View allAll Photos Tagged parenting

You have to wait a long time for this moments as a nature photographer but sooner or latter you get them. You have to have patience.

Aloot of time spend outside makes it more likely.

 

I was very lucky that got to spend aloot of the summer outside and not in a factory all time.

waiting for his parents to get married :)

Netherlands, 2014

There was a funny minister. He even wore a Garfield tie.

My parents' house in Florida.

Man claiming his space. This pose is called, "My Bed Woman!"

To the left are Daniel's parents. Mine are to the right. This is in our apartment, the day after our wedding. No pics of either of us from that day we were both in such bad shape! lol

Parents move from Texas to Pennsylvania

Student Affairs and Parent Philanthropy at Clemson University tailgate party Saturday morning at the Fike Recreation Building.

Mom was enjoying herself

My parents' engagement photo. Mom 20 y.o., Dad 21 y.o. Man, I never looked THIS good when I was young, this is a very beautiful couple!

 

Working on this to restore the details.

@ the Filling Station

Parents Cape Cod Visit October 2005

Mum's unhappy that dad pulled out the plug while she was vacuuming the kitchen floor.

 

Still from video ads we created for our client, AlertMe

During the Annual Parents Assembly on Sept. 29.

President Michael Roth '78 and Sharon Belden Castonguay, director of the Gordon Career Center, provided remarks. (Photo by Olivia Drake)

RSPB Frampton and Freiston Shore, Lincolnshire

Parents Weekend 2012, Drill Down, Leamy Hall. U.S. Coast Guard photograph by Auxiliarist Barry Novakoff.

Parents watching their kids' soccer match from way up high in Riverside Park. COVID keeps them from being able to cheer from the sidelines.

Horizon Perfekt

Fujifilm Superia X-Tra 400

Both of my Parents are absolutely amazing, and I owe them all the credit in the world. They have provided me with all of the tools I need to succeed in life. Now that I am finally reaching my goals within my passion of photography I want them to know they are my biggest inspiration. I decided to take a photo of them on my last day because Family is the most important thing in my life! It is surreal that I finished my 365 day project.Thank you to everyone who has supported me in this last year of my life. I can't even describe what it means to me to hear you compliments. Please keep checking in because a new project will come around very soon! Thank you again to each and every one of you!~Rocky Maloney / ©RocMaloney Photography 2010.

 

©rocmaloney photography

rocmaloney@hotmail.com

 

Canon EOS 7D

Canon 18-55mm

(2) Pocket Wizard PLUS II

(2) Alienbee B800 Strobehead

 

Mamiya Universal

Mamiya Sekor 100/2.8

Fuji FP-3000

Scans from slides

Parenting begins the moment your new baby is born. Antenatal classes can help you to prepare for your baby’s birth and learn to look after and feed your baby.

Mayer was born Lazar Mayer in the Ukraine and grew up in Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada after his parents fled Russian oppression in 1886. He had a brutal childhood, raised in poverty and suffering physical and emotional abuse from his nearly-illiterate peddler father. In the early 1890s, he changed his name to Louis and fudged his birth date to reflect the more "patriotic" date of July 4, 1885. He moved to Boston in 1904 and struggled as a scrap-metal dealer until he was able to purchase a burlesque house. Although he made large sums by showing films (he made a sizable fortune off The Birth of a Nation (1915)), his early business ventures favored legitimate theater in New England. As his theater empire expanded, he had acquired and refurbished enough small movie theaters that he was able to move his business to Los Angeles and venture into movie production in 1918. Along with Samuel Goldwyn and Marcus Loew of Metro Pictures, he formed a new company called Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM).

 

Over the next 25 years, MGM was "the Tiffany of the studios," producing more films and movie stars than any other studio in the world. Mayer became the prime creator of the enduring Hollywood of myth, home to stars like Clark Gable, Judy Garland, Joan Crawford, and Jean Harlow. Mayer became the highest-paid man in America, one of the country's most successful horse breeders, a political force and Hollywood's leading spokesman. Both he and MGM reached their peaks at the end of World War II, and Mayer was forced out in 1951. He died of leukemia in 1957. - imdb

1 2 ••• 27 28 30 32 33 ••• 79 80