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I found myself in Berlin at an abstract exhibition by a recently deceased German light artist. The exhibit featured projections of videos and sound, the dimensions of which were peculiar. I lay on a cushion and watched the display flash by on the drapes of linen and the people that walked between them.
I loved the sci fi feeling of walking in this space, with these people and these shapes cut out of light. This one came straight out of camera, no double exposure.
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I took a draping class with sewing group at DAAP, and got to play with the fabric :) It was so of fun!
White flowers with petals that drape the inner petals like they have a white skirt. JC Raulston Arboretum Raleigh, NC
Murree (Punjabi, Urdu: مری) is a hill station and summer resort and the administrative centre of Murree Tehsil, Pakistan, which is a subdivision of Rawalpindi District and includes the Murree Hills.
Murree was the summer capital of the British Raj in the Punjab Province (British India). A popular tourist destination Located in the north-west Himalayas at an average altitude of 2,291 metres (7,516 ft), the city of Murree, draped in forests of pine, and oak, experiences pleasant summers and cold, snowy winters. The city is famous for its buildings styled in tudorbethan and neo-gothic architecture dating from the colonial era.
Murree is located along the Islamabad-Murree Highway, some 58.3 km (36.2 mi) northeast of Islamabad.
Murree was developed in 1851 by the (then) President of the Punjab Administrative Board, Sir Henry Lawrence, and was originally established for the British troops garrisoned on the Afghan frontier as a sanatorium.Officially, the municipality was created in 1850.
The permanent town of Murree was constructed at Sunnybank in 1853. The church was sanctified in May 1857, and the main road, Jinnah Road, formerly known as The Mall (and still commonly referred to as), was built. The most significant commercial establishments, the Post Office, general merchants with European goods, tailors and a millinery, were established opposite the church. Until 1947, access to Jinnah Road was restricted for "natives" (non-Europeans).
Until 1876, Murree was the summer headquarters of the Punjab local government; after 1876 the headquarters were moved to Shimla.[
The railway connection with Lahore, the capital of the Punjab Province, via Rawalpindi, made Murree a popular resort for Punjab officials, and the villas and other houses erected for the accommodation of English families gave it a European aspect. The houses crowned the summit and sides of an irregular ridge, the neighbouring hills were covered during the summer with encampments of British troops, while the station itself was filled with European visitors from the plains and travellers to Kashmir.
Murree is one of the largest resort towns in the Galyat area of Pakistan, and is the municipal or regional capital of Murree Tehsil* (*general administrative subdivision), it is an administrative division of the Rawalpindi District. The town of Muree is situated on the southern slopes of the Western Himalayan foothills as they ascend northeastward, towards the bifurcated states of Kashmir. During British colonial rule in the nineteenth century, its altitude was established at 7,500 feet (2,300 m).
Murree is accessible by road from the centre of the Islamabad and Rawalpindi areas. It is still associated with Britain; many British fruits (including cherries, raspberries and strawberries) thrive locally. There is an Anglican church, built in 1857, located at the centre of the town, which is still used as a place of worship. Many houses around the church are still standing, functioning mostly as hotels. Old traditional restaurants have been replaced by fast-food shops and newer restaurants. Some famous old places of accommodation, such as the Rich Villa Inn and Gulberg Hotel, have completely disappeared. A typical hotel provides a motel-type accommodation with breakfast and communication access. Newly built hotels are also accessible
Murree houses headquarters of 12th infantry division of Pakistan Army and large number of educational and training institutions. Combined Military Hospital established to cater the needs of civilian population of Murree and adjoining areas. Pakistan Air Force also maintains base at Lower Topa. For administrative purposes the military areas of Murree are divided in two separate cantonments, Murree Cantonment and Murree Hills Cantonment.
