View allAll Photos Tagged interpreter

Explore FP Highest Position # 18. Thank you everyone !!

 

View of the Gantry Plaza State Park across the East River from FDR Drive, New York. Gantry Plaza State Park is a park on the East River in Long Island City in New York. The 2.5-acre park is a former dock facility and includes restored gantry cranes. The final scene in the films Munich and Interpreter were shot in this park. The Queensboro bridge can be seen in the left corner.

 

| Portfolio | Facebook |

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

[Photo Specs]

- Single raw adjusted for white balance, exposure and contrast

- Layer of curves and saturation in Photoshop

- Some cloning to get the symmetry right

- Layer of unsharp mask at the end

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

2016 edit of a picture I took of one of the Viking interpreters at the Parks Canada UNESCO World Heritage Site at L'Anse aux Meadows in northern-most Newfoundland not far from St. Anthony in early June 2013.

An interpreter at Bent's Old Fort enjoys a little rest in the shade. I suspect that passing the time is historically accurate.

Interpreters, both paid and volunteer, help bring the history to life with music, live demonstrations, and reenactments, including musket and cannon firing demonstrations. The site has numerous reconstructed historical wooden structures based on archeological excavations. This is considered one of the most extensively excavated early colonial French archaeological sites in the United States.

Interpreters Concessions.

  

Заблуждения результаты очищающие действия интеллект конфликтующий отвлекающий поэт сбитый с толку союз разные пути прекращение тревоги беды,

פרייינג אַטאַטשמאַנץ אָובידיאַנט אַרבעט כּללים גראַספּינג סענסעס רירנדיק תאוות ענסלייווד געווער ברידינג טראַנסענדאַנט ווערטער,

العطور التي لا حدود لها العطور التي لا تعد ولا تحصى في الجسم الأحزان في كل مكان يقيس المخلوقات اشتعلت فيه النيران الثراء الأقوياء,

intensive Devotionen geheime Rituale akzeptieren Wahnvorstellungen Terror Streiks Meister erfreut höchste Formen ängstliche Ergebnisse,

tradições metafísicas imaginações diversas iluminando crenças estéticas que ensinam povos compreensão sensível,

εξάλειψη των λόγων πεποίθηση δάσος εφαρμοσμένη διορατικότητα μοναξιά ζωντανή θρησκευτικές απαντήσεις αδελφότητα σκεπτόμενα γεγονότα,

議論の広がり解散時間瞑想の変容宝物テキスト教え意識無知嘆き大量苦しみ存在点.

Steve.D.Hammond.

Inari casually told me that she was the interpreter for B.B. King when he played at the Pori Jazz Festival in Finland on July 13, 1979. As a fan of B.B. King, it totally blew my mind.

File: 2025009-1381

 

At the GlastonBeoley Music Festival, at the Redditch Cricket Hockey & Rugby Club, in Redditch, Worcestershire, England, United Kingdom, on Friday 27th of June 2025.

  

About the photograph.

 

The GlastonBeoley Music Festival is one of the few outdoor music festivals that provide a British Sign Language (BSL) interpreter for any deaf audience.

 

This lady is one of the BSL interpreters on stage during a performance by the Birmingham based band called Indigo Kid. She is seen here doing a sign language version of the band’s song.

 

Often during the gaps in the songs, like between the verses and chorus, she would simply dance around.

 

A friend of mine whom was doing a performance for the event, got me a free ticket, so I was able to do some live music photography. Those shots were done using a 50mm lens much closer to the stage, and cropped in Adobe Photoshop.

 

Also, I converted the photo into black and white for a more dramatic effect.

   

The Comment Box is NOT an adverting billboard or adverting space for the groups. Do NOT leave canned comments or award codes. You are free to comment on my photograph, about the subject in the photo, or your similar relevant experience. If you want to promote the groups you are member of, do it in YOUR own photos and YOUR own Photostream.

 

Marquis de Lafayette - Colonial Williamsburg Character Interpreter of the Marquis de Lafayette - Camera = Nikon F5 - Lens = Nikkor 17-35mm 1:2.8D - Film = Kodak TRI-X 400 - Film developed by The Darkroom Lab in San Clemente, CA, USA - TheDarkroom.com

One of four photos taken at "The Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village is an open-air museum that uses costumed historical interpreters to recreate pioneer settlements in east central Alberta, Canada, northeast and east of Edmonton." - Wikipedia

 

Thanks for visiting, enjoy each day.

