View allAll Photos Tagged housearrest
♥. Lock Down .♥
25% off for the duration of the event
Includes 2 styles of unrigged mesh ankle monitors
Texture hud included
8 different colors:
Cable
Cable plug
LEDs
Paw
Heart
Since item is modify, you can hide the paw & heart if you like
Copy - Modify
♥
Tag Earrings are 60L at this event!
Once winter weather begins to clamp down, normal daily activity seems to come to a halt. Around here, people tend to reduce their outdoor exposure to the bare minimum, leaving the house mostly just for work, essential errands, clearing snow and maybe to workout. Winter storms (and the associated media hype) have a way of scaring people into staying at home. Not that any incentive is needed. it's just human nature to seek warmth and safety on a cold winter day. And there's also a compounding effect that sets in as winter progresses. We've all experienced the winter 'beat-down', that feeling of weariness after extended cold weather and/or successive winter storms. Very relatable feelings of 'enough is enough' and wanting to be done with winter. Personally I feel this more in late winter and early spring than I do in the heart of winter. There is simply no hope of reprieve from the cold in the midst of January, so I am mostly resigned to it. I cope by breaking out of confinement, bundling up and taking the camera on long treks. The longer I spend at this, the more I begin to appreciate the nuance of winter photography. On one level, it's all a monolith of white; color is desaturated and photos often lack a sense of depth. But astounding texture and dimensional aspects are out there waiting to be exploited. In this scene I happened to be standing near a small stand of trees just as the sun emerged from behind heavy clouds. The surrounding landscape was covered with a heavy blanket of new-fallen snow which created this amazing visual tapestry of texture. The long shadows cast by the trees seemed to reach out to me and created a contrasting overlay full of depth. It's a serene scene, but layered with a feeling of energy and movement. Great dichotomy and a revelation for me in terms of capturing the darker side of snow. This was the end of hour three of my exploration. Had I bagged the session even five minutes sooner I would have missed this moment entirely. I came away from this feeling elated, as if I had overcome winter weather, even if only for a while.
Another wet day.
As the UK lockdown continues in England the death toll continues to rise.
Cases were spiking so we went into lockdown so 14 days later we should start to see a drop in cases, two weeks after that we should start to see a drop in the Covid related deaths.
We are all waiting to see if the lock down is having an effect.
On the predicted timetable we should have a sensible idea of what is happening by 2nd December when the government plan to relax (or not) the current restriction.
Just in time to reinfect a whole bunch of people for the 25th December - - -
Take care
Day one of the curfew/confinement here in France. My wife has taken over the living room an I work out of the kitchen.
As I can't show you new work, I might as well show you what I use for post prod. My only PC is the one on the right: a Lenovo ThinkPad W541. It runs Linux and all post is done in darktable and Gimp.
On the left is my work-laptop, issued by my employer. The picture has been taken with a Google Pixel 3a
It's going to be two VERY long weeks....
Day 131. Someday I’ll get out of the house and get a break from woodcarving. #housearrest #quarantine
... sailing past Watsons Bay.
Nicolaus Copernicus (1473 – 1543), a Polish scientist, formulated a comprehensive heliocentric cosmology, which displaced the Earth from the centre of the universe. His theory was published in On the Revolutions of the Celestial Spheres but only to the science world, in the year of his death though he had completed the theory a decade earlier.
Galileo Galilei (1564 - 1642), an Italian scientist, championed Copernicanism around 1610 and was condemned by the catholic church thus spending the rest of his life under house arrest........Wikipedia
Watsons Bay, Sydney, Australia (Saturday 10 Apr 2010 @ 4:43pm).
Shah Jahan's Contributions to architecture
The Shalimar Gardens, comprising over four-hundred fountains, were built by the Mughal emperor.
The Taj Mahal is the most notable example of Islamic architecture in South Asia; it was constructed according to the commands of the famous Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan.
