View allAll Photos Tagged goodshot
The Tour de France Grand Depart competitors as they sped through Burngreave in Sheffield. 7 shots of these riders uploaded plus 9 others from today.
GOOD SHOT! Congrats Photo by @gultenozguler Selected by @bunyms ____________________________ Follow ✪ @VSCOGoodShot Tag ✪ #VSCOGoodShot ●fb.com/vscogoodshot ●http://twitter.com/vscogoodshot ____________________________ #shxxx_hub #vscocam #vsco #best #onthetable #photography #photographer #photography #photo #art #fotoğraf #goodshot #best #vscoturkey #vscogrid #oneistanbul #photographer #vscoturkeyy #vscodaily #colors #vscocamgram #vscophile #great #exploretocreate #moodygrams #artofvisuals #folkgood #folkmagazine #livefolk via Instagram ift.tt/1QOMprh
GOOD SHOT! Congrats Photo by @istanbulkadar Selected by @bunyms ____________________________ Follow ✪ @VSCOGoodShot Tag ✪ #VSCOGoodShot ●fb.com/vscogoodshot ●http://twitter.com/vscogoodshot ____________________________ #shxxx_hub #vscocam #vsco #best #portrait #photography #photographer #photography #photo #art #fotoğraf #goodshot #best #vscoturkey #vscogrid #oneistanbul #photographer #vscoturkeyy #vscodaily #colors #vscocamgram #vscophile #great #exploretocreate #moodygrams #artofvisuals #folkgood #folkmagazine #livefolk via Instagram ift.tt/1IyZsoQ
A shot on the beach, camera on the sand in my hat, Manari on the road to Cape Leveque, which we had visited with the mob in '91, so we just explored the track up the coast for 60k or so, well worth the detour, for a day, with some nice camp spots.
Now about to be sacrificed to a LNG plant!! at James Price Point.
Near Minarriny and the Yellow River, Bindingankun.
see the water here...
Tracks along the Lurujarri Trail see the Australian Geographic Magazine 112 Jan 2013
from Minarriny (Couomb Point) via Walmadan (James Price Point), Kardilakan (Quandong Point), Nuwirrar (Barred Creek), Wirrkinymirri (Willie Creek), Ngunungkurrukun (Coconut Well), and Cable Beach near Broome and the Goolarabooloo Community past Minyirr (Gantheaume Point).
See and hear some history here..
www.abc.net.au/radio/programitem/pglxGLMnd6?play=true
Looks like we vote for the Greens again to save the Planet in 2016...
P9092820
Es arquitectura natural, esa que encuentras incrustada en un palo, cuando fijas tu mirada en momentos vacíos de una mañana vacashional
What neat repast shall feast us, light and choice,
Of Attic taste, with wine, whence we may rise
To hear the lute well touched
Part of the highly commercialised sponsors' parade of vehicles prior to the Tour de France competitors. Seen in Burngreave.
Part of the highly commercialised sponsors' parade of vehicles prior to the Tour de France competitors. Seen in Burngreave.
Professional camera manufacturers don't want you to know that it's not the camera that matters — it's how you use it.
Even if you're just using an entry-level camera or even a cell phone, YOU can take professional fine art photographs! And you can get the most out of the camera using the Transformation 4-Step System, which costs less than even a standard lens!
Get your Transformation 4-Step System Masterclass now, and start taking the best photos of your life today.
Tim Shields,
newsletter.laptoplife.com/lt.php?s=74a00ffdec965e04d0679b...
Interesting, but full-on American-style chat!
Some good points for new members of Flickr..
Since I've recently had a few friends IRL who have joined Flickr, I thought I'd post some thoughts about how folks can get the most out of Flickr.
I would also encourage all of you to add to this discussion with your own thoughts, even if you disagree. Because one of the things I've learned is that not everyone joins Flickr for the same reasons.
What I get out of Flickr might be completely different that Tom, Leslie, or Mary.
So here ya go. Remember, please post your own thoughts. And I'm going to make this discussion "sticky" so that it's easily findable.
And these are in no particular order - I just use numbers to calm my OCD.
1. If you want "likes" and comments, you must give likes and comments. Just posting a picture and expecting a response won't work.
2. I'll be using the word "engage." To me, on Flickr, it means like and comment on pictures. It also means engaging in group discussions.