Murree Houses residence for Punjab Governor at the Kashmir point. The imposing building was built in nineteenth century by the British. There are Punjab and Sindh Houses to cater needs of the provincial government. Similarly, there are Rest Houses for the Judges of Supreme Court and Lahore High Court. A large number of government, semi government and private departments and institutions maintain guest houses in Murree. A number of diplomatic missions based in Islamabad established their camp offices in Murree in the 1960s. The same however are seldom used now. Adjacent to Murree is the Galliat region of North West Frontier Province which includes Nathiagalli, Ayubia, Khanspur, Dunga Galli, Khairagalli and Changla Galli. Before the British rule whether part of Rawalpindi District of Muzaffarabad, Murree and Galiat have been part of same administrative unit, however in 1850 the British decided to divide them between Rawalpindi and Hazara. Howevere despite divided by provincial boundaries, Murree and Galliat are inseparable both geographically, culturally, linguistically as well as from the point of view of the tourists. Murree serves as a gateway to Galliat.
[Bhurban]] and New Murree (Patriata) have also developed as tourist centres. The whole Murree Galliat region is known for its scenic beauty. Mountains overhung with pines and oaks, bubbling with gurgling springs, crisscrossed by rivulets, dotted with sprawling lawns and orchards overloaded with fruits present a nice spectacle. A fine view of the snowy peaks of Kashmir is to be had on a clear day, and the crest of Nanga Parbat can sometimes be seen.
Bhurban, boosting with a five star Pearl Continental Hotel and a nine hole Golf course has cropped recently as another tourist attraction in the area. Lying at an altitude of 6000 ft, Bhurban is situated at a distance of 13 kilometres from Murree on one of main roads leading to Azad Kashmir. The Punjab government is said to have plans to develop New Murree city at Patriata fifteen kilometres southeast of Murree. The Punjab Tourism department constructed resorts amidst the forests on the Patriata ridge in 1987 as well as a 3 kilometre sky slope from the top of Patriata ridge to Gulara Gali (not functioning currently). Patriata is connected with Islamabad and Murree through a number of all weather roads.
Strobist: 1 Profoto 600w/s Monolight at 1/8 power thru a ebay version silver beauty dish with a 20degree grid directly overhead of model.
"Rouge" was an adult mix of circus and burlesque. They actively encouraged (non-flash) photography (at least while the performers were clothed) and I think a few of them worked out OK.
Highwire Entertainment
This is Freddie, my Mama's Boy. He puts up with a lot in the name of being able to cuddle whenever he chooses.
Material: Lace
Color Option: Red
Size: Free Size
Front Clothes Length: 74cm, Back Clothes Length: 94cm, Bust: 70cm, Sleeve Length: 46cm, Shoulder Width: 33cm, Waist: 56cm
www.buytrends.com/Products/sexy-lace-irregular-draped-zip...
Important Note:
1. The size refers to clothing dimensions, NOT your body measurements.
2. Please check the measurement chart carefully. Because of different producing batches, there may be deviation of 2~3 cm.
3. Due to limitations in photography and the inevitable differences in monitor settings, the colors shown in the photograph may not correspond 100% to those in the items themselves.
::C'est la vie !:: Drape cami(flower)groupgift
Creator : larcoco.mathy
::C'est la vie !:: mainstore ::p, Harlman (193, 23, 50)
As seen at Christopher Bachmann Photography » An Underwater Exhibition
Taken during an underwater shoot for "Form and Figure" class at Photographic Center NW.
St Mary, Burgate, Suffolk
Just south of the strange landscape of Wortham Common, and away from the horrible A143, head south towards Mellis, and not long after, you will see this ship of a church riding the western fields. For me, the view is quintessential Suffolk; a great medieval tower raised above simple council houses, surrounded by hedgerows and barley fields. There is no big house, no great hall, just the homes of the ordinary people. What a sight it must be if you have been away from it for very long!
