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This religious sculpture is inside the Mezquita (mosque-cathedral) in Cordoba, Spain. I do not know who it represents; if any viewer knows anything about this I would most grateful to get that information. I tried a number of google searches but to no avail.

Old Homestead, Wyoming.

 

East St. Louis, Illinois, Big Muddy Virtual Tour using Google Street View.

- large -

 

Two days later the leaves on the trees were all gone...

 

Where: Sweden, Östergötland, Bjärka säby. google maps

When: 20101015

How and why: The path littered with autumn leaves in morning sun.

Editing: HDR tone mapped.

 

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Danger / Google It / Warning sign. Colossal Media, working on another outdoor advertsing mural in Bushwick, Brooklyn, NYC.

Photo taken with the Fujifilm X100F.

 

Justin

www.justingreen19.co.uk

 

While at Walmart one Saturday afternoon I suddenly spotted this in a hotel parking lot. It then came up into the Walmart parking lot and parked. I snapped a few pictures of it, it's the first one I've seen in person! Who knew a simple little Impreza hatchback could be so interesting? I saw it patrolling this general area a few more times in the next two or three weeks, and then saw it leave going on the freeway. Incredible!

I was just about to floor it out of a dead end in Randwick when I saw this vehicle come around the corner and roll down the hill. I reversed back with hope they’ll keep coming towards me to do their thing, but unfortunately they cut things short and came back later to cover the ground where I was stopped. I saw the street view camera a while ago now and didn’t see any fresh images published, so didn’t expect to view myself on the maps, but I checked again and there I am in SL37! This picture was taken in Albi Place and we also crossed paths on the upper end of neighbouring Milford Street. I got a picture of Google and Google got a picture of me =]

Taken at Latitude/Longitude:48.212747/16.375772. 0.51 km North-East Innere Stadt Vienna Austria (Map link)

 

For higher quality version visit gallery.var.at/g2/main.php/v/Feste2009/Regenbogenparade2009/

Chernobyl, Ukraine. KD's Virtual World Tour using Google Street View.

The great thing about this spot is that although it was foggy, you can get some clarity in the foreground, which really highlights the fog..

 

The only thing I miss about this shot is the tower of the church (the highest point in the Vale of Glamorgan) is shrouded in fog... and would probably be hidden behind the tree..

 

HDR from 3 exposures at f10

 

See where this picture was taken. [?]

From a recent visit to the famous "GooglePlex" in Mountain View.

 

I think the name really comes from the number of Google bikes one can find there...alot.

two shots of tonight's sundown,,,,6.42pm

using a Cokin Filter ...but with different setting

 

You have been sent 1 picture.

 

IMG_0081.JPG

 

These pictures were sent with Picasa, from Google.

Try it out here: picasa.google.com/

20230224-3474

 

Bij toeval fietste ik achterom bij de Fokker Terminal waar ik een schitterend gebied ontdekte waar skaters en graffiti-artiesten vrij hun gang konden gaan. Dit schijnt al 10 jaar te bestaan.

 

All images are copyrighted by Pieter Musterd. If you want to use any of my photographs, contact me. It is not allowed to download them or use them on any website, blog etc. without my explicit permission.

If you want a translation of the text in your own language, please try "Google Translate".

 

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Fotografía Nº 124.

Rocio. Una vez mas, un retrato de ella, con su mirada y su cabello al aire. jajaja

Les deseo que tengan un buen día.

Photo No. 124.

Rocio. Once again, a picture of her with his eyes and his hair in the air. lol

I wish you a good day.

  

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Camera used Hasselblad 500CM cir:1982 with 80mm f/2.8 Carl Zeiss Planar lens. Film Acros Neopan ISO100...Commercial development...

L'entrée de St Goustan à Auray

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © 2008 nathalie56 . All rights reserved - Photo non libre de droits.

I tried to start playing with the lighting a bit with these, specially with the face . It's much easier to work on figureine that a real living person.

