View allAll Photos Tagged enterpreneur
This was taken in Reber, in the new York North Country, which I thought a very, very small farming town. Research on-line finds that it is designated only as a “populated place” incorporated within the more defined and substantial (2000 inhabitants!) town of Willsboro (no pretentions at elegance with an “ugh” on that) of revolutionary war vintage. Here, aging farmland, and farmland newly rejuvenated by Amish or new age organic enterpreneurs, mixes with maturing forests and views that are honey on the heart.
The subject of this landscape is Mt. Poko-O-Moonshine, modest in elevation but with two fine trails, a vintage fire tower (zoom... it's there), famed rock climbing routes, and excellent summit views of Lake Champlain, Vermont, and higher Adirondack peaks nearby. It’s a treasure in its own right, along with the varied and rich country that surrounds it. It's handsome in any season, but invites "Another Autumn View"
This is processed from RAW in LR, PS and gently textured with an offering in Topaz. The result is as close to the eye's imagination as possible.
The rituals of Devibaran and Sindur Khela in progress in Chatu Babu-Latu Babu house in Beadon street in North Kolkata.This grand old mansion was built by the Bengali enterpreneur-millionaire of the 18th century - Ramdulal Dey.He was supposed to have maintained trade relations with America!The Durga Puja originally started by him in 1770 became famous during the lifetime of his sons Chatubabu and Latu Babu.The Puja is now carried on by the descendants.
On the last day of Durga Puja- Vijayadashami- Bengali ladies carry out the rituals of Devibaran and Sindur Khela.Dressed in all their traditional finery they apply sindur (vermillion) on the forehead and feet of the Goddess and offer her Paan (betel) and sweets .This is how a married daughter is seen off from her parental home in Bengal.After this the ladies indulge in a little fun as they apply vermillion on each other's forehead and faces.Hence the name Sindur Khela - playing with vermillion.:-)
I took this shot in the graceful interiors of Chatubabu Latubabu house.The light was a bit dim but I hope my friends enjoy this glimpse of the traditional festivities of Bengal.
Available on Getty Images' Catalogue
A view of the Minaret that used to welcome visitor to this abandoned town. The entrance to a ghost town that from this place seemed to be above the clouds
Consonno likely originated in the Middle Ages and remained a small farming village of 200-300 people until the 40s. Later the beginning of the war started to depopulate it finding itself with just some 60 inhabitants at the end of the 50s.
In 1962 an Italian enterpreneur bought the whole town from a real-state group that owned all the houses in the village. The village was completely destroyed, except for the church of San Maurizio , the rectory, an adjoining house and the tiny cemetery, and all the inhabitants were forced to leave.
In its place was constructed a small "Las Vegas style" town, as a sort of entertainment place that could be reached easily not being far from Milan. Commercial and entertainment buildings in a variety of architectural forms were built: a shopping mall with an Arabic minaret and a top floor housing small apartments for holidays, a
Chinese style pagoda, a medieval castle, as well as a luxury hotel. The hill facing the country side was also smoothed to improve the panoramic view from the village.
After the initial attention, primarily governed by the novelty of the place, Consonno's "land of toys" felt into oblivion, former inhabitants would say as a punishment from God itself, mainly due to a series of landslides that swept away the new road that connected this village with the center of the nearest town. The town was abandoned before all the projected buildings and structures could be completed.
Getting there was a small adventure as what seems to be the only road available was very narrow and alongside the cliff, this leaves you hoping you will not find traffic in the opposite direction as you slowly drive there.
Consonno likely originated in the Middle Ages and remained a small farming village of 200-300 people until the 40s. Later the beginning of the war started to depopulate it finding itself with just some 60 inhabitants at the end of the 50s.
In 1962 an Italian enterpreneur bought the whole town from a real-state group that owned all the houses in the village. The village was completely destroyed, except for the church of San Maurizio , the rectory, an adjoining house and the tiny cemetery, and all the inhabitants were forced to leave.
In its place was constructed a small "Las Vegas style" town, as a sort of entertainment place that could be reached easily not being far from Milan. Commercial and entertainment buildings in a variety of architectural forms were built: a shopping mall with an Arabic minaret and a top floor housing small apartments for holidays, a Chinese style pagoda, a medieval castle, as well as a luxury hotel. The hill facing the country side was also smoothed to improve the panoramic view from the village.
