View allAll Photos Tagged macabre
Undead are quite friendly, really.
Very quick study at 24mm.
Actually. Maybe it's more of a nightmare coming out of the closet at night to wash over your brain.
Small flash in white interior beauty dish, sock diffuser on, CL, short light position. Radio trigger.
A lone Wardancer, entangled in a dreadful dance, overcoming foul demons in a spiral vortex of blades.
Those suscectible to the divine rhythms of nature can see her ever-changing paths and follow them accordingly. Wardancers move swiftly along these unseen patterns in order to remove any creature who tries to block the flow of energy. They rely on the protection of the three blue tokens bestowed by the goddess herself.
For a list of customization techniques see here: www.eurobricks.com/forum/index.php?/forums/topic/151276-t...
Ali Mardan, originally a noble at the court of the Safavid king Shah Tahmasp, after surrendering Iranian Qandahar to Emperor Shahjahan in 1638, rose rapidly to great heights at the Mughal court. He became an indispensable member of the Mughal nobility and was appointed Governor of Kashmir, Lahore and Kabul. In 1639, Ali Mardan Khan was given the title of Amir al-Umara (Lord of Lords), made a Haft Hazari (commander of 7,000 troops) and appointed viceroy of the Punjab which then stretched from Kabul to Delhi.
An eminent engineer, Ali Mardan Khan is credited with supervising construction of several royal buildings in Kashmir and digging of the Delhi canal, which runs between the Red Fort and the old city. The water supply system of Shalimar Gardens in Kashmir (Gulmarg) was also planned by him. His lasting contribution to actualize Shah Jahan's paradisiacal vision for Lahore was the construction of a canal from the river Ravi for the supply of water to the Shalimar Gardens, as well as for the irrigation and cultivation of surrounding areas. Although the Shalimar canal was later completed by others, Ali Mardan also became known for the canal he built at Shajahanabad (Delhi). There is little doubt that "he excited universal admiration at the court by the skill and judgement of his public works." He is known to have built many edifices and gardens—at Nimla (near Kabul), Kabul, Peshawar and Lahore. Much to the sorrow of the emperor, his favorite noble died in 1657, while on his way to Kashmir. Ali Mardan Khan's body was carried back to be buried in the magnificent tomb that he had built for his mother. He was buried along the graves of his mother and her maid servant.
The tomb itself is a massive brick construction work, octagonal in plan with a high dome and kiosks on angular points and standing on an eight sided podium, each side measuring 58 ft. It was originally a magnificent structure with the dome finished with white marble inlaid with floral design in black marble. Its sides punctured by lofty Timurid iwans, surmounted by a massive 42' diameter dome raised on a drum. Although most of the chattris (domed kiosks) at the corners of the octagon are lost, it is a decorative feature often utilized in 16th and 17th century Mughal tombs.
Today, shorn of surface decoration, except the remains of frescoes in some of the alcoves, the exterior walls must once have carried scintillating tile mosaic (kashi kari), as can be seen in the extant gateway at some distance to the north of the sepulcher. The chambers had peitra dura work in the massive marble columns and fresco paintings in walls and ceilings. The graves were on a three-foot high red sand stone platform beneath a larger than usual dome which was profusely decorated with inlaid precious and semi-precious stones and fresco floral patterns.
The tomb once stood at the centre of a paradisiacal garden, a favorite theme as evidenced in the sepulcher of Jahangir. The extent of Ali Mardan garden can be gauged by the double-storey gateway in the north mentioned above. Similar gateways would have marked the centers of the south, west and east edges of the garden square.
Although Ali Mardan Khan was a Mughal noble and not a saint, the spiritually-inclined locals call the tomb Mardan Khan's durbar or shrine. The grave which is in the subterranean chamber, and accessed through a descending flight of steps, is decorated in the manner of a saint's shrine.
The ravaged condition of the tomb is attributed to the Sikh rule, when the tomb structure was used as a military magazine be Gulab Singh, one of Ranjit Singh's generals, and the gateway as residence by Gurdit Singh, colonel of the Sikh battalion Misranwali.
Published today in Daily Times Lahore...
DIpinto ad olio (1964) di Gino Severini (1883-1966)
Villa dei Capolavori Mamiano di Traversetolo (PR) sede della Fondazione Magnani Rocca
Italia: Emilia Romagna, Mamiano di Traversetolo (PR)
A Nun in front of your house and a fence/hedge covered in road kill skulls! Satanic or just bloody weird?
Kaikoura, New Zealand
Sony A7R full spectrum converted with IR590nm clip in filter and using a Lensbaby Twist 60 lens
Danse Macabre gothic set for Halloween at LISP Bazaar - includes:
"Temptation" hand with apple plaque, "into the dark" hand plaque, "be still my beating heart" pumping heart plant, "rest in peace" sign, "smoking is good for you" skulls, liquid visitor mirror, Bryron chaise, victorian glass cloche jars with spiders and bird skulls, "because I love you" masacre with axe, vintage poison bottles: belladonna, sugar of lead etc.
slurl.com/secondlife/Ravens Requiem/64/224/21/
Its Now May 2018 and this photo still gets a few views almost every day, it is far more popular than I ever imagined it would be when I took it.
By far and away my highest scoring photo that is not Explored, how strange.
This strange sculpture was assembled on the beach in the bay where the Annie Jane was wrecked.
One of the saddest events to befall the island happened when the Annie Jane, a three-masted immigrant ship out of Liverpool bound for Montreal, Canada, struck rocks off West Beach during a storm in September 1853.
Within ten minutes the ship began to founder and break up casting 450 people into the raging sea. In spite of the conditions, islanders tried to rescue the passengers and crew.
There were only a few survivors rescued.
A small cairn and monument marks the site. The inscription reads: "On 28th September 1853 the ship Annie Jane with emigrants from Liverpool to Quebec was totally wrecked in this bay and threefourths of the crew and passengers numbering about 350 men women and children were drowned and their bodies interred here."
Two Chinese seamen from the SS Idomeneus which sank on 28th September 1917 are also buried somewhere near the monument. There is a commemorative headstone in Cuier Churchyard.
Archaeology of Vatersay: The island has remains of an Iron Age broch at Dun a' Chaolais overlooking the Sound of Vatersay and nearby is a passage grave dated to the 3rd millennium BC. There is also a Bronze Age cemetery at Treasabhaig south of the heights of Theiseabhal Mòr and a cairn built circa 1000 BC west of the village of Vatersay. The offshore islet of Biruaslum has a walled fort that may be of Neolithic provenance.
The westernmost permanently inhabited place in Scotland, Vatersay is linked to Barra by a causeway completed in 1991.
At low tide, the island is also linked to the islet of Uineasan to the east.
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