Shah Jahan left behind a grand legacy of structures constructed during his reign. He was one of the greatest patrons of Islamic architecture. His most famous building was the Taj Mahal, now a wonder of the world, which he built out of love for his wife the empress Mumtaz Mahal.
Its structure was drawn with great care and architects from all over the world were called for this purpose. The building took twenty years to complete and was constructed from white marble underlaid with brick. Upon his death, his son Aurangazeb had him interred in it next to Mumtaz Mahal. Among his other constructions are the Red Fort also called the Delhi Fort or Lal Qila in Urdu, large sections of Agra Fort, the Jama Masjid, the Wazir Khan Mosque, the Moti Masjid, the Shalimar Gardens, sections of the Lahore Fort, the Jahangir mausoleum—his father's tomb, the construction of which was overseen by his stepmother Nur Jahan and the Shahjahan Mosque. He also had the Peacock Throne, Takht e Taus, made to celebrate his rule. Shah Jahan also placed profound verses of the Quran on his masterpieces of architecture.
#vincefumo #mansion #housearrest #corrupt #politician #cronie #whatisracketeering #philadelphia #philly #igers #ig_philly #igersphilly #igers_philly #ig_philadelphia #instagood #visitphilly #spring #architecture #brownstone
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Name: Aung San Suu Kyi
Dates: Born in 1945
Biography:
Aung San Suu Kyi is a pro-democracy activist currently detained as a political prisoner by the government of Myanmar (Burma). Elected Prime Minister in 1990, she has intermittently been under house arrest ever since, despite calls for her release by world leaders, human rights organizations, and even the United Nations.
As a Buddhist, Suu Kyi has advocated a non-violent struggle for democracy in the face of the military dictatorship that has been in power since 1962. Suu Kyi won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1992 and remains under house arrest today.
Learn more: Wikipedia
(http://www.brothers-brick.com/2008/01/16/aung-san-suu-kyi/)
This is what depression feels like for me.
I cannot choose to do anything.
I can't choose to go out. I have to check with my depression if it's ok first. Whether I can go there, or whether it will punish me for venturing too far with a panic attack. It might be too far from home, or too many people, or too far to the nearest building, I might spot someone who I don't like. All resulting in a panic attack.
It's taken away my ability to see things, and have them make me happy. I don't notice flowers outside, I don't notice spring about to be sprung. I'm too busy wondering if I've pushed my depression too far by being out of the house and if I'll be rewarded with - you guessed it - a panic attack.
My hands are tied behind my back - I am usually creative and want to make things all of the time, from cakes to music, to sewing, to jewellery - I want to do it all - but my depression has taken away my motivation to do any of it.
I am gagged. I don't like talking to anyone. In case they ask me a direct question that I can't answer. I can't say no. If I were to say no, I'd go home and agonise about it for hours. Will they ever speak to me again? Have I annoyed them? Have I overstepped the mark? Was I rude? Do they think I'm stupid? Resulting in... a panic attack.
Are you spotting a theme here?
The only thing that doesn't result in a panic attack is the fact that I can't remember what I was doing 5 minutes ago most of the time. Depression has taken away my short term memory. I have to go through a set of methodical steps to get anything done. If I get interrupted, I can't remember where I was, so have to start at the beginning. This means I cannot multitask. I can't make a cup of tea at the same time as having a conversation on a bad day. Hell, on a bad day, I can't even remember how to make a cup of tea.
I can't go anywhere, see anything, talk to anyone, make anything, do anything... without my depression saying it's ok to do so.
I am effectively being held hostage by my own brain. I hate it.
Depression is a horrible, dark, black, encroaching illness. It affects every area of your being. Every sleeping or waking minute is affected by it. Every breath I take I'm worried it will build into a panic attack where I literally cannot breathe, my vision starts to fade, I start to shake, I cannot talk - in fact, describing the symptoms now I can feel them all creeping back in. I am wrestling with them every minute of every day. Trying to fight them back down. Trying to climb out of the well.
