View allAll Photos Tagged hell
Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist once we grow up.
Pablo Picasso
Modelka: Ewelina
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On Monday, Nov 7, I went for a stroll at Hells Hollow with another photographer (and with my toddler in a carrier on my back). I managed to get a few ok shots. I can't wait to go back with the 4x5 (maybe in snow).
The forth true miniland scale entry for LUGNuts 55th Build Challenge - 'Rubber side down. Shiny side up' - is this customised ride - Hell Razor.
Another street fighter, this time with a cracked skull tank-side motif and horn seat motif. Exhausts exit via the left hand side on a grazed, chrome side pipe. Again the chrome-ringed ratior makes an appearance, matched by chrome detail on the topside of the fuel tank.
A dual, stacked headlamp design makes an appearance, taking the sticker feature from the Lego Nr. 8371 'Extreme Power Bike' from the 'Drome Racers' theme of 2003.
Other features are a single dial intrument set, and a small wedge wind deflector.
Hell Razor is a tough bike for a tough biker, and it makes it's intent clear to all.
Even in hell, somebody has to keep order. So when the damned cause trouble, the Hell P.D. are called in. Officer Brimstone (Badge number 666) is a hard working demonic minion patrolling the nine circles of Hell in his soul wagon.
Doomed souls don’t often have a lot to look forward to, and an eternity of having your eyes continually pecked out can diminish your respect for authority – even if that authority is the Devil. Because demons can be lazy and dumb, there are often chances for the tormented to cause trouble, disrupt the smooth running of purgatory or worse – try to escape. This is where officer Brimstone and his colleagues in the Hell P.D. come in. Catching errant souls and shackling them in the back of a soul wagon, they return them at the pointy end of a pitchfork to even worse suffering.
An ancient Green Lane running between Symondsbury and North Chideock, close to the photogenic Colmer's Hill. Many carvings on the soft gully walls form an interesting art gallery, from many years ago to more current times. A damp dark environment with many ferns and roots from the hedgerow trees above.
On Monday, Nov 7, I went for a stroll at Hells Hollow with another photographer (and with my toddler in a carrier on my back). I managed to get a few ok shots. I can't wait to go back with the 4x5 (maybe in snow).
I just read the novel "the fountainhead" by Ayn Rand. A classic novel about an architect, Howard Roark, and the uncompromising integrity you need to make art.
A great novel, but a tough read, 750 pages of heavy intellectual dialogue. This is how I envisaged Roark's first design (the Heller house); which is quite funny, because back in 1926 they never would have heard of deconstructivist architecture.
Fotos para el Web Magazine The Concert in Concert (www.theconcertinconcert.com/) Kreator + Arch Enemy + Hell + Drone - La Riviera - Madrid - 29/11/14
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The Hell Gate Bridge runs over Astoria Park in Queens. This railroad bridge was opened in 1916 and is still in use. It runs parallel of the Triborough Bridge which lies just to the south. It crosses the East River, a tidal strait between Manhattan and the Bronx, and Brooklyn and Queens.
Looking North, with Wards Island to the left and Queens on the right.
For more about this photo, see zamez.org/exploring/hell-gate
Lucky Hell.
Taboo Barcelona Burlesque Nights.
21st December 2013,
Sala Apolo,
Barcelona.
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I was making my way past The Elevator to Hell (at Epic) when I realized I never took any photos of this structure. So I setup my tripod and took a nice long exposure (due to this hallway being eerily dark). At the time of taking this, I knew what I wanted to do in editing, make it look like it's in hell.
So I opened up Topaz Adjust 5, and started tweaking. I hit on a preset that had a color scheme similar to what I wanted. Then I just needed to adjust the exposure/details. I was looking for a slightly cartoony feel (but not too much), so I really bumped up the adaptive exposure and kept the details relatively low.
Hull Fair 6th October 2012.
The annual event, the largest travelling Fair in Europe, occurs during the second week in October and has been coming to the city for over 700 years.
Canon EOS 450D f/9 125th/sec iso 100
The Hells Canyon Recreation Trail is a 36 mile trail that winds along the Snake river from Pittsburg landing south along Hells Canyon. On the weekend of March 19th, a bunch of people gathered for an "adventure run" and choose their own adventure—a 15 mile ("short") or 22 mile ("long") jet boat ride upstream, with a run back to camp, or an out and back of whatever length we wanted to travel.
Stacie, Mick, Corey, Cheryl, and I choose none of those options and hiked instead. The trail welcomed us with a hill and scenery unlike anything I've experienced on foot before. I will be back.
Hell Gate railroad bridge dating from 1917. This bridge was the inspiration for the design of Sydney Harbour Bridge in Sydney, Australia;
Randall's Island, New York City.
Olympus OM-D with a Lumix G Vario 12-35/f2.8 lens.
I left the town of Joseph, OR to drive to Hells Canyon. I expected a nice ride on a curvy road but the stupid GPS in the car had other ideas. It routed me through a very small town (??) called Imnaha and then onto a 26 mile long rough dirt road that took 2+ hours to cover. Decent scenery but the road shook all my internal organs out of place. Eventually I ended up on the road I should have been on and things got much better. I made it to a nice viewpoint on the Oregon side - I could see a lot but not into the canyon. From there it was downhill to the Oxbow and Brownlee Dam. Stark landscape but very nice.
I took these photos in mid-June 2017.
Primary artwork for a new series about the reality/existence of hell, and will examine issues like universalism, eternal security and so on. The title comes from the question "do you really think that a loving God allows people to go to hell?" And his answer was..."Hell Yes I do".