View allAll Photos Tagged java...

D|16

I love bokeh. Especially when you can do something creative with it.

Judy Knesel | Awakenings

Java Indonesia - volcano mount merapi

 

View my Java Indonesia set here

borobudur

 

Please note that all the contents in this photostream is copyrighted and protected under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and the Copyright Act of Singapore, any usage of the images without permission will face liability for the infringement.

 

For enquiry, drop a flickr mail

"I love java, sweet and hot

Whoops! Mr. Moto, I'm a coffee pot

Shoot me the pot and I'll pour me a shot

A cup, a cup, a cup, a cup, a cup!"

Java Jive - The Ink Spots

  

Didn't get the chance to post this yesterday!

Bean, Shiva and Coco wait for their treats at the Java Hut.

Indonesia - Java.

 

Visit of Mendut Temple and his monastery complex.

 

Key West Butterfly & Nature Conservatory,Key West Florida USA

(also known as Java Sparrow)

Java Skin come Only for Maitreya body and Catwa head

 

Each tone come:

Without brows and 4 brows tones

5 differents lips colors

3 Body skins for Maitreya ( Normal, Shadowed and Fitness)

2 shapes NO MODIFY ( For Catwa Lona and Catya heads )

 

The pic shows Natural tone on Catwa Catya head and Bronze tone on Catwa Lona head

 

Demos here

Coca & Wolf Store

Coca & Wolf MarketPlace

 

Portra 160 @100, Voigtlander Bessa RF

Rice field and farm plantation in rural Central Java, Indonesia.

Java Junction, Strasburg, PA

Java. Indonesia. Sept 2012. Pentax Z1p, kodak portra 400NC.

svs309_16

Indonesia - Java.

 

Yogyakarta - Kraton: the palace of the sultans is the cultural and political heart of the city.

  

Indonesia - Java.

 

Yogyakarta - Kota Gede.

 

Kota Gede was once the first capital of the Mataram Kingdom (16th century).

 

Visit of:

-the market

-the Mataram mosque and the graveyard with the royal tomb

-"betweenn two gates"

-Omah UGM house

-Rumah Adat Joglo (Joglo traditional house.

 

All finished. Was so happy with the way this went togethe. Just one charm pack and the binding

A couple of Java Sparrows hang out near the pool at our condo on Maui.

 

Also know as the Java finch, Java rice sparrow or Java rice bird.

This was about as best I could do with only 200mm.

 

Lonchura oryzivora

Bandung, in West Java, became increasingly popular from the 19th century by the Dutch colonialists who were looking for a cooler, more pleasant climate than the humid, tropical Batavia (Jakarta) on the coast.

 

The city started to develop greatly between the end of the 19th century until the end of Dutch colonial rule in 1945. In this time, lots of neo-classical, neo-traditional, Art Nouveau, Art Deco and modernist buildings were built. The Dutch architecture was adapted to the tropical climate and blended with local Javanese and Chinese architectural design. Bandung is in fact in even one of the cities with the highest concentration of Art Deco buildings in the world! For this reason, it was once given the nickname "Paris of the East".

 

Bandung to this day has preserved its homogenous historic centre relatively well. The town centre is beautiful and lush with tropical greenery, and well endowed with many artsy cafés serving excellent local Indonesian coffee.

Street in the heart of the Dutch colonial old town of Surabaya, with its Dutch colonial architecture. Specifically here Chinatown.

 

Surabaya was already a significant port of the Hindu Majapahit Empire (13th century to 1500s), whose capital was nearby. It was also one of the first ports on the North Coast of Java to receive significant Islamic missionary activities. In particularly, the Sufi saint Ampel from the 15th century was famous for spreading Islam from here to Java. After the fall of the Majapahit Empire, it became part of a Muslim Javanese successor state, the Mataram Sultanate. The Dutch, who slowly colonized Indonesia from Batavia/Jakarta, conquered it only in the 1750s. Soon, however, Surabaya grew into an important colonial port exporting sugar cane and tobacco from the interior.

 

The Dutch colonial Surabaya was divided roughly in 3 to 4 neighbourhoods: the walled Dutch town, Chinatown where the Chinese traders lived, the Muslim Ampel neighbourhood to the north, which had also an Arab community, and the old Javanese neighbourhood to the south, a remnant of the pre-colonial town.

 

In this street, houses from the 18th to 19th century are preserved, in a Dutch tropical style. Around the corner, splendid Art Nouveau, Art Deco, ecclectic and early modernist buildings are abundant.

 

Surabaya was the birthplace of Sukarno, the first president of Indonesia. Surabaya was one of the first cities in the Dutch-East Indies to proclaim independence from the Dutch in 1945, after the Japanese occupiers left. This history is still much celebrated in town.

 

Today, Surabaya is the second largest and most important city of Indonesia and is a modern city with much history preserved. There are lots of young people who are stimulating a vibrant coffee culture, with local Indonesian Arabica beans.

1 2 ••• 4 5 7 9 10 ••• 79 80