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Sur la route du volcan du piton de la fournaise au petit matin quel plaisir de découvrir cette mer de nuage. Ce volcan culmine à 2 632 mètres d'altitude, volcan actif de l'île de La Réunion.
On the road to the Piton de la Fournaise volcano in the early morning, what a pleasure to discover this sea of clouds. This volcano culminates at 2,632 meters, an active volcano on the island of Reunion.
Retrouver cette photo en vente sur mon portfolio sur @artactif
Canon EOD 7D
#jmlpyt #jmlpytphotography #artistefrancais #artistephotographe #photooftheday #photography #photographie #architecture #iledelareunion #reunionisland #creole #creolestyle #creolearchitecture #gettyimagescontributor #getty #artgallery #gallery #galleryart #galeriedart #artist #oceanindien #canonfrance #tourisme #tourism #shootuploadrepeat #pitondelafournaise #volcano #volcan #artactif #yellowkorner
Littoral de Saint-Pierre à la tombée de la nuit.
Retrouver cette photo en vente sur mon portfolio sur @artactif
www.artactif.com/artistes/jmlpyt-photography/photographie...
Plus d'ïmages sur mon compte Getty Images www.jmlpyt.eu
Canon EOD 7D
#jmlpyt #jmlpytphotography #artistefrancais #artistephotographe #photooftheday #photography #photographie #architecture #iledelareunion #reunionisland #creole #creolestyle #creolearchitecture #gettyimagescontributor #getty #artgallery #gallery #galleryart #galeriedart #artist #oceanindien #canonfrance #tourisme #tourism #shootuploadrepeat #pitondelafournaise #volcano #volcan #artactif #yellowkorner
Sur la route du volcan du piton de la fournaise au petit matin quel plaisir de découvrir cette mer de nuage. Ce volcan culmine à 2 632 mètres d'altitude, volcan actif de l'île de La Réunion.
On the road to the Piton de la Fournaise volcano in the early morning, what a pleasure to discover this sea of clouds. This volcano culminates at 2,632 meters, an active volcano on the island of Reunion.
Retrouver cette photo en vente sur mon portfolio sur @artactif
Canon EOD 7D
#jmlpyt #jmlpytphotography #artistefrancais #artistephotographe #photooftheday #photography #photographie #architecture #iledelareunion #reunionisland #creole #creolestyle #creolearchitecture #gettyimagescontributor #getty #artgallery #gallery #galleryart #galeriedart #artist #oceanindien #canonfrance #tourisme #tourism #shootuploadrepeat #pitondelafournaise #volcano #volcan #artactif #yellowkorner
Sur la route du volcan du piton de la fournaise au petit matin quel plaisir de découvrir cette mer de nuage. Ce volcan culmine à 2 632 mètres d'altitude, volcan actif de l'île de La Réunion.
On the road to the Piton de la Fournaise volcano in the early morning, what a pleasure to discover this sea of clouds. This volcano culminates at 2,632 meters, an active volcano on the island of Reunion.
Retrouver cette photo en vente sur mon portfolio sur @artactif
Canon EOD 7D
#jmlpyt #jmlpytphotography #artistefrancais #artistephotographe #photooftheday #photography #photographie #architecture #iledelareunion #reunionisland #creole #creolestyle #creolearchitecture #gettyimagescontributor #getty #artgallery #gallery #galleryart #galeriedart #artist #oceanindien #canonfrance #tourisme #tourism #shootuploadrepeat #pitondelafournaise #volcano #volcan #artactif #yellowkorner
Depuis le volcan du piton de la fournaise au petit matin quel plaisir de découvrir cette mer de nuage.
Ce volcan culmine à 2 632 mètres d'altitude, volcan actif de l'île de La Réunion.
from the Piton de la Fournaise volcano in the early morning, what a pleasure to discover this sea of clouds. This volcano culminates at 2,632 meters, an active volcano on the island of Reunion.
Retrouver cette photo en vente sur mon portfolio sur @artactif
www.artactif.com/artistes/jmlpyt-photography/photographie...
