View allAll Photos Tagged framework!
This is a hand built bridge in Guelph, Ontario, Canada which has no nails, screws or bolts! It's all put together by engineering and a few wooden pegs!
Tom Clancy's The Division
- ~20MP hotsampling via SRWE;
- ReShade framework;
- Hatti's tool for timestop, weather toggle, time of day, freecam and FOV.
the framework of one referencing a plurality as the - framework knowingly - or unknowingly breaking the fourth - wall for all - the world is a stage from one perspective referencing a plurality as the framework
Obrunnschlucht, Odenwald (Germany)
Zenza Bronica EC-TL
Zenzanon 2.4/80
Agfapan 400, expired 01/93
400 ISO, exposed @ 100 ISO
Rodinal 1+25
7min @ 22°C
A view through the roof of the new building of the Faculty of Science of the University of Trento, which hosts the lecture rooms.
See also Another Framework by Michele Pedrolli
A series of silhouettes of leaf skeletons, photographed in close-up on a lightpad, and then given a graduated tone from blue to brown
The nation’s first steel-framed conservatory was built by Jay Gould in 1881. Only the framework of the 390-foot-long greenhouse remains.
"Watch_Dogs"
-4500x6000 (Nvidia custom resolutions)
-Natural & Realistic Lighting Mod by Danvsw
-Camera Tools by Otis_Inf
Camera: Zenza Bronica EC-TL
Lens: 75mm Nikkor f2.8
Film: Ultrafine Extreme 100
Developer: Xtol
Scanner: Epson V600
Photoshop: Curves, Healing Brush (spotting)
Cropping: None
KCR radio personnel got all dressed up, DJs for the crowd at the annual new years day Polar Bear Swim.
Wednesday Links to Tangles, Tutorials and Giveaways #zentangle #Giveaways #ArtJournal
lifeimitatesdoodles.blogspot.com/2018/01/wednesday-links-...
Miramar is a city in Broward County, Florida, United States. As of the 2010 census, the population was 122,041. It is a principal city of the Miami metropolitan area, which is home to over 6 million people.
Miramar was founded by A.L. Mailman to serve as a "bedroom community" for nearby Miami and Fort Lauderdale. Mailman bought the original property he was to develop from H.D. Perry, Sr. in 1953. He built 56 homes on the property that were inexpensive homes of concrete and flat roofs. These homes sold quickly because of the low cost of both the homes and the land, and the city of Miramar came into being.
The city was incorporated on May 26, 1955 and was named for the Miramar area of Havana, Cuba where Mailman had a summer home (Miramar translates to "look at the sea" in Spanish). At the time of incorporation, the city had a population of less than two hundred people. With approximately 2.9 square miles land area, Miramar's original city boundaries were Southwest 64 Avenue on the east, University Drive on the west, the Dade County line on the south, and Pembroke Road on the north. On June 20, 1955, the city's first mayor (Robert Gordon) and city council were sworn in, all of whom were appointed by the governor and served until January 1959, at which time the first municipal election was held.[7] Mayor Robert Gordon is the individual who is attributed to have given the city its name. The city seal is inscribed with the motto "Beauty and Progress".
H.D. Perry Sr.'s part in Miramar did not cease with selling the land to Mailman for development. He is recognized as one of the foremost pioneers in the history of Miramar. His character and civic-activities influenced not only the lives of early residents, but continues to the present day, as evidenced by the schools and parks in the city which bear his family's name. Many long-time residents fondly recall the community barbecues hosted by Mr. and Mrs. Perry during those early years. Others are grateful to Mr. Perry for the lessons in animal husbandry, which he conducted for the benefit of Miramar's youth so that they could learn something of farm life.
The only major roads when Miramar was developed were U.S. 441 which was a two-lane road at that time, Hallandale Beach Boulevard to Southwest 66 Terrace and Pembroke Road which was a dirt road to University Drive. There were no other transportation routes of any kind supplying access to the new community. Miramar's early city fathers advocated the philosophy of planned and controlled growth. The city adopted a Comprehensive Land Use Plan in 1972 before cities and counties were mandated to do so. This provided the framework for the orderly development of future growth. Two-thirds of the land within city limits is currently undeveloped.
Credit for the data above is given to the following website:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miramar,_Florida
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