View allAll Photos Tagged memory

Memories Jibacoa Resort, Cuba.

Also known as Bishop Cemetery #2 Restland Memory Park was established in 1919, following flooding from the 1919 hurricane, a committee, headed by J. M. Binion, acquired and designed a new cemetery to relocate some of the burials from the original town cemetery and for future citizens of Bishop.

In April 1920, twenty-one burials were relocated to Restland Memory Park. Citizens recollect witnessing the procession of caskets across town. Most of these were reinterred burials from the 1910, and included many young children, along with one World War I soldier, Joseph Ray Teasley (1893 - 1918).

The first new burial was for the infant son of Rudolph and Johanna Menn in 1920. Between 1942 and 1962, additional sections opened. Francis Zion Bishop (1880 - 1950), the founder and namesake of the town of Bishop is buried here.

With more than 1.600 burials, the cemetery provides a record of the pioneer area families and generations of doctors, nurses, veterans, educators, preachers and business leaders, fraternal organizations such as the masons, Order of the Eastern Star, Woodmen of the World and Daughters of the Republic of Texas are represented.

Over the years, the community has participated in the maintenance of the cemetery. The Women's History Club donated the brick entrance and the east brick fence. Other items such as the flagpole and flag were donated by the community. The Bishop Cemetery Association formed in 1987 and has continued the care and maintenance of the sacred ground. (2017) (Marker No. ​15961)

Memory quilt made from baby clothes.

Memory Lane is a section of waterfront trail in South Foster Park along the eastern shore of the Bay of Quinte.

Memory wears dress and shrug from jny_jeanpretty, it is made by her friend. Thank you Jean, we love it!

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One comment only for the whole set of 28 shots is great!

Oil on Canvas

36/24"

Candles burning in memory of loved ones at the "Relay for life" event in support of Cancer research.

A memory quilt made for my in-laws overseas - a nice homemade way for them to see the girls everyday :)

Irvin Schlegel. My father-in-law. Fought in World War II. Injured in the Battle of he Bulge. A good man.

 

Here are some memories of him that sit on a shelf in a spare bedroom. A few photos, the flag that draped his casket when he passed away about 15 yeas ago, some German currency that he brought home from war, his well-worn copy of the New Testament.

 

Shot is an in-camera HDR (only 1 stop over, under)

I'm okay with the composition - I didn't want to move too much on the shelf.

The "softness" and toning were added in post processing. I wanted to give the feeling of an aged memorial - almost in a "museum like" setting.

  

life is not a box of roses

Blackpool circus family memories

 

Created with fd's Flickr Toys

www.linenspa.com/Products/ To test how good they are on their promise, I decided to test one of their products. On this occasion it is the 12” Plush Triple-Layer Memory Foam Mattress with Bamboo Cover. It has a 2” memory foam comfort layer weighing four pounds, 2” memory foam center weighing three pounds and 8” foam base with high density.

 

Grand ma's Handmade gift

Daily Create is a sketchquote for Amy. Sketch is of my childhood home in Wenatchee, Washington State. Memory fades leaving cartography and color, distant shapes reduced to stick figures running in an apple orchard by a river...

memory student,kỷ yếu

To create this image I have used the blur tool on photoshop to make the boy on the left look blurry. My original idea was to blank him out in white, but after using the blur effect I feel it worked better and conveyed what I wanted it to better. I wanted to show someone you don’t really remember. They used to be a part of your life when you were younger, but as you’ve grown up you’ve forgotten them, the memories aren’t as clear.

For my Nani...... treaures from my grandmother.

Memories of Rome

Relax & spend a moment at my virtual art gallery: turuset.fi

VISIT, SHARE, LIKE and ENJOY!

www.facebook.com/vpuagp/

Where we told the Nuns we were going.

'Memory Field' (resin, nails, enamel, acrylic, mixed media on wood, 12"x12")

2007

 

gift from the artist RH+EM 2022

Memories are heartbeats

Sounding through the years

Echoes never fading

Of our smiles and our tears.

Moments that are captured

Sometimes unaware

Pictured in an album

Or a lock of hair.

 

Images that linger

Deep within the mind

Bit of verse we cherished

Once upon a time.

Through the musty hallways

Of the days we knew

Ever comes the vision

Beautiful and true.

 

Memories are roses

Blooming evermore

Full of fragrant sweetness

Never known before.

Life must have a meaning

Goals for which to strive

Memories are lights that burn

To keep the heart alive.

-Memories by Grace E. Easley

 

This old bike belonged to MJ (my wife) when she was about 10 years old. It was a hand-me-down from her older sister. It has seen better days. My son rescued it from an estate auction of a family member. But he left it in an old barn that leaked for several years. Now it is in really bad shape.

 

Copyrighted Image

Memories, pressed between the pages of my mind

Memories, sweetened thru the ages just like wine,

Memories, memories, sweet memories..

