View allAll Photos Tagged crying
Strobist: SB800 camera left and slightly behind. SB800 camera right and slightly behind. Hensel strobe with beauty dish camera right.
Probably crying for that last nice sunny afternoon of winter before the spring rain started...
In Losaida, playing with the flash...
Loisaida (pronounced /ˌloʊ.iːˈsaɪdə/) is a term derived from the Latino (and especially Nuyorican) pronunciation of "Lower East Side", a neighborhood in Manhattan, New York City. The term was originally coined by poet/activist Bittman "Bimbo" Rivas in his 1974 poem "Loisaida". Loisaida Avenue is now an alternative name for Avenue C in the Alphabet City neighborhood of New York City, whose population has largely been Hispanic (mainly Nuyorican) since the 1960s.
One of the twenty-three bronze sculptures that make up Fairytale Sculptures by the Sea. Some of these fairytales are known all over the world (Hansel and Gretel), while other sculptures relate to the surroundings of Scheveningen (Herring Eater). Beelden aan Zee museum commissioned American sculptor Tom Otterness to design and make all the sculptures.
The bronze had a special treatment to get the special red toning.
thefairytalesbythesea.wordpress.com/fairytales/2-the-cryi...
It's tough growing up . . . learning to fly . . . hunt . . . find enough food to survive. It was much easier living in a nest and having nest service.
Member of the Flickr Bird Brigade
Activists for birds and wildlife
this is the output of a grungy effect that went wrong.
model: ysa, ate (partially seen)
mua: none
- photo taken using Nikon D60 + 18-55mm kitlens.
- pp'd using CS3
This is the woman behind the veil, naked and desperate, crying for the love that went away, or crying for the fate of being the wife that stands behind her man.
I went to visit Cider today and as I was leaving she started meowing and crying... She still needs to put on about 250 grams before she can come home...
(Têmpera e colagem sobre canson 40cm X 60cm). VENDIDO.
(Tempera and collage on canson 40cm X 60cm). SOLD.
High scorer on the Apgar test (8.6 or 8.9) He started crying right after they suctioned out the mucus and settled down almost as quickly.
La Recoleta Cemetery, Buenos Aires, Argentina
La Recoleta Cemetery (Spanish: Cementerio de la Recoleta) is a cemetery located in the Recoleta neighbourhood of Buenos Aires, Argentina. It contains the graves of notable people, including Eva Perón, presidents of Argentina, Nobel Prize winners, the founder of the Argentine Navy, and a granddaughter of Napoleon. In 2011, the BBC hailed it as one of the world's best cemeteries, and in 2013, CNN listed it among the 10 most beautiful cemeteries in the world.
The monks of the Order of the Recoletos arrived in this area, then the outskirts of Buenos Aires, in the early eighteenth century. The cemetery is built around their convent and a church, Our Lady of Pilar (Iglesia de Nuestra Señora del Pilar), built in 1732. The order was disbanded in 1822, and the garden of the convent was converted into the first public cemetery in Buenos Aires. Inaugurated on 17 November of the same year under the name of Cementerio del Norte (Northern Cemetery), those responsible for its creation were the then-Governor Martin Rodríguez, who would be eventually buried in the cemetery, and government minister Bernardino Rivadavia. The 1822 layout was done by French civil engineer Próspero Catelin, who also designed the current facade of the Buenos Aires Metropolitan Cathedral. The cemetery was last remodeled in 1881, while Torcuato de Alvear was mayor of the city, by the Italian architect Juan Antonio Buschiazzo.
Set in 5.5 hectares (14 acres), the site contains 4691 vaults, all above ground, of which 94 have been declared National Historical Monuments by the Argentine government and are protected by the state. The entrance to the cemetery is through neo-classical gates with tall Doric columns. The cemetery contains many elaborate marble mausoleums, decorated with statues, in a wide variety of architectural styles such as Art Deco, Art Nouveau, Baroque, and Neo-Gothic, and most materials used between 1880 and 1930 in the construction of tombs were imported from Paris and Milan. The entire cemetery is laid out in sections like city blocks, with wide tree-lined main walkways branching into sidewalks filled with mausoleums.