Historical interpreters at the 1740's American Farm at the Frontier Culture Museum in Staunton, Virginia.

 

Settlement of America’s Appalachian river valleys began in the late 1720s. The colony of Virginia enacted land policies to attract settlers to create a buffer of Protestant farmers on the colony’s western frontier. Virginia granted large blocks of western land to individuals and companies with the requirement that it be divided and sold to settler families within a few years. To meet this requirement, grantees offered land in parcels up to several hundred acres in size on easy terms. Virginia’s land policy attracted diverse groups of Old World settlers to its western frontier, or “backcountry.” This encounter between different ethnic groups in western Virginia shaped American culture for generations to come.

 

www.frontiermuseum.org/exhibits/1740s-american-settlement/

Costumed historical interpreter recreating a pioneer settlement... in east central Alberta, Canada at the Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village. Ukrainian Canadian settlers from the years 1899 to 1930 are recreated.

"what did these rock paintings say, R2D2?"

My complete protocol droid collection , including (from left to right) :

 

E-3PO | K-3PO (custom) | R-3PO (custom) | D-0T | TC-3 | W1-LE | Death Star Droid |

 

Nobot | C-3PO | TC-4 | 4D6-J-A7 | Jabba's Protocol Droid "Interpreter" | R-3PO |

 

U-3PO | TC-14 | C-3PO (chrome gold) | C-3PO (Red Arm) | K-3PO

 

HFF! A candid shot taken at the Fort Edmonton Park, Alberta, Canada.

 

"Fort Edmonton Park is an attraction in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Named for the first enduring European post in the area of modern-day Edmonton, the park is the largest living history museum in Canada by area.[2] It includes both original and rebuilt historical structures representing the history of Edmonton (including that of post-horse Aboriginals), and is staffed during the summer by costumed historical interpreters."

 

I spent a thoroughly enjoyable day with Peggy, Ted and Sophia, their grand-daughter. Beautiful weather, and lots of fence photos to be had!

 

Thanks for visiting, enjoy each day.

“The soul, fortunately, has an interpreter - often an unconscious but still a faithful interpreter - in the eye.” ― Charlotte Brontë

 

Good evening, Flickr friends! Here's another one of those photos I debated about posting. This is a recreation of a photo taken with a friend of mine three and a half years ago. I think I like this result better, although I'm not sure it's "great" photography. Yet I like it. I like the light in the eye, the pose of the fingers, and the tone of her skin. I like eyes. They reveal so much.

 

Hope you all are doing well!

these 4 guys were full of great information & loved their jobs!

Clients are advised that for an interview with God, an interpreter may prove necessary.

 

(Three beautiful female nude models were booked for

this and, one after the other, cancelled for perfectly

acceptable reasons.)

“The soul, fortunately, has an interpreter - often an unconscious but still a faithful interpreter - in the eye.”

(From “Jane Eyre” by Charlotte Brontë)

 

I met this rickshaw wallah (auto rickshaw driver) at the gas pump nearby the railway station in Varanasi (Benaras).

He was wondering what was I doing with a camera while I was waiting for someone to fill the car up with petrol.

He kept on watching me so I took a few pictures of his staring and intense look…

 

Join the photographer at www.facebook.com/laurent.goldstein.photography

 

© All photographs are copyrighted and all rights reserved.

Please do not use any photographs without permission (even for private use).

The use of any work without consent of the artist is PROHIBITED and will lead automatically to consequences.

Le Paradis Infernal

23/03/2014

Historical interpreter demonstrates the loading and firing of a period firearm at Jamestowne Settlement.

 

0.002 sec (1/500) f/5.6 500

80.0-200.0 mm f/2.8 92 mm

  

www.JamesBrianClark.com

www.facebook.com/photo.jamesclark

  

Uploaded with PhotoQueue™

I also did a refold of this great model with a very special paper :) Book: Origami for Interpreters.

 

I hope you like it :)

As a matter of fact (s)he the only sign language interpreter I ever shot, anyway GOOD looking !

 

Copyright WGC (Edwin) van Tilburg - Please respect my property, if you have any questions feel free to contact me by e-mail : propertypicture@yahoo.co.uk

Historical interpreters at the Pioneer Apple Festival in New Tripoli.

 

www.facebook.com/events/ontelaunee-park/pioneer-apple-fes...

A historic interpreter at Fort Delaware is portraying the captain's wife.

HFF! One of three candid shots taken at the Fort Edmonton Park in Alberta. I visited with Peggy, Ted and their grand-daughter.