3. Follow people and engage with them regularly. Flickr gives you a feed on the home page where you can scan all of the pictures that the people you follow have posted. That should be one of the first places you visit. It is for me, and I look at it a couple of times a day.
4. One place to start finding pictures is in the Explore section on Flickr. That's kind of why Flickr created it. HOWEVER, keep in mind that everyone (well...almost everyone) craves getting their pictures into Explore. And it will give you a lot of likes, views and comments. But it probably will not get you many followers, if any. And it ISN'T a measure of the quality of your picture. Getting your picture "explored," with the exception of some of the pictures at the top of Explore, is almost random (there are groups where this is the only topic of discussion). But it will give you a place to start.
5. Join groups. Contribute pictures to those groups. And, if there are discussions, participate in them. Some groups are just repositories for pictures. Other groups, like the one this post is in, have a pretty robust (and weird) discussion section. Also...LOOK at the pictures in those groups. You'll find that most people on Flickr do NOT look at the pictures in groups, they just post to them assuming that other people are looking. They aren't. But if you're looking for ENGAGEMENT, look at the pictures in the groups. My own practice is to limit the groups I post picture in to less than 20. And I make a point of looking at the pictures in every group I post to. If you come across someone posting to 100 groups or more, they're NOT looking at the pictures in the groups they post to.
6. Note that I said LOOK at the pictures. There is no requirement that you like or comment on every picture. I don't. I only "like" pictures I really like. And I only comment on pictures where I truly I have something to say. Other people are more liberal with their liking or commenting. And that's OK. I just tend to be a bit miserly. But when I like or comment on a picture, it's genuine. But to each his or her own.
7. A warning though. Don't like every picture, and don't comment on every picture. If you do, there are people out there that get a little cynical about that behavior. And we can tell that's what you're doing. So be genuine.
8. Flickr isn't the most reliable online service. Sometimes you'll click on something and see, what we call "pandas." You'll know it when you see it. Just reload the page and that will work 95% of the time. But if Flickr really quits working, just hang out on Facebook for a while or read a book. Flickr sometimes has to wake up their programmer, who has probably run out of rubber bands.
9. Use key words. Most of my pictures are found because I use a LOT of tags/keywords. And write something useful in the descriptions. People search for stuff and those keywords and descriptions are how they find pictures. Most of the views I get are from people who have found the pictures because of searches.
OK. Now hopefully below, others in this group (which includes quite a few Flickr veterans), will add their tips and hints. And I'll add a few too.
Welcome to Flickr!
By the way, Flickr predates Facebook and Twitter. Those upstarts!
Copied from here..
www.flickr.com/groups/14815092@N22/discuss/72157721920249...
Animarse a entrar es como introducirse en un mundo extraño. Un aire que no se respira, y animales que miran con ojos delatores.
Part of the highly commercialised sponsors' parade of vehicles prior to the Tour de France competitors. Seen in Burngreave.
Sun setting after a hot-air balloon ride at Langfang Economic Development Zone near the Beijing Tianjin expressway in China. Overlooking corn stalks and dirt road. Photo taken 2003/08/10.
Sun setting after a hot-air balloon ride at Langfang Economic Development Zone near the Beijing Tianjin expressway in China. Overlooking corn stalks. Photo taken 2003/08/10.
GOOD SHOT! Congrats Photo by @h.rebel Selected by @bunyms ____________________________ Follow ✪ @VSCOGoodShot Tag ✪ #VSCOGoodShot ●fb.com/vscogoodshot ●http://twitter.com/vscogoodshot ____________________________ #shxxx_hub #vscocam #vsco #best #photography #photographer #portrait #photography #photo #art #fotoğraf #goodshot #best #vscoturkey #vscogrid #oneistanbul #photographer #vscoturkeyy #vscodaily #colors #vscocamgram #vscophile #great #exploretocreate #moodygrams #artofvisuals #folkgood #folkmagazine #livefolk via Instagram ift.tt/1MUYzJd
GOOD SHOT! Congrats Photo by @peppe_vas Selected by @bunyms ____________________________ Follow ✪ @VSCOGoodShot Tag ✪ #VSCOGoodShot ____________________________ #shxxx_hub #vscocam #vsco #best #city #photography #photographer #photography #photo #art #fotoğraf #goodshot #best #vscoturkey #vscogrid #oneistanbul #photographer #vscoturkeyy #vscodaily #colors #vscocamgram #vscophile #great #exploretocreate #moodygrams #artofvisuals #folkgood #folkmagazine #livefolk via Instagram ift.tt/1l8awEx
Walking along the edge of Hangzhou's West Lake near the hotel Shangri-La during the early summer on a bad weather hot, windy, and overcast day. I saw a nice spread of lotus root on my side of the lake. Photo Taken 2003/07/15.
