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Globe Road, Bethnal Green, London E2. Triple exposure using Diana F+ then swapped film to Holga. Ilford HP5, scan from print, cropped and frame dropped in.
The Globe Theatre, on the Southbank. I chose this angle so that the modern day crap was left out and the reconstruction looked a bit more real.
I suspect a processing fault has caused the light leak, as I think is has come in the front of the canister.
Fujica Ax-1 and Fujicolor Superia 1600.
Processed: No Culture Icons.
Scanned: Epson V500
Unofficial GLOBE 2016 cocktail party, hosted by the Pembina Institute and Real Estate Foundation of British Columbia, in Vancouver, B.C.
March 2, 2016.
Photo: Stephen Hui, Pembina Institute.
Cool Globes debuted in Chicago with a June 1, 2007 grand opening celebration attended by more than 500 people, including artists, sponsors, business and civic leaders, and children. This public event featured a news conference with Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley, the unveiling of eight globes, refreshments and live entertainment. Cool Globes' educational partner, the Field Museum, also hosted more than 230 CPS students who learned about climate change before attending the event. The globes were displayed along Chicago's lakefront, from the Museum Campus to Navy Pier, from June 1 to September 30, 2007.
Cool Globes was launched in Chicago because of the City's leadership and dedication to promoting environmentally sound policies. Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley's goal is to make his city the greenest in the nation through the promotion of environmental programs and practices, including a bike initiative, adding hybrid buses to the city's mass transit system, and building "green" libraries, public schools and police stations. Mayor Daley served as honorary co-chair of the Chicago Cool Globes project.
The Ericsson Globe (originally known as the Stockholm Globe Arena, or in Swedish nicknamed Globen, ’The Globe’) is the national indoor arena of Sweden, located in the Johanneshov district of Stockholm (Stockholm Globe City). The Ericsson Globe is currently the largest hemispherical building in the world and took two and a half years to build. Shaped like a large white ball, it has a diameter of 110 metres (361 feet) and an inner height of 85 metres (279 feet). The volume of the building is 605,000 cubic metres (21,188,800 cubic feet). It has a seating capacity of 16,000 spectators for shows and concerts, and 13,850 for ice hockey.
It represents the Sun in the Sweden Solar System, the world's largest scale model of the Solar System.
On February 2, 2009, the naming rights to the Stockholm Globe Arena were officially acquired by Swedish telecommunications company Ericsson, and it became known as the Ericsson Globe
Three globes visible here:
"Future Solar" by William Conger and Sarah McDonald, www.coolglobes.org/globe.htm?page=ajaxfiles/globe_41.htm
"Green Roofs Save Water" by Carol Luc, www.coolglobes.org/globe.htm?page=ajaxfiles/globe_40.htm
"Illionis Green Fleets" by Peta Kaplan-Sandzer, www.coolglobes.org/globe.htm?page=ajaxfiles/globe_39.htm
Though I personally take issue with the diversion of corn for energy, when I think it is a more valuable food resource.
On a greengrocers stall, Lytham, August 2010.
Taken with a Zenit TTL and Helios 44M-4 58mm f2 lens on Fuji Superia Reala 100 film, home developed in Tetenal C41 chemistry.