After the initial attention, primarily governed by the novelty of the place, Consonno's "land of toys" felt into oblivion, former inhabitants would say as a punishment from God itself, mainly due to a series of landslides that swept away the new road that connected this village with the center of the nearest town. The town was abandoned before all the projected buildings and structures could be completed.
Getting there was a small adventure as what seems to be the only road available was very narrow and alongside the cliff, this leaves you hoping you will not find traffic in the opposite direction as you slowly drive there.
... I will be posting more from this interesting forgotten place in the future.
Getting there was a small adventure as what seems to be the only road available was very narrow and alongside the cliff, this leaves you hoping you will not find traffic in the opposite direction as you slowly drive there.
Consonno likely originated in the Middle Ages and remained a small farming village of 200-300 people until the 40s. Later the beginning of the war started to depopulate it finding itself with just some 60 inhabitants at the end of the 50s.
In 1962 an Italian enterpreneur bought the whole town from a real-state group that owned all the houses in the village. The village was completely destroyed, except for the church of San Maurizio , the rectory, an adjoining house and the tiny cemetery, and all the inhabitants were forced to leave.
In its place was constructed a small "Las Vegas style" town, as a sort of entertainment place that could be reached easily not being far from Milan. Commercial and entertainment buildings in a variety of architectural forms were built: a shopping mall with an Arabic minaret and a top floor housing small apartments for holidays, a
Chinese style pagoda, a medieval castle, as well as a luxury hotel. The hill facing the country side was also smoothed to improve the panoramic view from the village.
After the initial attention, primarily governed by the novelty of the place, Consonno's "land of toys" felt into oblivion, former inhabitants would say as a punishment from God itself, mainly due to a series of landslides that swept away the new road that connected this village with the center of the nearest town. The town was abandoned before all the projected buildings and structures could be completed.
Looking back on your life so far, this Holiday Season,
what experience stand out as your 'most' memorable?
Imagine yourself compiling a list of memorable moments
and reflecting on the things you'll have done up to this point.
Whether you see yourself as an Enterpreneur, Adventurer,
Explorer, Homemaker, Artist, Boho, Hobo, or No-Hoper, there's
room for it all when making your list. From the simplest of everyday
pleasures you'd like to make time for, to any lifelong ambitions
you're keen to tackle, writing a list you have accomplished or need
to accomplish is a chance to remind yourself of what genuinely captures
our curiosity, challenges our imagination, and keeps us involved.
Above all, taking a step back from your everyday life, ask yourself
questions and take a fresh look at life-- the past, present and future.
Give yourself the freedom to consider, maybe for the first time, what is
you really want to do with the wonderful life you've got left...
Have Yourself A 'Magical' Merry Christmas! Be Very 'Merry'!
'Thank You' for all your continued visits, heartwarming comments and faves!
Your undying support makes it all 'worthwhile'! Stay 'Blessed'! My Flickr Friends.
Please 'Bear With Me' If I Won't Be Able To Visit Your Streams On Time!
Villa La Cassinella is surrounded by mistery. This beautiful lake residence has been restored in the early 1920s by engineer Carlo Mantegazza, and it is famous today for the privacy it can give to its guests: the villa is infact reachable exclusively by boat. Giacomo Mantegazza continued with the modernisation work started by his father, making Villa La Cassinella one of the most amazing buildings on Como Lake.
Maintaining the traditional architecture like the other lake villas, La Cassinella is perfectly blend together with the nature of its garden, so that it is impossible to distinguish the swimming pool and the tennis court; you could never imagine that inside the villa there are also a cinema and a gym. La Cassinella is for very wealthy people: the rent is € 100.000 for a week, about € 700 per hour.
This peculiarity made the villa exclusive, and the magazine Forbes inserted it among the most beautiful villas in the world for the holidays. The four buildings composing La Cassinella can host up to 20 guests, but nothing is knew about the priviledged ones: the Qatar’s Sheikh wife (owner of the Italian brand Valentino) has been enchanted by the lake of Como, but nobody has more information about her stay at the villa. An air of mistery also surrounds the real owner of La Cassinella: in a recent article published by La Provincia di Como there was the name of the manager. Richard Branson, the British enterpreneur who owns the Virgin Group, was supposed to be the owner of the villa. He denied that some time ago: “Me? The owner of Villa La Cassinella? Wishing it were true…”.