The thing which I find the most difficult is when people see me smile, or walk somewhere, or maybe go into a shop, or out with friends. Anyone who sees me would think that there's nothing wrong with me. They'd think I was a fraud. They'd think that I didn't have a care in the world. What they can't see is my internal monologue, trying to coax the depression away for long enough to enable me to put one foot in front of the other. The smile will be a nervous one. If I am out with someone, usually my long-suffering husband, have a look at my knuckles. The poor guy suffers from me clinging onto him with white knuckles as if my life depended on it. Quite honestly it feels as if it does.
I just hope that anyone who sees this picture, and reads this description can understand a tiny bit about how I am feeling, and that there might not appear to be anything wrong with me, and I might appear as if I don't have a care in the world, but appearances, with depression, are very rarely what they seem.
Fergus has a 'minor' tear in his right, rear ACL. He's on house-arrest until it heals. The days are long, healing is slow, but I think we're seeing some progress. A recent x-ray revealed he has hip dysplasia in his left hip. Fingers are crossed it's stable and won't degrade over time. He's now on daily glucosamine supplements. He misses his long trail walks and his pals, but naps, lattes and delivery trucks keep him occupied for at least part of the day.
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A little town mostly visited for it's Chateau, but there are other things in the town to see.
Zoom in on the roof of the Hotel de Ville from the Quai Charles Guinot. Includes a pair of coat of arms.
The Musee de l'Hotel de Ville is open from the middle of June to the middle of September each year.
It was built between 1501 and 1505 by Pierre Morin, the finanical advisor of Louis XII (1498 - 1515). Built in the style of the First French Renaissance. Its architecture combines tradition and French Gothic, and the recently introduced Italian Renaissance style (in the early 16th century).
Like the castle / chateau, the building is built of stone, which is very modern for EPO and shows the wealth of the owner. In the early 16th century, the nearby houses were built with brick and timber (see Rue Victor Hugo for an example).
It had many owners between the 16th and 18th centuries. One of them was the Duke of Choiseul (1719 - 1785). Minister of War, Navy and Foreign Affairs of King Louis XV (1715 - 1774). It is also of Governor of Touraine, Lord of Amboise Chanteloup. He decides to buy the hotel for Morin do its Ducal Palace and installed the seat of his manorial court, The Board of Auditors and prison.
In 1786, after the duke's death, the Duchy passed to the Duke of Penthievre (1725 - 1793) , then his daughter the Duchess of Orleans.
During the French Revolution, the Palace Duke is confiscated by the Convention and provided as the Hospice General Tours. It then leased the building to the municipality Amboise who eventually became owner in 1826. Prison Justice and the salt warehouse are then installed.
Between 1848 and 1852, the hotel serves as barracks for the Garrison was responsible for monitoring the Emir Abd-El-Kader (1808 - 1883), captured in 1847 after his surrender to Algeria during the colonization of the country by the French. The Emir and his family remained under house arrest in chestnut teau d'Amboise.
In 1880, while it remains home to municipal services, the home is classified as Monument History (Monument Historique). And in 1890, noting that its condition required a major restoration, work is done.
Until the 1970s the Morin Hotel houses the administrative departments of the municipality
The birth of the museum started in the "Wedding Room" which since the 19th century has had a number of works of art. It was only gradually that all parts of the building have art. In the 1970s the Town Hall moved to a new Town Hall, and this enabled the old Town Hall to be turned into the Museum of the Town Hall. Three rooms remained in use by the municipality, the marriage hall, the Council Chamber and the meeting room Emilienne Gouverne.
Today it is a museum fron July to September. It is closed on Saturday's to allow for marriages.
A little town mostly visited for it's Chateau, but there are other things in the town to see.
This is the Hotel de Ville in Amboise. Now the Musee de l'Hotel de Ville, Amobise. As seen from the Quai Charles Guinot.
The Musee de l'Hotel de Ville is open from the middle of June to the middle of September each year.