 

"Fort Edmonton Park is an attraction in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Named for the first enduring European post in the area of modern-day Edmonton, the park is the largest living history museum in Canada by area.[2] It includes both original and rebuilt historical structures representing the history of Edmonton (including that of post-horse Aboriginals), and is staffed during the summer by costumed historical interpreters." - Wikipedia

 

Thanks for visiting, enjoy each day.

Read my blog   |   Like me on Facebook   |   Follow me on Twitter

 

This interpreter at Fort Clatsop in Oregon was very knowledgeable about life on the Lewis and Clark Expedition.

 

All rights reserved. Protected with PIXSY.

Photograph published on April 9th, 2020, in The Interpreter to illustrate the article "COVID-19: A War of Words"

 

www.lowyinstitute.org/the-interpreter/covid-19-war-of-words

 

Also published on April 6th, 2020 to illustrate an article in Washington DC based radio station NPR affiliate WAMU 88.5

 

wamu.org/story/20/04/06/coronavirus-latest-week-of-april6/

 

Published also on April 6th, 2020 to illustrate a Coronavirus updates for Washington DC in TheDCist

 

dcist.com/story/20/04/06/coronavirus-latest-week-of-april6/

 

Photograph also published in My Big Apple on April 12th, 2020

 

mybigappleny.com/2020/04/12/barrons-20apr11/

 

Also published in "Good" on April 13th, 2020

 

www.good.is/muslim-women-who-cover-their-faces-find-accep...

 

Also published on April 15th, 2020 in Ms. Magazine

 

msmagazine.com/2020/04/15/covid-19-policy-takes-steps-to-...

 

Also published in a German language website ( link below)

 

www.gutfuerdich.net/einweghandschuhe-beim-einkaufen/

 

Also published in the following Italian article.

 

www.sagace.co/guanti-monouso-errori-comuni/

 

Also published in the following article in Russian.

 

www.g8ozd.ru/perchatki-protiv-virusa/

 

Also published in the following article in Spanish.

 

www.tiposano.net/enfermera-consejos-uso-guantes/

 

Also published in the following article in French.

 

www.laminutebienetre.net/danger-gants-jetables-epidemie/

 

Also published on May 13th to illustrate an article /transcript of a KCRW show.

 

www.kcrw.com/news/shows/kcrw-features/coronavirus-risk-st...

  

Also published on June 9th

 

flaglerlive.com/154560/prepare-to-hunker-down-at-home-again/

 

Also published in German for the following site Luxemburg site.

 

www.zeitschrift-luxemburg.de/alltag-in-der-krise/

A living history volunteer portrays an 1820s native language interpreter at Fort Atkinson State Historical Park.

“The soul, fortunately, has an interpreter – often an unconscious but still a faithful interpreter – in the eye.” - Charlotte Brontë, Jane Eyre.

~

THE EYES HAVE IT - AIA Challenge 2025 November

www.flickr.com/groups/recreatingmasters/

pixlr AI/gimp

The soul, fortunately, has an interpreter - often an unconscious but still a faithful interpreter - in the eye.”

― Charlotte Brontë, Jane Eyre

 

This picture is #54 in my 100 Strangers Project.

 

After a long tiring day on working weekend I debated if I should lounge around at home or a make a quick 20 minute drive to Bethesda to my favorite haunt in recent days and hope to find a stranger or two for the project. Luckily I chose the latter and am glad that I did since I met Azhar.

 

Halfway into my project I now feel reasonably confident in my ability to find a 'striking' interesting strangers in a crowd - the challenge is more to convince the subject that he/she is interesting to an outsider. It is satisfying in this cases when the pictures turn out well and are liked by the reluctant strangers. But equally challenging, or maybe more, is photographing a willing beautiful photogenic stranger and ensure that the pictures do justice or at least worth their few minutes. I have had a mix of both on the project - and Azhar definitely fits into the later category.

 

When I saw Azhar walking briskly with purposeful strides, I interrupted her walk with a quick excuse me and explained my intent to her. I was half expecting a polite 'am in rush' judging by her walk but was pleasantly surprised that she agreed to participate. She was picking up food and had about 5-10 minutes to spare. Azhar is undoubtedly a very beautiful young lady who would easily catch attention - even though she was on a quick errand and was relatively simply dressed she still managed to make a impression at a quick glance. After a initial couple of test shots she suggested opening up her hair which definitely changed her whole look pretty visibly. There was something very unique about her appearance (of course in line with most of my strangers her eyes were a big factor) and I think I could attribute it to the mix of Saudi Arabian and Puerto Rican roots But more importantly as with most of the 'interesting' strangers its her striking personality

that stood out. Azhar works for the media and is primarily associated with TV and video. When asked what she enjoyed doing for fun the essence of her spontaneous reply was 'when you really enjoy your work so much is there a need to find time for anything else'. You really cant argue with that attitude and sentiment, can you?