 

If you look at this photo on large the building on the right used to be my Grandmothers Greengrocers (see photo in photostream) The house partially hidden by the tree on the right was where I was born.

Memory Map at the Bishop Bar in Bloomington, IN. 2/17/11.

Sony A7 Contax Vario Sonnar 100-300mm F4.5-5.6 MMJ

It was 1988, I was that child...

 

My father used to take diapositives with an old Nikon Reflex.

We were in the wood of Cirifusolo, Calabria.

 

Taken with Canon S2IS in SuperMacro mode.

Memory Foam Mattress Pad by Best Price Memory Foam

 

Free to use image. Credit thesleepjudge.com

Taken on my 2018 trip to Rome, southern Italy, and Sicily.

imal.org/en/memory-lane

 

An exhibition by Félix Luque and Iñigo Bilbao

Memory Lane is an audiovisual installation exploring in new ways the theme of memory and space through different artefacts the two artists produced from 3D-captured landscapes of their childhood in Asturias (Spain). Better yet, these natural environments – strands, rocky areas, woodland – do not simply inspire this project: they literally feed it. Turned into data via a high-end 3D panoramic scanning and modelling, these locations served as a mould to the sculpted piece presented in the final installation.

 

On the one hand, two large screens let you experience a new form of cinematography: explore the data cloud of the 3D-scanned static scenes, imagine what cannot actually be seen and what might lurk into darkness. On the other, a sand rock, which was scanned and reproduced in full detail floats on top of powerful electromagnets within a structure that shifts horizontally. The noise produced by the magnetic field is amplified to create a sound environment that surrounds the two artworks in an almost meditative ambience. The installation forms in this way a coherent unit: sand rock and landscape – slowly shifting together and coming through as hyperrealist as well as clearly artificial – are two aspects of the same investigation on memory and space, on perception of reality and on the human capacity of generating fiction, either by means of a simple child's game or of a complex technological process.

 

Memory Lane exhibition space is a landscape composed of four parts: a series of large prints, a 2 channels video, a levitation sculpture, and Bois Mort ("Snag"), a new light&sound sculpture produced especially for this show at iMAL. The installation was first exhibited in September 2015 during the Ars Electronica Festival at Linz (AT).

imal.org/en/memory-lane

 

An exhibition by Félix Luque and Iñigo Bilbao

Memory Lane is an audiovisual installation exploring in new ways the theme of memory and space through different artefacts the two artists produced from 3D-captured landscapes of their childhood in Asturias (Spain). Better yet, these natural environments – strands, rocky areas, woodland – do not simply inspire this project: they literally feed it. Turned into data via a high-end 3D panoramic scanning and modelling, these locations served as a mould to the sculpted piece presented in the final installation.

 

On the one hand, two large screens let you experience a new form of cinematography: explore the data cloud of the 3D-scanned static scenes, imagine what cannot actually be seen and what might lurk into darkness. On the other, a sand rock, which was scanned and reproduced in full detail floats on top of powerful electromagnets within a structure that shifts horizontally. The noise produced by the magnetic field is amplified to create a sound environment that surrounds the two artworks in an almost meditative ambience. The installation forms in this way a coherent unit: sand rock and landscape – slowly shifting together and coming through as hyperrealist as well as clearly artificial – are two aspects of the same investigation on memory and space, on perception of reality and on the human capacity of generating fiction, either by means of a simple child's game or of a complex technological process.

 

Memory Lane exhibition space is a landscape composed of four parts: a series of large prints, a 2 channels video, a levitation sculpture, and Bois Mort ("Snag"), a new light&sound sculpture produced especially for this show at iMAL. The installation was first exhibited in September 2015 during the Ars Electronica Festival at Linz (AT).

Memory Cloud is a platform that offers the people of Detroit an opportunity to engage in a dialouge about the city.

 

www.voiceofdetroit.com

Photo by Jireh Hinton

It's memories, what keep us linked to our past, so brief, and that bring us knowledge and wisdom. It's the beauty of the past, today's longings. And it is as well the past, paradise of the photography.

 

Son las memorias las que nos mantienen unidos al pasado, tan breve, y nos traen conocimiento y sabiduría. Es la belleza del pasado, la nostalgia del presente. Y es también el pasado, el paraíso de la fotografía.

A Wooden Ornament This was given to me in 1979 by a colonel's wife at Fort Knox, Kentucky. We spent a day together at the Cincinnati Reds and she then brought me a gift at Christmas with this as the bow. She died the following spring.

 

People come in and out of our lives for such short times. Hope I have brought good memories to others in these past years myself. So many have to me!

memory student,kỷ yếu

santorini greece grecia

Simon taking 40 winks after a hard day photographing and 'bashing' the trains on Severn Valley Railway.

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