking/non-smoking 'separation' sections in many restaurants and bars around the world.
This cafe was directly below our apartment.
This part of our adventures on our Grand Tour of Europe is in episode one of the Take Flight with Scott video series on YouTube. Please join us there for even more content from this trip.
I've been to Hoochie Mamma's a few times lately. It's near a major hospital where I was visiting a friend. The food is wonderful and the cups are ORANGE.
Classic corner coffeeshop in classic corner building. Had time to grab a drink March 1 before taking what was probably my last Metra trip for a long time...
7 -+ EVs
partial image by; Chris Bloch. HDR, CGI legend in Hollywood movie production. Also an asshole as a friend once in a while. IRET technology is an extented/enhanced algorithm of HDRImaging developed by mavenimagery.
Processed by: mavenimagery Labs, Universal Studios, Californa.
HDR PROCESSED with IRET (Iris Range Enhancement Technology)
IRET (Iris Range Enhancement Technology and MavenFilters are products of mavenimagery Labs Innovation)
*This is HDR enhanced with IRET. This is as close as the eye sees. This is how maven o_o. This is what HDR meant to be. HDRI (High Dynamic Range Imaging) is one of the most controversial techniques that has emerged in the photographic front. It’s original purpose was to expand the shadow and highlight details by combining multiple images shot at different exposure in order to create more balanced with increased dynamic range. However, some geniuses misinterpreted this and started taking HDR to edge…of Grand Canyon, producing dramatic and surreal images that look like more painting than photographs. Whether you love it ( I hate it) or hate it SHDR (Surreal High Dynamic Range) is here to stay…at least for a while, until it fades as quickly as any other trends. Trends come and go in photography, but Photorealism will stay forever. And IRET was developed for this purpose…only. Any photo editing program manufacturer which will produce IRET will be forced to exclude Hyper-realistic presets and functions in their programs. That’s a promise. Your candy-like colors, saturated to the the extreme images will be obsolete in no time.
maven's note: This image has been processed with IRET (Iris Range Enhancement Technology). The image below was tonemapped with photomatix and postprocessed in Ps and Lr., The 'Photomatix' and 'IRET' watermarks here used for tutorial purpose, and only to show before and after processesing. Any differences in quality/or superior result is left to the judgment of the viewer. This tutorial is about introducing IRET (Iris Range Enhancement Technology) only.
*Original files can be provided upon request to anyone who'd like to experiment.
Maven has the confidence that the trained eye will see what's been trying to convey here!