View allAll Photos Tagged pseudo
+ I really like the pop of red in the chaco. I also like how Blue jeans and green grass make the shoe pop.
- My feet are ghostly white. There us no pinkish or peachy color. Also the one pant leg is very white and lost its blue color.
18 /20
Hummelragwurz - ophrys holoserica -
syn. ophrys fuciflora -
syn. ophrys linearis
syn. ophrys pseudo-scolopax
Gigors-et-Lozeron, Drôme
Crossing the swinging bridge across the South Fork of the Holston River, onto Long Island of the Cherokee.
Sydney’s biggest New Year’s Eve party: Jamiroquai, Culture Club and Pet Shop Boys, as well as Australia’s very own Guy Sebastian, Pseudo Echo and Lyndsey Ollard
Sydney Resolution Concert Series is thrilled to announce Sydney’s biggest New Year’s Eve party, which will be staged at Sydney’s Glebe Island overlooking the iconic Sydney Harbour on Saturday December 31st 2011. The inaugural Sydney Resolution Concert Series will feature international superstars including Jamiroquai, Culture Club and Pet Shop Boys, as well as Australia’s very own Guy Sebastian, Pseudo Echo and Lyndsey Ollard.
Sydney Resolution Concert Series is sure to be an unforgettable night of music and festivities, showcasing some of the biggest acts in the world against a backdrop that only Sydney can provide.
With unobstructed, stunning views of the city and the fireworks display, there is no better place to be on New Year’s Eve than Glebe Island. See 2011 out with a bang with some of the world’s biggest classic and contemporary artists, playing all the songs you know and love.
Sydney’s Glebe Island will turn into a ‘mini city’ for this very special event, with a custom-built venue providing the very best in entertainment and bars, an incredible on-site ‘village’ showcasing Sydney’s best local and international food, and a unique array of retail and market stalls.
Sydney Resolution Concert Series will be the hottest ticket in town for New Year’s Eve!
Please be advised that Sydney Resolution Concert Series is a licensed event – all patrons must be over 18 years of age.
Glebe Island is situated on the beautiful Sydney Harbour. All patrons will arrive and depart by ferry or bus service from terminals and wharfs provided by Sydney Resolution Concert Series.
Please note there is no parking at the event. Gates open at 2pm, entertainment commences at 4:00pm and all performances will conclude by 1:45am.
Gates close at 3.00am
Tickets go on sale at 9am on 28th November through Ticketmaster.
Websites
Sydney Resolution Concert Series - New Years Eve
Eva Rinaldi Photography
Music News Australia
2020 collection
classical cluster freeform
DADA chaos knitting
intuitive organic crochet
autumn color mix
Gründl art-yarn
& matching materials
multiversatile lagenlook tunic
pseudo-poncho wrap vest
Took a trip to the town where I was born yesterday for their heritage week. I was especially keen to get inside the church where I sang in the choir, rang the bells and belonged to both the Sunday school and youth club and which I knew was open for the day. I was also able to catch up with people I hadn't seen or spoken with for over 40 years; a humbling experience.
Here's a shot of the main altar in the church that I have processed as a pseudo HDR. I will post more of the interior as and when I get them processed.
This is an untouched image. No editing. I encounted this artist just off Market Square in Knoxville, TN where he was sketching a cathedral onto a blank piece of plywood. This wall is an enduring tribute to mankind's need to make meaning out of void. The building is condemned, so who knows how long it will last, but I do know new art will fill the new space. "Old stone to new building..." to quote Eliot yet again.
Interior view of a 1967 Bond Equipe 6 GT Coupé 2+2.
Screenshot taken from the Classic Car Auctions site. The interior was heavily affected by smoke and soot. Probably it will take a long time before the burning smell will disappear.
Original photographer and date unknown.
The Bond Cars company started to produce cars in 1949 with a simple 3-wheel small car. In 1963 a 4-wheel GT was added. The first model was the four cylinder Equipe 4 GT with a fibre glass body. It was built on a Triumph Herald platform.
The 6 cylinder Equipe 6 received a renewed body with Triumph Vitesse technics and platform.