 

This series started as I was putting away my Christmas decorations and thought "oh, some of these would make good photos to post next year". That turned into a shoot lasting three evenings and creating around 10 gigs of images.

 

This was an educational (if slightly grueling) process that helped me learn a bit more about still life, lighting and macro shooting.

  

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Chelsea, Manhattan

Yesterday, I was listening to a NPR (National Public Radio) segment in which Steve Inskeep was interviewing the pianist Herbie Hancock. Toward the end of the interview, they discussed an instance when everything seemed to fall into place for Herbie, and the whole band seemed to be in autopilot mode. He said that it was "as if his fingers were doing their own thing.” When asked if he could actually recreate a moment like that, he replied, “I'm not looking to create anything that I did before. I'm looking to create the moment that I'm actually living in at that moment.” For some reason, this stuck in my mind and I kept thinking, isn't this true of photography as well? Isn't that what Bresson called the decisive moment? I am sure I am over thinking this!

 

More on this --- Herbie Hancock: 'On A Path To Find My Own Answer' n.pr/1vRtnTA

 

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We’ve crossed the border into Mexico on my Pan-American Trek using Google Street View. The border town of Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, is very different from its cousin town of Laredo, Texas, but the cultural crossovers are still very evident. Nuevo Laredo is a key logistics hub in Mexico.

 

It’s been 8800 km from Dead Horse, Alaska, to Laredo, Texas, and it will be about 2400 km from Nuevo Loredo to Tapachula, at the Mexico-Guatemala border. Unfortunately, Google Street View isn’t available in the rest of Central America, so we’ll be doing a virtual flight from Mexico to Columbia, South America.

 

Some initial thoughts about the trip from Alaska to Texas:

* Google Street View is one of the most important photographic endeavors of history, and Street View drivers are photography pioneers. Really.

* A drive in Alaska can be the most boring imaginable or the most glorious.

* Alberta Highway 93, otherwise known as the Icefields Parkway, or Promenade des Glaciers, is heavenly.

* Towns really do have archetypal layouts; the “other side of tracks” is literally true.

* Decaying brick, wood, and metal are sustainable art.

* The US is a visibly Christian country.

* Grain and livestock businesses still exist in Grain Belt, but fewer people are needed for labor, so almost everyone has migrated, leaving modern ghost towns.

* Signage is often purposefully quirky, an artistic brand expression.

* No one is outside in the US, they’re only visible getting into, inside, or getting out of cars.

* Wall art falls into three categories – gang or random graffiti, “endorsed” wall art (by a town or business), and “unendorsed” wall art, the latter being typically the most intense and artistic.

* More old buildings exist as you go south, probably because of increased density and less harsh weather.

* The Texas Panhandle looks like it’s been standing up to a strong wind for a long time.

* Texans use trees purposefully to frame their houses.

* Mexican-Hispanic influence increases nonlinearly as a function of closeness to the Mexican border.

* Abandoned buildings are a luxury of a rich society; the US can afford to build structures that last and afford to leave them to decay without stealing their materials or re-using them in some intelligent way.

* Is it possible that there’s a “Law of Conservation of Interestingness”? In awesome landscapes the buildings are boring and aren’t made to last; in boring landscapes (dry landscapes?) the buildings are made to be more interesting and last a long time, which in turn makes them even more interesting.

* Is virtual photography a new field?

50mm with extension tubes used.

Google's Playa Vista office in the former Spruce Goose Hanger

Today would have been Anna Atkins 216th birthday, the person who created the first photographic image illustrating a book. Google have a stylised version of a cyanotype decorating their homepage, although it's crude representation rather than the real thing in context.

 

She was English, and she was a woman...!

 

Nevertheless well done Google, and happy cyanotyping everyone...

Going downhill in Pachuca, Mexico.

 

Kevin Dooley's Pan-American Trek using Google Street View.

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