And yet, for several reasons, this is a most unusual church, and there isn't another like it in the county. This won't be apparent from the outside, however, so instead you can admire the fine Decorated exterior, reasonably unfamiliar in this land of Perpendicular, and if it is a little over-restored by our friend Phipson, it still retains the patina of age that is more easily effaced in its architectural sequel. I was struck again at its organic feel, a natural growth in this intensely agricultural setting. St Mary is tightly hemmed in by its hedge. A large cross looms in front of the east window. The cherry trees by the porch which I had seen in full bloom nine years before were gone, except for one survival - the nice lady I met inside the church told me that they had simply died of old age.
The war memorial to the design of diocesan architect Munro Caultey is in the porch, although there is another rather more remarkable one inside, as we shall see. To the south of it are two unusual headstops to the doorway. They are portraits made in the late 1980s of the two churchwardens, Harry Baker and Billy Garrod. You step into a screened area at the west end of the church, designed in the style of a baptistery as at Gosbeck. But this is altogether on a grander scale, and beyond the lovely font, with its dedicatory inscription to the Burgates, there is another screened area, which we will also come back to in a moment. The former vestry in the south-west corner, which I had seen in 2002, has now gone, to be replaced by a meeting room and kitchen conversion beneath the tower. The west end now feels more open, but the devotional organ screen is still a memory of the Church of England as it was half a century ago.
Stepping through the doors of the screen into the body of the church, you find that Richard Phipson was pretty thorough here, and this is to all intents and purposes a Victorian church inside. There is no division between nave and chancel, the body of the church continuing eastwards the same width. In the north side, there are some fragments of medieval glass, including what may be part of an image and label of St Augustine. However, the most striking feature is the tomb of William de Burgate and his wife Alianora. This stands lengthwise on, directly in front of the altar. On top of it sits one of Suffolk's three finest brasses (the others are at nearby Redgrave and far-off Acton). William died on the vigil of St James the Apostle 1409, and Alionora died - well, we don't know. Her date has been left blank, a not uncommon occurrence. It is an awesome piece, and the whole building revolves around it. There is a near-replica of it twenty miles off at Haughley.
And yet, even while taking it in there is the distraction of the quite extraordinary side altar set against the north wall beside it. It is a shrine, a chapel of remembrance to those named on the memorial in the porch. It is the work of the Reverend Appleyard, who came here in 1919, and who was largely responsible for the Anglo-catholic makeover that this place received, and which it has never really recovered from. The thing that makes it remarkable is that all the candlesticks and furnishings are made out of shell-cases, supposedly by soldiers in a field hospital in Flanders where Appleyard was chaplain. He built the altar itself, which is set in the entrance to a former chapel, not an Easter sepulchre, as several guides suggest. If you look just behind it to the east, you'll see his helmet. Another remarkable feature of the altar is that, as well as naming the local lads who were slaughtered in northern France, it also carries the names of the two medieval de Burgates. And, as if that was not enough, St Edmund, King and Martyr. I suppose that they all died in battle of a kind. The little figure of the French Saint Bernadette was also presumably brought back from the killing fields.
If you want to see what Appleyard looked like, his portrait is up in the screened off area to the west of the main entrance, along with all Burgate's other Priests back into the 19th century. Back in 2002, the then-churchwarden showed them to me, pointing out that Appleyard was 'a bit of a tyrant'. He sounded as if he was speaking from memory. This area was Appleyard's chapel of St Edmund, a neat solution in a church with no aisles. and at the time of my last visit it had fallen into disuse, although there were plans to restore it to use. I was pleased to discover that this has now happened, and it is a beautiful devotional space in use for small-scale communions with a delightful icon of the patron Saint.
All around the church are the decorative and devotional fittings of almost a century ago, when the Church of England was at the height of its powers. The Reverend Appleyard created an interior where the power of devotion overwhelmed all wordly things. Perhaps there are many churches that were once like this, but they have been slowly cleared of clutter as the years go by, and now Burgate is one of the few that is left. I mentioned to one of the ladies inside that another writer had compared this church to an ecclesiastical junkshop, but she just laughed and said she didn't mind. "We like it like that!" she told me. And so do I.