Bond was taken over by Reliant in Februari 1969.
Private import.
Seen at the viewing days of the Palmen Barnfind Collection Auction initiated by Gallery Aaldering, Brummen and provided by Classic Car Auctions, location Dordrecht.
More info: www.gallery-aaldering.com/nl/the-palmen-barnfind-collecti...
More photos: www.classiccar-auctions.com/nl/lot-details/18108/Main%20c...
1998 cc L6.
960 kg.
Production Bond Equipe Series: April 1963-Oct. 1970.
Production Bond Equipe 6 Coupé Series: Aug. 1967-Oct. 1970.
Production Equipe 6 this Mk1 version: Aug. 1967-Sept. 1968.
Original first reg. number: Dec. 1, 1967.
New Dutch pseudo-historical reg number: Oct. 18, 1999 (still valid, Aug. 2023).
Probably bought by Mr. Palmen on Dec. 7, 2011.
Was for sale since May 24, 2023, and finally sold on June 16, 2023.
Dordrecht, Einsteinstraat, May 29, 2023.
© 2023 CCA/Sander Toonen Halfweg | All Rights Reserved
Been playing with Pseudo-Tilt-Shift lens photography.. actually there's no tilt here since you need a real tilt shift lens to do that.
Pseudo and not Fake because instead of doing perspective correction in photoshop i used a ultrawide angle lens (12mm) and extracted a 24mm equivalent crop out of it. Luckily the 5d2 resolution is enough to end up with an image which is roughly 8 Mpixels in size...
This process is actually what happens optically on shift lenses, the difference is you retain your full pixel count and you can actually see the result while framing instead of having to picture it in your head and crop it afterward.. I guess there's a reason why you pay those lenses an eye and a half...
More info here in this discussion
epfl, lausanne
Banknote designs have always fascinated me - this is a Pseudo-Banknote I've created from colouring a monochrome image and distorting through Photoshop. (Best viewed on Black or full view)
(Go to [above] "Actions - View All Sizes - Original" to view at its original resolution of 1050x303 - 150 dpi).
Pseudo-unipolar neurons, spinal ganglion (H-E stain)
Leitz Orthoplan, 10X Phase Contrast illumination
2011-02-20
model: Sabrina Curry
make-up/hair: Brie Reeder
Mamiya 645AF
Mamiya AF 80mm f/2.8 lens
Kodak Portra 400NC 120 film
The Vesterflex is a Japanese 6×6 pseudo TLR, made in 1953–4 by Ginrei. The Topflex and Honestflex are name variants.
One of many lilies growing in our garden. Straight out of the camera, no processing.
I am really impresssed with the image quality of the XF16mm, and it's ability to capture macro-like shots. Highly uncommon for a wide angle prime...
O dia em que 'nevou' em Guarulhos/SP
Foi mágico *-*
Todo mundo com medo, desesperado e tal e eu mó feliz, em êxtase.
Pobre é uma desgraça :B
(more inside)
From WIKI:
Carnegie Hall (generally pronounced /ˌkɑrnɨgi ˈhɔːl/)[3] is a concert venue in Midtown Manhattan in New York City located at 881 Seventh Avenue, occupying the east stretch of Seventh Avenue between West 56th Street and West 57th Street, two blocks south of Central Park.
Designed by architect William Burnet Tuthill and built by philanthropist Andrew Carnegie in 1891, it is one of the most famous venues in the United States for classical music and popular music, renowned for its beauty, history and acoustics. Carnegie Hall has its own artistic programming, development, and marketing departments, and presents about 250 performances each season. It is also rented out to performing groups. The hall has not had a resident company since the New York Philharmonic moved to Lincoln Center's Philharmonic Hall in 1962.
Other concert halls that bear Carnegie's name include: 420-seat Carnegie Hall in Lewisburg, West Virginia; 1928-seat Carnegie Music Hall in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on the site of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History and the main branch of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh; 1022-seat Carnegie Music Hall annexed to Pittsburgh suburb Homestead's Carnegie library; and 540-seat Carnegie Hall, in Andrew Carnegie's native Dunfermline, Scotland,