It was built between 1501 and 1505 by Pierre Morin, the finanical advisor of Louis XII (1498 - 1515). Built in the style of the First French Renaissance. Its architecture combines tradition and French Gothic, and the recently introduced Italian Renaissance style (in the early 16th century).
Like the castle / chateau, the building is built of stone, which is very modern for EPO and shows the wealth of the owner. In the early 16th century, the nearby houses were built with brick and timber (see Rue Victor Hugo for an example).
It had many owners between the 16th and 18th centuries. One of them was the Duke of Choiseul (1719 - 1785). Minister of War, Navy and Foreign Affairs of King Louis XV (1715 - 1774). It is also of Governor of Touraine, Lord of Amboise Chanteloup. He decides to buy the hotel for Morin do its Ducal Palace and installed the seat of his manorial court, The Board of Auditors and prison.
In 1786, after the duke's death, the Duchy passed to the Duke of Penthievre (1725 - 1793) , then his daughter the Duchess of Orleans.
During the French Revolution, the Palace Duke is confiscated by the Convention and provided as the Hospice General Tours. It then leased the building to the municipality Amboise who eventually became owner in 1826. Prison Justice and the salt warehouse are then installed.
Between 1848 and 1852, the hotel serves as barracks for the Garrison was responsible for monitoring the Emir Abd-El-Kader (1808 - 1883), captured in 1847 after his surrender to Algeria during the colonization of the country by the French. The Emir and his family remained under house arrest in chestnut teau d'Amboise.
In 1880, while it remains home to municipal services, the home is classified as Monument History (Monument Historique). And in 1890, noting that its condition required a major restoration, work is done.
Until the 1970s the Morin Hotel houses the administrative departments of the municipality
The birth of the museum started in the "Wedding Room" which since the 19th century has had a number of works of art. It was only gradually that all parts of the building have art. In the 1970s the Town Hall moved to a new Town Hall, and this enabled the old Town Hall to be turned into the Museum of the Town Hall. Three rooms remained in use by the municipality, the marriage hall, the Council Chamber and the meeting room Emilienne Gouverne.
Today it is a museum fron July to September. It is closed on Saturday's to allow for marriages.
A little town mostly visited for it's Chateau, but there are other things in the town to see.
I think that this is the Hotel de Ville on Rue Francois I in Amboise. I think it is a museum now. Might have been a town hall at one time.
The Musee de l'Hotel de Ville is open from the middle of June to the middle of September each year.
It was built between 1501 and 1505 by Pierre Morin, the finanical advisor of Louis XII (1498 - 1515). Built in the style of the First French Renaissance. Its architecture combines tradition and French Gothic, and the recently introduced Italian Renaissance style (in the early 16th century).
Like the castle / chateau, the building is built of stone, which is very modern for EPO and shows the wealth of the owner. In the early 16th century, the nearby houses were built with brick and timber (see Rue Victor Hugo for an example).
It had many owners between the 16th and 18th centuries. One of them was the Duke of Choiseul (1719 - 1785). Minister of War, Navy and Foreign Affairs of King Louis XV (1715 - 1774). It is also of Governor of Touraine, Lord of Amboise Chanteloup. He decides to buy the hotel for Morin do its Ducal Palace and installed the seat of his manorial court, The Board of Auditors and prison.
In 1786, after the duke's death, the Duchy passed to the Duke of Penthievre (1725 - 1793) , then his daughter the Duchess of Orleans.
During the French Revolution, the Palace Duke is confiscated by the Convention and provided as the Hospice General Tours. It then leased the building to the municipality Amboise who eventually became owner in 1826. Prison Justice and the salt warehouse are then installed.
Between 1848 and 1852, the hotel serves as barracks for the Garrison was responsible for monitoring the Emir Abd-El-Kader (1808 - 1883), captured in 1847 after his surrender to Algeria during the colonization of the country by the French. The Emir and his family remained under house arrest in chestnut teau d'Amboise.
