View allAll Photos Tagged elixir

Elixir de Espinha Santa, Elixir de Hortelã, Aro-clim Xarope, Aro-clim Composto P.A.M.

Lego Elixir. New Mutants look. My own design.

PENTAX *ist DL + Carl Zeiss Jena 135mm F/3.5

in a blaze of colour

 

I couldn't help having fun with a photo I took and distorted the lvels

Three swimsuits from Elixir. The colors are very nice, and these are great for lounging around the pool, especially since summer is here.

 

The black version is called "Black Circuitry" and has a slight gray pattern to it that you can see when it is worn if you look closely, but is subtle enough to be overlooked at a distance.

Fotomontaje psicodelico

A Photoshoot of a Club and an Enternainment Event that happened on the 25 September 2021

[+3]

who else read elixir by hilary duff? tell me what you thought about it :D

haha, i've always been a fan of hilary duff since lizzie mcguire. this is her first published book, although she didn't write it herself, i thought it had a good plot that includes a love triangle and magic. :)

i don't like the ending though. :(

Annelie, the most energetic woman ever brought to a studio

Fabulous lampwork. Mediocre photo - I need some daylight!

"castle of good hope" hope being restored

 

star fort, cape town

 

trompe l'oeil, renaissance and renovations to the fortress

 

werk in progressie, a quick visual tour

 

mural restoration, several layers re-discovered and preserved, through the decades. select specimens displayed behind perspex panels

 

restoration work in, on and under the castle- up and down stairways to discover the survivalist nature of the murals during early dutch, later british, classic ’apartheid’ and ‘neo anc apartheid colonial’ governments

 

*****

trompe l'oeil-

french for literally a trick of the eye - poor man's architecture where architectural embellishments and features are represented two-dimensionally to seem as if they are there- goes all the way back to Pompeii and probably beyond but very popular in the late Renaissance Mannerist period to which the originals of the Castle probably belong- Roger C Fisher

*****

 

visual/painterly tricks ’faking it’

3D wood grain effects painted in 2d, hand railings, pseudo wall and door panels, all beautifully efxed, faked, old school. works well with 2d photography in 2016. next year’s 3D virtual and augmented reality will change it forever

*****

 

“a lot of obvious differences between the Dutch and English styles to the layman. The Dutch murals were earlier, and more crudely and loosely painted than the later English ones which frequently incorporated the use of stencils and were generally more linear and simple in design”

*****

 

From Wikipedia

 

Coordinates

33.9259°S 18.4278°E

 

Built- 1666–1679

 

The Castle of Good Hope (Dutch: Kasteel de Goede Hoop; Afrikaans: Kasteel die Goeie Hoop) is a star fort built in the 17th century in Cape Town, South Africa. Originally located on the coastline of Table Bay, following land reclamation the fort is now located inland. In 1936 the Castle was declared a historical monument (now a provincial heritage site) and following restorations in the 1980s it is considered the best preserved example of a Dutch East India Company fort.

  

Built by the Dutch East India Company between 1666 and 1679, the Castle is the oldest existing colonial building in South Africa.

 

It replaced an older fort called the Fort de Goede Hoop which was constructed from clay and timber and built by Jan van Riebeeck upon his arrival at the Cape of Good Hope in 1652.

 

Two redoubts, Redoubt Kyckuit and Redoubt Duijnhoop were built at the mouth of the Salt River in 1654.

 

he purpose of the Dutch settlement in the Cape was to act as a replenishment station for ships passing the treacherous coast around the Cape on long voyages between the Netherlands and the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia).

 

During 1664, tensions between Britain and the Netherlands rose amid rumours of war. That same year, Commander Zacharias Wagenaer, successor to Jan van Riebeeck, was instructed by Commissioner Isbrand Goske to build a pentagonal fortress out of stone. The first stone was laid on 2 January 1666.[5] Work was interrupted frequently because the Dutch East India Company was reluctant to spend money on the project. On 26 April 1679, the five bastions were named after the main titles of William III of Orange-Nassau: Leerdam to the west, with Buuren, Katzenellenbogen, Nassau, and Oranje clockwise from it.