But there’s a certainty: a stay in this lake residence is pure luxury.
Villa La Cassinella is surrounded by mistery. This beautiful lake residence has been restored in the early 1920s by engineer Carlo Mantegazza, and it is famous today for the privacy it can give to its guests: the villa is infact reachable exclusively by boat. Giacomo Mantegazza continued with the modernisation work started by his father, making Villa La Cassinella one of the most amazing buildings on Como Lake.
Maintaining the traditional architecture like the other lake villas, La Cassinella is perfectly blend together with the nature of its garden, so that it is impossible to distinguish the swimming pool and the tennis court; you could never imagine that inside the villa there are also a cinema and a gym. La Cassinella is for very wealthy people: the rent is € 100.000 for a week, about € 700 per hour.
This peculiarity made the villa exclusive, and the magazine Forbes inserted it among the most beautiful villas in the world for the holidays. The four buildings composing La Cassinella can host up to 20 guests, but nothing is knew about the priviledged ones: the Qatar’s Sheikh wife (owner of the Italian brand Valentino) has been enchanted by the lake of Como, but nobody has more information about her stay at the villa. An air of mistery also surrounds the real owner of La Cassinella: in a recent article published by La Provincia di Como there was the name of the manager. Richard Branson, the British enterpreneur who owns the Virgin Group, was supposed to be the owner of the villa. He denied that some time ago: “Me? The owner of Villa La Cassinella? Wishing it were true…”.
But there’s a certainty: a stay in this lake residence is pure luxury.
My home Internet connection is still down, apologize for not getting to you soon... :-(
Dasaad Musin Concern building, an ex-company during the colonialism era.
Dasaad Musin Concern was the only local enterpreneur at his time which had an office in central city in 1857.
PA_1448 [50 points]
A big green invader in a narrow street in the 15ème arrondissement of Paris. Invaded in covid-19 times with curfew. A few weeks later Paris was in a kind of lockdown again. It was the 3956th space invader in the world.
Onscreen FlashInvaders message: READY FOR THE NEXT ONE?
All my photos of PA_1448:
PA_1448 (Close-up, September 2021)
PA_1448 (Wide shot 1, September 2021)
PA_1448 (Wide shot 2, September 2021)
Date of invasion: 01/12/2020
[ Visited and flashed this one more than 9 months after invasion due to the covid virus ]
© Milan Cvetanovic
All rights reserved!
Buy 4 get 1 free. Stumbled upon these two girls during my exploration of the city, I got a special deal during my purchase.
Well well well, here we are after a year and a half. Even though I read some of the previous picture descriptions and they make me cringe several times per paragraph, it is rather funny to see what I did, what I wrote and what I was written 15 months ago or so.
Right now I feel older somehow (though quite understandably), and on the verge of becoming a full-blown adult with 18 years and an empty canvas I am, too, in the middle of my late teenage years crisis. I have about 10 carreers I would love to study (yes, 10) and a desire to explore beyond my country (but, at the same time, the paranoia of money running out).
As of today, I am writing this as I continue to shoot, though less frequently and in more concise events, with a lot more Photoshop tricks and a lot less fantasy-like image altering like I used to. I'm trying to create a business in fashion and a business in photography and a touch of journalism, deciding which place should be the best to try to develop myself. Buenos Aires? New York Cirty? Los Angeles? London? Elsewhere? Everywhere?
As I struggle with these doubts, I would love to hear you guys comment about which places do you believe best to study (or simply have a go at) photography and be an enterpreneur.
Have you guys changed too?
Sofia
PA_1448 [50 points]
A big green invader in a narrow street in the 15ème arrondissement of Paris. Invaded in covid-19 times with curfew. A few weeks later Paris was in a kind of lockdown again. It was the 3956th space invader in the world.
Onscreen FlashInvaders message: READY FOR THE NEXT ONE?