She is a videographer herself and when requested she shared her 'two cents' (her words) - I personally think was very valuable feedback. Azhar expressed her preference for pictures emphasizing more depth and use of shadows to accentuate that aspect - I definitely kept that in mind when I worked on her pictures.

 

People make impressions in a few minutes and even during a brief conversation with the lady she came across as a very poised and articulate individual oozing confidence. Elegant and classy, and strong woman (in a petite frame I must add) is the image she left me with.

 

Thank a lot Azhar - it was an absolute pleasure to have you participate on the project. Aldo thank you for taking the time to pick your pic. Wish you all the very best for your future!!

 

Find out more about the project and see pictures taken by other photographers at the 100 Strangers Flickr Group page

For my other pictures on this project: www.flickr.com/photos/vijaybrittophotography/sets/7215764...

 

A historical interpreter talks with a youngster at Old Sturbridge Village.

 

www.osv.org/

Monocacy National Battlefield.

Maria was our interpreter on a trip to Southern Russia earlier in the year.

hand in hand whit ivan luengo. heh. hampi is a grazy place. we found that hand, rip cage and some other bones in the midle of hampi "mountain". human?

www.vijayanagara.org/HTML/Vijay_Hist.html

Costumed interpreter at Colonial Williamsburg. It was a chilly morning and she had just changes from a lighter cloak to this warmer, bright red one. She then graciously agreed to pose for a portrait.

  

Williamsburg 2018_3337

 

.

  

Interpreter of contemporary dance and Publicist. She studied in Argentina and started dancing for three years at the CDC-IFA company of Luciano Cejas. 2014 Win a scholarship for CONERO DANCE CAMP. He also studied in the US Graham technique and in Havana, Cuba, Afro-Cuban techniques with the National Company. In Buenos Aires she worked as an interpreter in the company of the choreographer Ariel Caramés. In 2017 she travels to Europe to enter the world of contemporary experimentation.

Follow her @puccioxime .

 

I regard Lahiri as a worthy successor to R.K.Narayan for her fluency and talent as "Interpreter of Maladies" so wonderfully said her Pulitzer Prize winning collection of short stories.

 

The Namesake is a tremendous novel...beautiful prose...deeply-hued characters within an interesting story...It is not however "Interpreter of Maladies" her debut work...Every single story in the prior novel ended with me craving more...wishing they would go on....The Namesake is a story about the Ganguly's - Ashoke....his wife Ashima who is a sweet..simple and a conventional wife/mom...the children Gogol and Sonali... Ashoke and Ashima Ganguli have a traditional family background in Calcutta...After they marry (an arranged marriage) they move to Cambridge, Massachusetts where Ashoke pursues his education....Their lives are made more difficult by the separation from their families and homeland and they cope by drawing their Bengali friends in the U.S. close to them...Through an implausible series of events...they have no name prepared when their son is born....Forced to put down something they choose "Gogol" to be his name...To their son..that name is a curse that he bears which puts distance between him and his family....The book revolves around Gogol and end with him drawing comparions of his life with his namesake, the Russian writer Nikolai Gogol....Ashima Ganguli is her finest creation in the book and you will relate deeply to this woman...What bothered me alittle about the book is that it moves off of Ashima too much after the beginning....The first part of the book focusing on the parents is primarily a social novel...The second part..focusing on the son but the mother also to some extent is more a novel of character....The novel is touching and quite true to the reality that immigrants and children of immigrants from any nationality have to face...The author reveals the hardships of living apart from our closest family members...missing birthdays and deaths.

 

When a book is made into a film there are so many expectations...Mira Nair is a very talented director and she made "The namesake" which I thoroughly enjoyed...I have seen almost all her films and love the way she portrays her charaters so well developed that everytime I felt like I was there myself....Beautiful cinematoghraphy....So evocative and when I cried I felt someone I knew died....very poignant and intensely emotional and so well produced movie.

   

I have always thought the actions of men the best interpreters of their thoughts.

 

John Locke

2 4 5 6 7 ••• 79 80