  

Sketch of Castle of Good Hope in 1680

In 1682 the gated entry replaced the old entrance, which had faced the sea. A bell tower, situated over the main entrance, was built in 1684—the original bell, the oldest in South Africa, was cast in Amsterdam in 1697 by the East-Frisian bellmaker Claude Fremy, and weighs just over 300 kilograms (660 lb). It was used to announce the time, as well as warning citizens in case of danger, since it could be heard 10 kilometres away. It was also rung to summon residents and soldiers when important announcements needed to be made.

 

The fortress housed a church, bakery, various workshops, living quarters, shops, and cells, among other facilities. The yellow paint on the walls was originally chosen because it lessened the effect of heat and the sun. A wall, built to protect citizens in case of an attack, divides the inner courtyard, which also houses the De Kat Balcony,[note 1] which was designed by Louis Michel Thibault with reliefs and sculptures by Anton Anreith. The original was built in 1695, but rebuilt in its current form between 1786 and 1790. From the balcony, announcements were made to soldiers, slaves and burghers of the Cape. The balcony leads to the William Fehr collection of paintings and antique furniture.[5]

During the Second Boer War (1899–1902), part of the castle was used as a prison, and the former cells remain to this day. Fritz Joubert Duquesne, later known as the man who killed Kitchener and the leader of the Duquesne Spy Ring, was one of its more well-known residents. The walls of the castle were extremely thick, but night after night, Duquesne dug away the cement around the stones with an iron spoon. He nearly escaped one night, but a large stone slipped and pinned him in his tunnel. The next morning, a guard found him unconscious but alive.

 

In 1936, the Castle was declared an historical monument (from 1969 known as a national monument and since 1 April 2000 a provincial heritage site), the first site in South Africa to be so protected.

 

Extensive restorations were completed during the 1980s making the Castle the best preserved example of a Dutch East India Company fort.

 

The Castle acted as local headquarters for the South African Army in the Western Cape, and today houses the Castle Military Museum and ceremonial facilities for the traditional Cape Regiments. The Castle is also the home of the Cape Town Highlanders Regiment, a mechanised infantry unit.

 

Symbolism

Prior to being replaced in 2003, the distinctive shape of the pentagonal castle was used on South African Defence Force flags, formed the basis of some rank insignia of major and above, and was used on South African Air Force aircraft.

 

"castle of good hope" hope being restored

 

star fort, cape town

 

trompe l'oeil, renaissance and renovations to the fortress

 

werk in progressie, a quick visual tour

 

mural restoration, several layers re-discovered and preserved, through the decades. select specimens displayed behind perspex panels

 

restoration work in, on and under the castle- up and down stairways to discover the survivalist nature of the murals during early dutch, later british, classic ’apartheid’ and ‘neo anc apartheid colonial’ governments

 

*****

trompe l'oeil-

french for literally a trick of the eye - poor man's architecture where architectural embellishments and features are represented two-dimensionally to seem as if they are there- goes all the way back to Pompeii and probably beyond but very popular in the late Renaissance Mannerist period to which the originals of the Castle probably belong- Roger C Fisher

*****

 

visual/painterly tricks ’faking it’

3D wood grain effects painted in 2d, hand railings, pseudo wall and door panels, all beautifully efxed, faked, old school. works well with 2d photography in 2016. next year’s 3D virtual and augmented reality will change it forever

*****

 

“a lot of obvious differences between the Dutch and English styles to the layman. The Dutch murals were earlier, and more crudely and loosely painted than the later English ones which frequently incorporated the use of stencils and were generally more linear and simple in design”

*****

 

From Wikipedia

 

Coordinates

33.9259°S 18.4278°E

 

Built- 1666–1679

 

The Castle of Good Hope (Dutch: Kasteel de Goede Hoop; Afrikaans: Kasteel die Goeie Hoop) is a star fort built in the 17th century in Cape Town, South Africa. Originally located on the coastline of Table Bay, following land reclamation the fort is now located inland. In 1936 the Castle was declared a historical monument (now a provincial heritage site) and following restorations in the 1980s it is considered the best preserved example of a Dutch East India Company fort.