In 1880, while it remains home to municipal services, the home is classified as Monument History (Monument Historique). And in 1890, noting that its condition required a major restoration, work is done.
Until the 1970s the Morin Hotel houses the administrative departments of the municipality
The birth of the museum started in the "Wedding Room" which since the 19th century has had a number of works of art. It was only gradually that all parts of the building have art. In the 1970s the Town Hall moved to a new Town Hall, and this enabled the old Town Hall to be turned into the Museum of the Town Hall. Three rooms remained in use by the municipality, the marriage hall, the Council Chamber and the meeting room Emilienne Gouverne.
Today it is a museum fron July to September. It is closed on Saturday's to allow for marriages.
A little town mostly visited for it's Chateau, but there are other things in the town to see.
An advert about the Museum of the Hotel De Ville (Chateau d'Amboise)
The Musee de l'Hotel de Ville is open from the middle of June to the middle of September each year.
It was built between 1501 and 1505 by Pierre Morin, the finanical advisor of Louis XII (1498 - 1515). Built in the style of the First French Renaissance. Its architecture combines tradition and French Gothic, and the recently introduced Italian Renaissance style (in the early 16th century).
Like the castle / chateau, the building is built of stone, which is very modern for EPO and shows the wealth of the owner. In the early 16th century, the nearby houses were built with brick and timber (see Rue Victor Hugo for an example).
It had many owners between the 16th and 18th centuries. One of them was the Duke of Choiseul (1719 - 1785). Minister of War, Navy and Foreign Affairs of King Louis XV (1715 - 1774). It is also of Governor of Touraine, Lord of Amboise Chanteloup. He decides to buy the hotel for Morin do its Ducal Palace and installed the seat of his manorial court, The Board of Auditors and prison.
In 1786, after the duke's death, the Duchy passed to the Duke of Penthievre (1725 - 1793) , then his daughter the Duchess of Orleans.
During the French Revolution, the Palace Duke is confiscated by the Convention and provided as the Hospice General Tours. It then leased the building to the municipality Amboise who eventually became owner in 1826. Prison Justice and the salt warehouse are then installed.
Between 1848 and 1852, the hotel serves as barracks for the Garrison was responsible for monitoring the Emir Abd-El-Kader (1808 - 1883), captured in 1847 after his surrender to Algeria during the colonization of the country by the French. The Emir and his family remained under house arrest in chestnut teau d'Amboise.
In 1880, while it remains home to municipal services, the home is classified as Monument History (Monument Historique). And in 1890, noting that its condition required a major restoration, work is done.
Until the 1970s the Morin Hotel houses the administrative departments of the municipality
The birth of the museum started in the "Wedding Room" which since the 19th century has had a number of works of art. It was only gradually that all parts of the building have art. In the 1970s the Town Hall moved to a new Town Hall, and this enabled the old Town Hall to be turned into the Museum of the Town Hall. Three rooms remained in use by the municipality, the marriage hall, the Council Chamber and the meeting room Emilienne Gouverne.
Today it is a museum fron July to September. It is closed on Saturday's to allow for marriages.
Check out our season premiere, in which Andy awkwardly interviews an irritated Bob Odenkirk (of “Mr. Show with Bob and David” and “Breaking Bad”): www.atom.com/funny_videos/house_arrest_201_odenkirk/
A little town mostly visited for it's Chateau, but there are other things in the town to see.
This is the Hotel de Ville in Amboise. Now the Musee de l'Hotel de Ville, Amobise. As seen from the Quai Charles Guinot.
The Musee de l'Hotel de Ville is open from the middle of June to the middle of September each year.
It was built between 1501 and 1505 by Pierre Morin, the finanical advisor of Louis XII (1498 - 1515). Built in the style of the First French Renaissance. Its architecture combines tradition and French Gothic, and the recently introduced Italian Renaissance style (in the early 16th century).