This is really fantastic and great use of modern technology!
What they are watching www.youtube.com/watch?v=HXLr-evLLUQ
see a Facebook page! www.facebook.com/events/342846315728601/
See TED for technology See www.ted.com/
Alfred Canning produced a detailed map during his 1906-7 survey and the subsequent construction of a practical Stock Route between Halls Creek and Wiluna during 1909 – 10 - 11. The original map was about 5 metres long by one metre wide and Westprint is fortunate to have a copy in its collection. However, it is extremely difficult to display due to its size. The map runs down the sheet and is easiest to read when rolled out on the floor.
In 1978 the Western Australian Mines department reproduced Canning’s map on two sheets as part of the states’ 150th Anniversary. The maps quickly sold and were not available again until 1993 when they were again reprinted by the Mines Department.
A friend of the Westprint family has been so impressed by his copies of these maps and so disappointed that they have not been readily available that he decided to arrange for a license to have them reprinted. This digitally-enhanced version is of high quality and should interest any Canning Stock Route traveller or historian.
The sheet size is 990mm by 700mm printed one side with two sheets in the set. It is supplied rolled in a tube and comes laminated. $7.00 postage..
Buy - Laminated map set $49.00 - Add to Cart
See current Exhibition at the National Museum of Australia
www.nma.gov.au/exhibitions/kaninjaku
Kaninjaku is on show until August 2016 in the Gallery of First Australians at the National Museum of Australia in Canberra. Entry is free.
The Canning Stock Route
The Canning Stock Route is a track that was developed on Aboriginal homelands as mining and pastoral industries expanded in Western Australia. This is the story of the Canning, told from the perspectives of the Aboriginal people whose country it crossed. It is a story of contact with kartiya (white people), of conflict and survival, of exodus and return. Above all, it is a story of family, culture and country.
Kaninjaku: Stories from the Canning Stock Route takes highlights from the Museum’s groundbreaking 2010 exhibition Yiwarra Kuju: The Canning Stock Route and combines them with 17 works from the Museum's collection that have not previously been displayed.
Explore the artworks and stories of the Canning Stock Route
The Canning Stock Route Collection
The Museum acquired the Canning Stock Route Collection in 2009. It includes 116 paintings, sculptural works, contemporary cultural objects, documentary material, and oral histories by 60 artists who travelled along the Canning Stock Route on a return-to-country trip in 2007. This project was initiated by FORM, a not-for-profit arts organisation in Perth.
The National Museum of Australia regards this collection as one of truly national significance, providing a living archive of Aboriginal perspectives and experiences of our shared history. It is an important, evolving and dynamic addition to the nation’s heritage and history collections.
Leader of the pack at this point.
The Tour de France Grand Depart competitors as they sped through Burngreave in Sheffield. 7 shots of these riders uploaded plus 9 others from today.
water in the old stream has eroded a fine water hole for drinking animals and Aborigines from the Dreamtime..
On the Len Beadell Sandy Blight Junction Track…
See an excellent TED Talk here on Deep Listening..
See also gramma hole… museum.wa.gov.au/explore/wa-goldfields/water-arid-land/gn...
On the Plenty Highway, Boulia to Alice Springs.
see shot in "Explore Australia's Great Inland" Bill Andrews 1986 89 p69 Plenty Highway
See road conditions, at these links, but there are no supplies at Tobermorey
see www.exploroz.com/Places/27777/NT/Jervois.aspx
and www.openroad.com.au/travel_4wd_plentyhighway.asp
Read about the the first and last Great Camel race from Uluru to the Gold Coast in 1988…
www.abc.net.au/news/2023-04-18/the-great-australian-camel...?
P7251131Termite hill
Mapped approx...