All my photos of PA_1448:
PA_1448 (Close-up, September 2021)
PA_1448 (Wide shot 1, September 2021)
PA_1448 (Wide shot 2, September 2021)
Date of invasion: 01/12/2020
[ Visited and flashed this one more than 9 months after invasion due to the covid virus ]
Rue des Entrepreneurs 30/07/2022 18h10
Rue des Enterpreneurs with at the right the Rue Edmond Roger.
Rue des Enterpreneurs
The Rue des Entrepreneurs in Paris, France is an overall residential street located in the Paris 15th arrondissement. It is running from Avenue Émile Zola (at number 76) to rue de la Croix Nivert (at number 102). It is about 775 metres long and 14 metres wide. Its name comes from the entrepreneurs of the 19th century who owned land nearby, after its creation in 1851.
The street displays a noticeable diversity of architectural styles, mixing haussmannian buildings and modern constructions from the 80's.
Among remarkable monuments, there is la paroisse Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Grenelle, built in 1828.
[ Wikipedia ]
Trosky (literally "debris") is one of the most significant places in Czech lands with unique look. It was built on a relict of a volcano, two basalt towers which were exposed by long time erosion, those towers made of compact basanite were originally magma flows of two monogenetic volcanos. Due to it´s material composition, the towers are strong enough to bear the buildings. The building began around 1380, first the inner castle between the towers was completed, then the turrets on the towers which were accessible from the lower buildings through wooden towers and bridges. The lower, pentagonal tower is known as Baba (old hag) and is freely accesible, the higher one is named Panna (maiden) and is actually isolated and inaccessible. A spiral staircase to Panna had to be built in 1841, but was never finished after the death of the builder. The castle stood on the royal side in the Hussite wars, and was unsuccesfully besieged in 1424 by the Hussites. It was taken through a ruse by marauders in 1438, which withstood all attacks for years and terorized the surrounding county until 1444. After it was bought by the owner of the nearby Kost Castle in 1455, Trosky lost it´s primal role and became only a local administrative center for the next century. It served as a base for Swedes in the Thirty years war, in 1648 the castle burned down. It was bought in 1821 by the Aehrentals, a new type of rich enterpreneurs who invested into rescue od cultural heritage sites, and also Trosky has been changed into a tourist attraction, but the work was not finished. The castle became property of the Czech tourist club in 1920ies, the walls have been conserved, in 2000 the Baba tower was made accesible with incredible lookout into the landscape. It´s a place worthy of a visit.
Deep in the backcountry of Tuva, near the Mongolian border, we stopped for a shower using our R&M Hot Water system built into The Turtle IV’s Rickard bumper.
Place Violet 30/07/2022 18h06
An open space in the 15ème arrondissement of Paris.
Place Violet
Place Violet is located at the intersection between rue Violet and rue des Entrepreneurs in the 15eme arrondissement in the quartiers Grenelle and Javel.
Like rue Violet, the square owes its name to Léonard Violet (1791-1881), municipal councilor of the former commune of Vaugirard and real estate entrepreneur, who bought from the commune and divided up a large part of the district between 1824 and 1829. extending south of the current Boulevard de Grenelle between Rue de la Croix-Nivert and the Seine.
It was previously part of departmental road number 10 located on the former commune of Grenelle before its attachment to Paris in 1863.
Length: 60 meters
Width: 60 meters
[ Wikipedia ]
PA_1448 [50 points]
A big green invader in a narrow street in the 15ème arrondissement of Paris. Invaded in covid-19 times with curfew. A few weeks later Paris was in a kind of lockdown again. It was the 3956th space invader in the world.
Onscreen FlashInvaders message: READY FOR THE NEXT ONE?