Like the castle / chateau, the building is built of stone, which is very modern for EPO and shows the wealth of the owner. In the early 16th century, the nearby houses were built with brick and timber (see Rue Victor Hugo for an example).
It had many owners between the 16th and 18th centuries. One of them was the Duke of Choiseul (1719 - 1785). Minister of War, Navy and Foreign Affairs of King Louis XV (1715 - 1774). It is also of Governor of Touraine, Lord of Amboise Chanteloup. He decides to buy the hotel for Morin do its Ducal Palace and installed the seat of his manorial court, The Board of Auditors and prison.
In 1786, after the duke's death, the Duchy passed to the Duke of Penthievre (1725 - 1793) , then his daughter the Duchess of Orleans.
During the French Revolution, the Palace Duke is confiscated by the Convention and provided as the Hospice General Tours. It then leased the building to the municipality Amboise who eventually became owner in 1826. Prison Justice and the salt warehouse are then installed.
Between 1848 and 1852, the hotel serves as barracks for the Garrison was responsible for monitoring the Emir Abd-El-Kader (1808 - 1883), captured in 1847 after his surrender to Algeria during the colonization of the country by the French. The Emir and his family remained under house arrest in chestnut teau d'Amboise.
In 1880, while it remains home to municipal services, the home is classified as Monument History (Monument Historique). And in 1890, noting that its condition required a major restoration, work is done.
Until the 1970s the Morin Hotel houses the administrative departments of the municipality
The birth of the museum started in the "Wedding Room" which since the 19th century has had a number of works of art. It was only gradually that all parts of the building have art. In the 1970s the Town Hall moved to a new Town Hall, and this enabled the old Town Hall to be turned into the Museum of the Town Hall. Three rooms remained in use by the municipality, the marriage hall, the Council Chamber and the meeting room Emilienne Gouverne.
Today it is a museum fron July to September. It is closed on Saturday's to allow for marriages.
I took this photo before he wandered, I think he in advance was
saying he is sorry for the plan he had already made......
Rusty and I are exhausted tonight, but we thank you
all for your flickr-world-goodness before we go to
sleep:):)
To be kind is to respond with sensitivity and human warmth to the hopes and needs of others. Even the briefest touch of kindness can lighten a heavy heart. Kindness can change the lives of people. - Suu Kyi
My version of "Suu Kyi"
I am honored to paint her
Photoshop CS4, Wacom Intuos
Bernard Madoff, the hedge fund boss accused of a $50bn fraud, has put up $10m bail and in effect been placed under house arrest by a federal judge He will also be fitted with an electronic tag and will have to seek permission to leave his apartment/flat/penthouse.
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This is where I've been hanging out all day, in lieu of going to work and having a normal life. Note the all-important pillows, used to keep foot propped 8" above hip level whenever possible.
Having your foot propped above hip level all the time is seriously annoying. I cannot wait to get new doctor's orders after my recheck on Monday.
Bernard Madoff, the hedge fund boss accused of a $50bn fraud, has put up $10m bail and in effect been placed under house arrest by a federal judge He will also be fitted with an electronic tag and will have to seek permission to leave his apartment/flat/penthouse.
Bernard Madoff, the hedge fund boss accused of a $50bn fraud, has put up $10m bail and in effect been placed under house arrest by a federal judge He will also be fitted with an electronic tag and will have to seek permission to leave his apartment/flat/penthouse.
Bernard Madoff, the hedge fund boss accused of a $50bn fraud, has put up $10m bail and in effect been placed under house arrest by a federal judge He will also be fitted with an electronic tag and will have to seek permission to leave his apartment/flat/penthouse.
Kafes means "the cage", it was the part of the Imperial Harem of the Ottoman Palace where possible successors to the throne were kept under a form of house-arrest and constant surveillance by the palace guards.
The history of the Ottoman Empire is littered with succession wars between rival sons of the deceased sultan. It was usual for a new sultan to have his brothers killed, including infants, sometimes dozens of them at once.