  

Built by the Dutch East India Company between 1666 and 1679, the Castle is the oldest existing colonial building in South Africa.

 

It replaced an older fort called the Fort de Goede Hoop which was constructed from clay and timber and built by Jan van Riebeeck upon his arrival at the Cape of Good Hope in 1652.

 

Two redoubts, Redoubt Kyckuit and Redoubt Duijnhoop were built at the mouth of the Salt River in 1654.

 

he purpose of the Dutch settlement in the Cape was to act as a replenishment station for ships passing the treacherous coast around the Cape on long voyages between the Netherlands and the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia).

 

During 1664, tensions between Britain and the Netherlands rose amid rumours of war. That same year, Commander Zacharias Wagenaer, successor to Jan van Riebeeck, was instructed by Commissioner Isbrand Goske to build a pentagonal fortress out of stone. The first stone was laid on 2 January 1666.[5] Work was interrupted frequently because the Dutch East India Company was reluctant to spend money on the project. On 26 April 1679, the five bastions were named after the main titles of William III of Orange-Nassau: Leerdam to the west, with Buuren, Katzenellenbogen, Nassau, and Oranje clockwise from it.

  

Sketch of Castle of Good Hope in 1680

In 1682 the gated entry replaced the old entrance, which had faced the sea. A bell tower, situated over the main entrance, was built in 1684—the original bell, the oldest in South Africa, was cast in Amsterdam in 1697 by the East-Frisian bellmaker Claude Fremy, and weighs just over 300 kilograms (660 lb). It was used to announce the time, as well as warning citizens in case of danger, since it could be heard 10 kilometres away. It was also rung to summon residents and soldiers when important announcements needed to be made.

 

The fortress housed a church, bakery, various workshops, living quarters, shops, and cells, among other facilities. The yellow paint on the walls was originally chosen because it lessened the effect of heat and the sun. A wall, built to protect citizens in case of an attack, divides the inner courtyard, which also houses the De Kat Balcony,[note 1] which was designed by Louis Michel Thibault with reliefs and sculptures by Anton Anreith. The original was built in 1695, but rebuilt in its current form between 1786 and 1790. From the balcony, announcements were made to soldiers, slaves and burghers of the Cape. The balcony leads to the William Fehr collection of paintings and antique furniture.[5]

During the Second Boer War (1899–1902), part of the castle was used as a prison, and the former cells remain to this day. Fritz Joubert Duquesne, later known as the man who killed Kitchener and the leader of the Duquesne Spy Ring, was one of its more well-known residents. The walls of the castle were extremely thick, but night after night, Duquesne dug away the cement around the stones with an iron spoon. He nearly escaped one night, but a large stone slipped and pinned him in his tunnel. The next morning, a guard found him unconscious but alive.

 

In 1936, the Castle was declared an historical monument (from 1969 known as a national monument and since 1 April 2000 a provincial heritage site), the first site in South Africa to be so protected.

 

Extensive restorations were completed during the 1980s making the Castle the best preserved example of a Dutch East India Company fort.

 

The Castle acted as local headquarters for the South African Army in the Western Cape, and today houses the Castle Military Museum and ceremonial facilities for the traditional Cape Regiments. The Castle is also the home of the Cape Town Highlanders Regiment, a mechanised infantry unit.

 

Symbolism

Prior to being replaced in 2003, the distinctive shape of the pentagonal castle was used on South African Defence Force flags, formed the basis of some rank insignia of major and above, and was used on South African Air Force aircraft.

 

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