Plus d'ïmages sur mon compte Getty Images www.jmlpyt.eu
a l'occasion d'halloween Profitez d'une réduction sur mon logiciel de Poste Traitement Luminar Neo skylum.evyy.net/c/249213/1491237/3255
Canon EOD 7D
#jmlpyt #jmlpytphotography #artistefrancais #artistephotographe #photooftheday #photography #photographie #architecture #iledelareunion #reunionisland #creole #creolestyle #creolearchitecture #gettyimagescontributor #getty #artgallery #gallery #galleryart #galeriedart #artist #oceanindien #canonfrance #tourisme #tourism #shootuploadrepeat #pitondelafournaise #volcano #volcan #artactif #yellowkorner
Sur la route du volcan du piton de la fournaise au petit matin quel plaisir de découvrir cette mer de nuage. Ce volcan culmine à 2 632 mètres d'altitude, volcan actif de l'île de La Réunion.
On the road to the Piton de la Fournaise volcano in the early morning, what a pleasure to discover this sea of clouds. This volcano culminates at 2,632 meters, an active volcano on the island of Reunion.
Retrouver cette photo en vente sur mon portfolio sur @artactif
Canon EOD 7D
#jmlpyt #jmlpytphotography #artistefrancais #artistephotographe #photooftheday #photography #photographie #architecture #iledelareunion #reunionisland #creole #creolestyle #creolearchitecture #gettyimagescontributor #getty #artgallery #gallery #galleryart #galeriedart #artist #oceanindien #canonfrance #tourisme #tourism #shootuploadrepeat #pitondelafournaise #volcano #volcan #artactif #yellowkorner
Garyville, Louisiana, USA
Plantation home of a 19th Century forced-labor camp devoted to the commercial production of sugar cane.
The forced labor camp was located abutting the Mississippi River for ease of transporting the product to New Orleans, the major U.S. port for cotton and U.S. sugar. The cotton was shipped to Europe, while the sugar was mostly for domestic consumption.
Louisiana is a subtropical climate with an actual winter. The growing season for sugar cane in Louisiana is much shorter than in fully tropical climates such as that of Cuba. The cane has to be cut before the first freeze, which before the hoax of global warming could come in November. The plant does not flower in Louisiana. With these drawbacks, it was thought originally that one could not commercially produce granulated sugar from Louisiana cane until Etienne de Boré proved otherwise around 1800. Large chunks of southern Louisiana became devoted to sugarcane production using the de Boré method.
While cotton planters were against protective tariffs because they bought significant farm equipment from the U.K., sugar planters were in the opposite situation. They supported a protective tariff to keep our lower cost sugar from Jamaica, Cuba, Brazil and Martinique (and elsewhere). Consequently the Whig Party was strong in Louisiana.
When racist morons argue that the Civil War had nothing to do with slavery, but instead was over high tariffs, remember how flawed that argument is with respect to Louisiana, which couldn't wait to jump on the Confederate bandwagon.
Unfortunately the course of the Mississippi River changed since the site of the house was chosen, coming much closer and cutting off almost all of the front yard. After leaving space for the levee and River Road (La. Hwy. 44), there is a chain-link fence that almost abuts the front entrance into the home. This is the best angle to get a shot of the beautiful front of the home.
Most of plantation (forced labor camp) homes are in the Greek Revival style, San Francisco represents the Creole style that is noted by the Caribbean color scheme and more importantly, the cross ventilation achieved by partition doors and lack of interior hallways.
Some of the interesting places that you get to visit if you get there at the right time, the top of the church bell tower of the Notre Dame des Anges.
Not usually open to the public but in this particular day we came across a man who had the keys to the entrance of the tower, and after paying a few rupie, not strictly allowed we started the climb to the top.
A cross section of the typical community you can find all across the suburbs on the western side of Mauritius.
Nothing really gives you a sense of how hot a tin roof can be until you walk under one on a sunny day.
I think I spent a total of five minutes here before I needed to walk outside into the relatively cooler air which was over 30℃ (86℉) and about 80% humidity.
Who knows what the inside temperature was.
All around the capital of Reunion Island stand many examples of early colonial and creole buildings.
Despite the condition of the paintwork of many of them, most if not all of them are still in use today.
To a westerner like me coming from a country where food hygiene is much more strictly controlled, with meat always stored in refrigeration the meat market in Port Louis is a very different place.
