View allAll Photos Tagged luminarneo
🇬🇧 She doesn’t blink. She doesn’t speak.
Behind the glass, adorned in gold and stillness, she sees without being seen.
A portrait of grace, frozen in time — half relic, half queen.
→ Final image in the series Seen Through the Window
→ Between object and presence, memory and light
🔗 Voir l’album complet / View the full album: www.flickr.com/photos/201798544@N06/albums/72177720326682427
🇫🇷 Elle ne cligne pas. Elle ne parle pas.
Derrière la vitre, parée d’or et de silence, elle regarde sans être vue.
Portrait figé entre grâce et distance — à moitié relique, à moitié reine.
→ Dernière image de la série Vu par la fenêtre
→ Entre objet et présence, mémoire et lumière
So called "Fineart"-photo with textures.
Edited with Luminar Neo
Photo captured with Sony a7II & Meyer-Optik Görlitz Trioplan 50mm f2.9
The Werregarenstraatje, a pedestrian street in the center of Ghent, is a graffiti-free zone. Officially, tagging is not permitted, but the practice is tolerated. This free zone was created during the 1995 Ghent Festivities for a graffiti project with a limited number of works on the walls. The street was soon renamed “the graffiti street”.
🇬🇧 They once made someone smile. Now they gather dust, behind a foggy glass and cobwebs.
Are they forgotten? Waiting? Staging a silent rebellion of plaster and beer mugs?
Whatever the story, they hold the pose.
→ Third image in the series Seen Through the Window
→ Where stillness meets absurdity
🔗 Voir l’album complet / View the full album: www.flickr.com/photos/201798544@N06/albums/72177720326682427
🇫🇷 Ils ont sans doute fait sourire, autrefois. Aujourd’hui, ils prennent la poussière, figés derrière la vitre trouble et les toiles d’araignée.
Sont-ils oubliés ? En attente ? Ou en révolte silencieuse, à coups de plâtre et de chopines ?
Quoi qu’il en soit, ils tiennent la pose.
→ Troisième image de la série Vu par la fenêtre
→ Quand l’immobilité flirte avec l’absurde
⭐️ win a chalenge on 250616: flickr.com/groups/challengefactory/discuss/72157721922957...
Napier is known for its compliment of Art Deco buildings and this Victorian-Edwardian structure, today the 18 room County Hotel.
The County Hotel building was originally constructed in 1909 for the Hawke’s Bay County Council.
It is the only building of significance that survived the devastating 1931 Napier earthquake. The buildings reinforced concrete construction helped it survive.
The building remained location of the Hawke’s Bay County Council administration until 1987.
1993, restoration work began to return the building to its former glory and to transform it into a boutique hotel. Original Edwardian Gothic features with Art Deco influences have been preserved.