All my photos of PA_1448:
PA_1448 (Close-up, September 2021)
PA_1448 (Wide shot 1, September 2021)
PA_1448 (Wide shot 2, September 2021)
Date of invasion: 01/12/2020
[ Visited and flashed this one more than 9 months after invasion due to the covid virus ]
the igorot stairs, built in1995, is a tribute conceptualized by a local enterpreneur dedicated to the indigenous mountain tribe of the cordilleras, the igorots. the igorots are a peaceful family dedicated people that practiced animism but were known to be fierce warriors when threatened. they used to practice headhunting. they are known for their intricate and elaborate body tattoos as well as their farming and land cultivation skills. one of their greatest achievements is the banawe rice terraces. the igorots are subdivided into 5 ethnolinguistic groups: Bontoc, Ibaloi, Isnag (or Isneg/Apayao), Kalinga, and the Kankanaey. for further info: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Igorot_people
the igorot stairs, built in1995, is a tribute conceptualized by a local enterpreneur dedicated to the indigenous mountain tribe of the cordilleras, the igorots. the igorots are a peaceful family dedicated people that practiced animism but were known to be fierce warriors when threatened. they used to practice headhunting. they are known for their intricate and elaborate body tattoos as well as their farming and land cultivation skills. one of their greatest achievements is the banawe rice terraces. the igorots are subdivided into 5 ethnolinguistic groups: Bontoc, Ibaloi, Isnag (or Isneg/Apayao), Kalinga, and the Kankanaey. for further info: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Igorot_people
From a photoshoot for the founder of Handmade from Tanzania. She is featured in Emirates' Open Skies (in flight) Magazine this month.
Work done for an Archallenge Competition which was cancelled before giving the results.
The project is about creating an Enterpreneur's meeting point near Plaça de les Glories in Barcelona. Public space, green and propose a new way of urban movility are the base for our proposal.
4 of September 2015
Group Members:
Joan Aliart
Pol Bosch
Clara Roma
Javi Ruiz
From a photoshoot for the founder of Handmade from Tanzania. She is featured in Emirates' Open Skies (in flight) Magazine this month.
Visit her Facebook www.facebook.com/HandmadefromTanzania
Issuu Link: issuu.com/motivatepublishing/docs/openskies_feb_2015/48
Trosky (literally "debris") is one of the most significant places in Czech lands with unique look. It was built on a relict of a volcano, two basalt towers which were exposed by long time erosion, those towers made of compact basanite were originally magma flows of two monogenetic volcanos. Due to it´s material composition, the towers are strong enough to bear the buildings. The building began around 1380, first the inner castle between the towers was completed, then the turrets on the towers which were accessible from the lower buildings through wooden towers and bridges. The lower, pentagonal tower is known as Baba (old hag) and is freely accesible, the higher one is named Panna (maiden) and is actually isolated and inaccessible. A spiral staircase to Panna had to be built in 1841, but was never finished after the death of the builder. The castle stood on the royal side in the Hussite wars, and was unsuccesfully besieged in 1424 by the Hussites. It was taken through a ruse by marauders in 1438, which withstood all attacks for years and terorized the surrounding county until 1444. After it was bought by the owner of the nearby Kost Castle in 1455, Trosky lost it´s primal role and became only a local administrative center for the next century. It served as a base for Swedes in the Thirty years war, in 1648 the castle burned down. It was bought in 1821 by the Aehrentals, a new type of rich enterpreneurs who invested into rescue od cultural heritage sites, and also Trosky has been changed into a tourist attraction, but the work was not finished. The castle became property of the Czech tourist club in 1920ies, the walls have been conserved, in 2000 the Baba tower was made accesible with incredible lookout into the landscape. It´s a place worthy of a visit.
Trosky (literally "debris") is one of the most significant places in Czech lands with unique look. It was built on a relict of a volcano, two basalt towers which were exposed by long time erosion, those towers made of compact basanite were originally magma flows of two monogenetic volcanos. Due to it´s material composition, the towers are strong enough to bear the buildings. The building began around 1380, first the inner castle between the towers was completed, then the turrets on the towers which were accessible from the lower buildings through wooden towers and bridges. The lower, pentagonal tower is known as Baba (old hag) and is freely accesible, the higher one is named Panna (maiden) and is actually isolated and inaccessible. A spiral staircase to Panna had to be built in 1841, but was never finished after the death of the builder. The castle stood on the royal side in the Hussite wars, and was unsuccesfully besieged in 1424 by the Hussites. It was taken through a ruse by marauders in 1438, which withstood all attacks for years and terorized the surrounding county until 1444. After it was bought by the owner of the nearby Kost Castle in 1455, Trosky lost it´s primal role and became only a local administrative center for the next century. It served as a base for Swedes in the Thirty years war, in 1648 the castle burned down. It was bought in 1821 by the Aehrentals, a new type of rich enterpreneurs who invested into rescue od cultural heritage sites, and also Trosky has been changed into a tourist attraction, but the work was not finished. The castle became property of the Czech tourist club in 1920ies, the walls have been conserved, in 2000 the Baba tower was made accesible with incredible lookout into the landscape. It´s a place worthy of a visit.
