View allAll Photos Tagged coralgables
of the morning, all life silently waits for the sunrise. Sun must rise for the darkness to sink! ~ Mehmet Murat Ildan
One more from this amazing sunrise @ Matheson Hammock Park.
Processed with VSCO with l1 preset
of the best memories are made in flip flops. ~ Kellie Elmore
Walking under the umbrella sky @ Coral Gable, FL.
El hogar del fundador de la ciudad George Merrick.
Incluido en el Registro Nacional de Lugares Históricos, CORAL GABLES MERRICK HOUSE fue el hogar del reverendo Solomon G. Merrick, Althea Fink Merrick y sus seis hijos. George, el hijo mayor, fundó y desarrolló la Ciudad de Coral Gables, incorporada en 1925. Existente hoy en día como lo fue en la década de 1920, la casa representa un homenaje a la historia del sur de la Florida y al legado de la familia. Muestra arte, libros, fotografías, muebles y otras pertenencias de la familia Merrick.
and turn your face into the wind.
Feel it sweep along your skin in an invisible ocean of exultation.
Suddenly, you know you are alive.” ~ Vera Nazarian.
Beautiful morning at Matheson Hammock Park, Coral Gables, FL.
El hogar del fundador de la ciudad George Merrick.
Incluido en el Registro Nacional de Lugares Históricos, CORAL GABLES MERRICK HOUSE fue el hogar del reverendo Solomon G. Merrick, Althea Fink Merrick y sus seis hijos. George, el hijo mayor, fundó y desarrolló la Ciudad de Coral Gables, incorporada en 1925. Existente hoy en día como lo fue en la década de 1920, la casa representa un homenaje a la historia del sur de la Florida y al legado de la familia. Muestra arte, libros, fotografías, muebles y otras pertenencias de la familia Merrick.
El hogar del fundador de la ciudad George Merrick.
Incluido en el Registro Nacional de Lugares Históricos, CORAL GABLES MERRICK HOUSE fue el hogar del reverendo Solomon G. Merrick, Althea Fink Merrick y sus seis hijos. George, el hijo mayor, fundó y desarrolló la Ciudad de Coral Gables, incorporada en 1925. Existente hoy en día como lo fue en la década de 1920, la casa representa un homenaje a la historia del sur de la Florida y al legado de la familia. Muestra arte, libros, fotografías, muebles y otras pertenencias de la familia Merrick.
Some lovely light and shadow on ferns at the Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden in Coral Gables, Florida.
Font daurada / Fuente dorada / Golden Fountain - Osceola Lake - University of Miami (Coral Gables - Miami-Dade County - Florida - USA) 21/10/2016 - ND_7200_009688_modificat_01
Reflexions a la posta de sol de la font al llac Osceola, vora la Universitat de Miami a Coral Gables.
Reflexiones en la puesta de sol en la fuente del lago Osceola, en la Unisersidad de Miami en Coral Gables.
Reflection on sunset in the Osceola lake fountain at Miami University at Coral Gables
A green iguana (Iguana iguana) sunning at the Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden in Coral Gables, Florida.
Purple waterlily in a pond. Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden, Coral Gables, Florida.
We need to persistently complain to Flickr about the awful and discouragingly slow new page. If they don’t listen to us as members and capriciously insist on shoving this horrible beta page down our throats, then, when the time comes, we should respond by not renewing our Flickr Pro account. It’s as simple as that. I’ve been uploading fewer photos and commenting less because of this. I´m not willing to waste valuable time waiting for the page to finish opening and downloading everything on it!. To try to make it faster Flickr considerably slashed the number of comments appearing on each page, but it has not worked; the page is still slower. Also, I have witnessed a considerable drop on the number of comments on my photos, due to the fact that Flikr members are commenting less. I don’t blame them! Flickr needs to listen and listen well to our message: get rid of the beta garbage they insist on calling “Bigger, Faster and more Flickr-er”.
First stop on Chihuly installation at Fairchild Gardens in Miami, FL.
Binary stars are rarities in the universe (relatively speaking), and the communication of light from our Sun to this glass vision, this 'sole del citron', suggested this cosmological interlinking, at least as far as I'm concerned. You can almost sense the response from this fantastic glass sun-that-fell-to-Earth with its counterpart in the heavens.
I could have spent my day with this piece, but there was so much more to witness!
More to come …
sol del citron, 2014. glasswork by dale chihuly.
littletinperson
p.s. this is one of those images that remind me that photography really is an art. if i had to categorize this particular image, i would call it a study. if i get the opportunity to return (before the installation is removed at the end of may,) i'll shoot this much differently i think. same angle … just much differently. ltp