The heat, the exposed meat, the doors to the meat market open to the street outside, flies coming in and out, the air thick with the smell of fat and muscle. The rawness of it all is not just limited to the product, the whole place feels exposed and raw. The butcher cuts the meat right on the very same counter where a customer will make their selection and carry out their transaction.
How much detail do you need? That’s the idea I was playing with behind this image, how much information do you really need to understand what you are seeing, and what does it really take to invoke a response in the viewer.
When I saw this scene I was struck by the ghostly appearance of the town centre lit up, framed by the dark foreground trees catching a faint glow from the distant buildings, and the silhouette of the mountain in the distance.
I’m still not sure where this photo fits in with my other work but for some reason I keep coming back to it. I wasn’t really worrying about the technical aspects of the photo, I had no tripod, and there was very little light, plus it was misty, so I knew that whatever I was going to get was going to really push the limits of what my camera could capture, dealing with the issue of image quality was something I knew I was going to have to deal with later so it was either this or nothing, better to get a shot to see what you can do with it.
Choosing to deliberately work with what you know to be a technically bad file needs a mental shift to let yourself get the most out of the process.
c. 1910
William Woodward
Oil on canvas, 25 x 40 inches
Gift of the Estate of William Woodward (acc. 12231)
This photo shows the interior courtyard on the Madame John's Legacy site. The photo was taken from the second floor gallery of the garçonnière.
c.2000
The house with a salt box roof was built around 1805. An early owner of the house, Julee Panton, was a free black women. The cottage is reminiscent of the Creole cottages of the New Orleans French Quarter. Originally, the house was locate a few blocks from its present location. It was in near ruin before being moved and restored at Historic Pensacola, an interpretative village in the Pensacola Historic District. As an exhibit, the cottage represents the home of a working class African-American family during the Reconstruction period following the Civil War. The cottage is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Eureka House is an original house from the heyday of French colonialism and the sugar plantations of the past in Mauritius. Wandering around some of the lesser visited parts of this historic place can lead to some remarkable discoveries like this scene which although has been clearly maintained by the staff responsible for looking after the place, it has not been prepared for visitors.
Blanc-Erlanger House
924 Moss Street, between Dumaine and St Philip Streets
Bayou St. John
New Orleans
built 1816 - city landmark
DSC08321
Lorreins Plantation House, aka the Old Spanish Customs House, at Moss Street and Grand Route St. John.
1300 Moss Street (1784)
Bayou St. John
New Orleans
DSC08312
Lorreins Plantation House, aka the Old Spanish Customs House, at Moss Street
1300 Moss Street (1784)
Bayou St. John
New Orleans
New Orleans city landmark
DSC08311
Pitot House
built 1790/ 1799
built for Santiago Lorreins. OR Bartólome Bosque
James Pitot was the fourth owner of the house who resided there from 1810 to 1819, and is considerered the first "American" Mayor of New Oreans.
Other residents included
Madame Rillieux (1805–1810), Edgar Degas' great-grandmother, Felix Ducayet and Mother Cabrini, America's first named saint.
1440 Moss Street
Bayou St. John
New Orleans
20160901_134348
This image shows the rear of the Madame John's Legacy main house as well as a portion of the courtyard, circa 1970's.
Classic "New Orleans Creole Cottage" style house - high gabled roof parallel to the street, central chimney. Unlike "Creole Cottage" style in other locations (Mississippi etc), New Orleans CC's don't necessarily have a full-width front porch (although many do).
Ornate decorations, including the 4 corbels supporting the roof, the carved and painted architraves around the windows, and the wrought-iron grilles protecting the lights in the roof, are a common feature in many houses of the French Quarter (Vieux Carre) in New Orleans.
This photo shows a streetscape featuring Madame John's Legacy and the surrounding buildings, and was likely taken in the early 1970's.
The James Pitot House
Moss Street
Bayou St. John
New Orleans
built 1790 or 1799
one time home of Saint Frances Xavier Cabrini.
National Register of Historic Places - New Orleans historic landmark
DSC08309
This small informal dining room recreates an image of Creole home furnishings in the mid-18th century.
Photograph c. 1970