Thanks to Minister of Enviroment Pritection - Mr. Szyszko, thousands of trees are falling down all around Poland. New law that came into force as of January 1st 2017 alows to cut down any tree that grows on the private property of any person not being enterpreneur. The effect is the mass felling of trees and shrubs, especially in urban areas. The process does not spare the parks, gardens and other green areas. Even the few hundred years old trees are falling down in this massacre.
Trosky (literally "debris") is one of the most significant places in Czech lands with unique look. It was built on a relict of a volcano, two basalt towers which were exposed by long time erosion, those towers made of compact basanite were originally magma flows of two monogenetic volcanos. Due to it´s material composition, the towers are strong enough to bear the buildings. The building began around 1380, first the inner castle between the towers was completed, then the turrets on the towers which were accessible from the lower buildings through wooden towers and bridges. The lower, pentagonal tower is known as Baba (old hag) and is freely accesible, the higher one is named Panna (maiden) and is actually isolated and inaccessible. A spiral staircase to Panna had to be built in 1841, but was never finished after the death of the builder. The castle stood on the royal side in the Hussite wars, and was unsuccesfully besieged in 1424 by the Hussites. It was taken through a ruse by marauders in 1438, which withstood all attacks for years and terorized the surrounding county until 1444. After it was bought by the owner of the nearby Kost Castle in 1455, Trosky lost it´s primal role and became only a local administrative center for the next century. It served as a base for Swedes in the Thirty years war, in 1648 the castle burned down. It was bought in 1821 by the Aehrentals, a new type of rich enterpreneurs who invested into rescue od cultural heritage sites, and also Trosky has been changed into a tourist attraction, but the work was not finished. The castle became property of the Czech tourist club in 1920ies, the walls have been conserved, in 2000 the Baba tower was made accesible with incredible lookout into the landscape. It´s a place worthy of a visit.
Originally a gothic castle built before 1316, soon being extended after gold mines opened in the surrounding area. Many owners switched in the coming centuries, a reconstruction in late renaissance style was finished in 1677, and a neogothic upgrade was done in 1870. The last private owner was a wealthy enterpreneur, communists confiscated the castle in 1948. Thankfully it was not damaged in the next decades by some lowly use, and today is a popular tourist target, inside is also a motorcycle museum.
Sundeep Bhardwaj (Nick names -Sam ,Kaku) in ROHTANG PASS,KULLU MANALI, HP,India
READ IT SERIOUSLY !!!
I've learned.... That when you're in love, it shows.
I've learned.... That just one person saying to me, "You've made my day!" makes my day.
I've learned.... That being kind is more important than being right.
I've learned.... That you should never say "no" to a gift from a child.
I've learned.... That I can always pray for someone when I don't have the strength to help him in some other way.
I've learned.... That sometimes all a person needs is a hand to hold and a heart to understand.
I've learned.... That life is like a roll of toilet paper. The closer it gets to the end, the faster it goes.
I've learned.... That we should be glad God doesn't give us everything we ask for.
I've learned.... That money doesn't buy class.
I've learned.... That it's those small daily happenings that make life so spectacular.
I've learned.... That under everyone's hard shell is someone who wants to be appreciated and loved.
I've learned.... That the Lord didn't do it all in one day. What makes me think I can?
I've learned.... That to ignore the facts does not change the facts.
I've learned.... That when you plan to get even with someone, you are only letting that person continue to hurt you.
I've learned.... That love, not time, heals all wounds.
I've learned.... That the easiest way for me to grow as a person is to surround myself with people smarter than I am.
I've learned.... That everyone you meet deserves to be greeted with a smile.
I've learned.... That no one is perfect until you fall in love with them.
I've learned.... That life is tough, but I'm tougher.
