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Elections and results, at the capital, Buenos Aires.
Copyright © 2007 Tatiana Cardeal. All rights reserved.
Reprodução proibida. © Todos os direitos reservados.
that's just what happened. that double exposure lever is not so easy to operate correctly.
dress rehearsal for FBP's Cinderella, May 10 2017
Киев-88, Волна-3В 85mm
Fujicolor NPS 160 (expired 2002)
Overlapping painted ads in Acworth, Georgia.
There seems to be a power struggle going on here..............
hand overlapped negatives in the darkroom. the focus is on negative space for my first project. “The absence of content does not mean the absence of interest”, says graphicdesignblog.com. Using white space focuses the viewer on the subject matter at hand. Framing and negative space is essential to creating a design-sound image. to convey negative space creatively would be using paint to cover the positive space on a 3-D object. For example, painting a strip of black down a face would highlight the negative space on the face. Highlighting the usually neglected and ignored negative space of subject matter would give a new light to old views.
The Battersea shield is not in fact a complete shield, but only the facing, a metal cover that was attached to the front of wooden shield. It is made from different parts of sheet bronze (4 sheets and 3 decorated panels), held together with bronze rivets and enclosed in a binding strip. All the rivets are hidden by overlaps between different components where the panels and roundels were originally attached to the organic backing.
The decoration is concentrated in the three roundels. A high domed boss in the middle of the central roundel (shown here) is over where the handle was located. The La Tène-style decoration is made using the repoussé technique, emphasized with engraving and stippling. The overall design is highlighted with twenty-seven framed studs of red glass 'enamel' (opaque red glass) in four different sizes, the largest set at the centre of the boss. The dominant repoussé forms on the shield are the palmette and interlocking S-motifs.
Stylistically, the La Tène-style decoration is not closely related to any other object. Because of this, closely dating this object is difficult. The shield was almost certainly made in Britain because of the use of a specifically British form of central circular shield boss.
British, bronze and enamel, ca. 350 - 50 BCE (Iron Age). Found in the Thames River at Battersea, London.
British Museum, London (1857,0715.1)
A double-exposure using a Fuji 100T, perhaps not my ideal choice for such a challenge but it remains a superb tool for me.
Graffitiwear - 100% Original mesh halter top coms with a HUD of 18 textures. Available in solid colors and 2 sets of prints.
> Maitreya & Petite
> LaraX & Petite
> Legacy
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> Prima Busty & Petite
marketplace.secondlife.com/p/Graffitiwear-Overlap-Top-DEM...
Hive #5 4x5 Q1
*Please don't mind that mine (lower left) is actually oriented incorrectly! I wanted all the blocks to match, so I turned mine! ;)
I used this tutorial:
themodernquiltguild.com/2012/01/29/100-days-week-of-impro...
preparing for expanding Fujimoto-Escher steps (John McKeever), I have prefolded square (CP), but I am still in the process of understanding how the central part works...
from 9 cm square of note paper (very good dimension for bus folding)
27.9.2011
Photo of basswood trees silhouetted against sunset in grayscale, with pale gold marble texture overlay.
Today. Rovereto, Trentino, Italy
CROSSVIEW
To view 3D pics cross your eyes focusing between at the pictures until both images overlap one another in the middle.
Per vedere le foto in 3D incrociare (strabuzzare leggermente) gli occhi fino a che le due immagini si sovrappongono formandone una sola centrale.
Armistice Day (which overlaps with Remembrance Day and Veterans Day) is celebrated every year on 11 November to commemorate the armistice signed between the Allies of World War I and Germany at Compiègne, France, for the cessation of hostilities on the Western Front of World War I, which took effect at eleven o'clock in the morning—the "eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month" of 1918. While this official date to mark the end of the war reflects the ceasefire on the Western Front, hostilities continued in other regions, especially across the former Russian Empire and in parts of the old Ottoman Empire.
The date was declared a national holiday in many allied nations, to commemorate those members of the armed forces who were killed during war. An exception is Italy, where the end of the war is commemorated on 4 November, the day of the Armistice of Villa Giusti.
The Initial or Very First Armistice Day was held at Buckingham Palace commencing with King George V hosting a "Banquet in Honour of The President of the French Republic" during the evening hours of November 10 1919. The First Official Armistice Day was subsequently held on the Grounds of Buckingham Palace on the Morning of November 11th 1919. This would set the trend for a day of Remembrance for decades to come.
Most countries changed the name of the holiday after World War II, to honour veterans of that and subsequent conflicts. Most member states of the Commonwealth of Nations adopted the name Remembrance Day, while the United States chose All Veterans Day (later shortened to 'Veterans Day') to explicitly honour veterans of all conflicts. "Armistice Day" remains the name of the holiday in France, Belgium and New Zealand; and it has been a statutory holiday in Serbia since 2012.
In the U.S., the function of Veterans Day is subtly different from that of other 11 November holidays. Unlike the situation in other countries, where that calendar date is set aside specifically for honouring those who died in action, Veterans Day honors all American veterans, whether living, dead in action, or deceased from other causes. The official national remembrance of war dead is instead Memorial Day, originally called 'Decoration Day', from the practice of decorating the graves of soldiers, which originated in the years immediately following the American Civil War.
In many parts of the world, people observe two consecutive minutes moment of silence at 11:00 a.m. local time as a sign of respect in the first minute for the roughly 20 million people who died in the war, and in the second minute dedicated to the living left behind, generally understood to be wives, children and families left behind but deeply affected by the conflict. This gesture of respect was suggested by Edward George Honey in a letter to a British newspaper, although Wellesley Tudor Pole had established two ceremonial periods of remembrance based on events in 1917.
From the outset, many veterans in many countries have also used silence to pay homage to departed comrades. The toast of "Fallen" or "Absent Comrades" has always been honoured in silence at New Zealand veteran functions, while the news of a member’s death has similarly been observed in silence at meetings.
Similar ceremonies developed in other countries during the inter-war period. In South Africa, for example, the Memorable Order of Tin Hats had by the late 1920s developed a ceremony whereby the toast of "Fallen Comrades" was observed not only in silence but darkness, all except for the "Light of Remembrance", with the ceremony ending with the Order’s anthem "Old Soldiers Never Die". In Australia, meanwhile, the South Australian State Branch of the Returned Sailors & Soldiers' Imperial League of Australia similarly developed during the interwar period a simple ceremony of silence for departed comrades at 9 p.m., presumably to coincide with the traditional 11 a.m. time for Armistice ceremonies taking place in Europe (due to the ten-hour time difference between Eastern Australia and Europe).
In the United Kingdom, beginning in 1939, the two-minute silence was moved to the Sunday nearest to 11 November in order not to interfere with wartime production should 11 November fall on a weekday. After the end of World War II, most Armistice Day events were moved to the nearest Sunday and began to commemorate both World Wars. The change was made in many Commonwealth countries, as well as the United Kingdom, and the new commemoration was named Remembrance Sunday or Remembrance Day. Both Armistice Day and Remembrance Sunday are now commemorated formally in the UK. In recent years Armistice Day has become increasingly recognised, and many people now attend the 11am ceremony at the Cenotaph in London - an event organised by The Western Front Association, a UK charity dedicated to perpetuating the memory of those who served in the First World War.
LIVERPOOL ST. GEORGES HALL NOVEMBER 2013
A display window still-life overlapped by images of the streetscape reflected in the glass of the display windows.