I've learned.... That opportunities are never lost; someone will take the ones you miss.
I've learned.... That when you harbor bitterness, happiness will dock elsewhere.
I've learned.... That one should keep his words both soft and tender, because tomorrow he may have to eat them.
I've learned.... That I can't choose how I feel, but I can choose what I do about it.
I've learned.... That everyone wants to live on top of the mountain, but all the happiness and growth occurs while you're climbing it.
I've learned ... That it is best to give advice in only two circumstances; when it is requested and when it is a life threatening situation.
Copyright 2011 © sundeepkullu.com All rights reserved.
The Stock samples of SDBWP SunDeep Bhardwaj World Photography in flickr Photostream cannot be Copied,Distributed,Published or Used in any form,full or in part,or in any kind of media without prior permission from Sundeep Bhardwaj the owner of these images.Utilization in other websites,intenet media,pages,blogs etc without written consent is PROHIBITED.
The images are also available for licence through GETTY IMAGES or directly by contacting Sundeep Bhardwaj Kullu Himachal Around the World to more than 50+Countries & 200+Major Destinations across 6 Continents.
Sundeep Bhardwaj Kullu
sb@sundeepkullu.com
+91 9816499629
+974 55344547
HCV Project Founder Sundeep Bhardwaj
HCV founder Sundeep Bhardwaj is a enterpreneur and a Landscape photographer who has travelled to more than 40 countries in the world in over 100 major destinations across East & West Europe, North & South America, Indian Sub-continent, Africa, South East Asia & The Middle East.He has done many professional assignments for famous magazines and have been associated with Lonely Planet for landscape Photography of Himalayas.
He was born in Sundernagar, another nearby beautiful town on the foothills of Himalayas in Himachal Pradesh(HP)India.He is a Serious Photographer with expertise in Landscapes of the Himalayas in India, Nepal, China, Bhutan & Tibet and Landscapes of more than 40 countries he has travelled to.
He has varied experience ranging from 5-star hotel chains to 5-star international airlines to brands like American Express.He holds 3 degrees in BHM (GCC-Bangalore),B.Pub.Admn.(H.P.University,Summer Hills, Shimla) & MBA-Sales & Marketing (Symbiosis,Pune).He is deeply attached to India and wants to come back in near future to do more for HCV. sundeepkullu.weebly.com
HIMACHAL CULTURAL VILLAGE
An ethnic Himachali cultural village experience in the foothills of the Himalayas in India.
A eco-friendly project encouraging HP Government scheme, "Home Stay Yojana" and highlighting "Har Gaon Ki Kahani"(Every Village Tale)
LATITUDE- 32° 6'53.43"N
LONGITUDE- 77°10'27.67"
hcvkullumanalihimachalindia.com
An ethnic Himachali cultural village experience in the foothills of the Himalayas in India.
A eco-friendly project encouraging HP Government scheme, "Home Stay Yojana" and highlighting "Har Gaon Ki Kahani'
(Every village tale)
Project under construction...
These are reduced sized pictures.Orignal pictures shot in 5,616 × 3,744 (21.1 megapixels) using Canon EOS 5D Mark II FULL FRAME DSLR CAMERA or 3872 x 2592 (10.2 million effective pixels) using NIKON D60 DSLR or 4,288 × 2,848 (12.3 effective megapixels) USING NIKON D90 DSLR's.
Official website sundeepkullu.com
All rights reserved.
copyright 2011 © sundeepkullu.com
Developer - phototube.co
Affiliation - himachalculturalvillage.com
Source en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hohenschwangau_Castle
Slide Shows | Full Screen Mode | Adobe Flash -
www.flickr.com/photos/wittysam/sets/72157624062638852/show/
WORLD IS MY STUDIO sundeepkullu.com
who could forget that time when ice creams were a prized treat to the children of our era? ahh.... the sweet clanging sound from a tiny bell that signalled the coming of the most coveted treat a child can ever imagine - "Flavor of the Road" ice cream!*
*Flavor of the Road ice cream - popular among filipinos as an alternative to the more expensive commercial ice creams sold in supermarkets and stores. It is locally made by small time enterpreneurs at their home or at a small shop and sold in streets by ambulant vendors.