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As usual when visiting Tate Modern I had anticipated the latest rehash of the ‘Emperors new clothes’, habitually normal viewing there which explains why most of the general public tend to view modern art as crap. I was astonished to find that this was far from the norm, both original & enchanting, stunningly impressive I’m delighted to report.

 

The Tate blurb says this:

 

Hyundai Commission Anicka Yi

 

What would it feel like to share the world with machines that could live in the wild and evolve on their own?

Artist Anicka Yi offers a vision of a new ecosystem within the Turbine Hall, the large post-industrial space at the heart of Tate Modern.

 

Originally part of Bankside Power Station, the hall was built to house electricity-generating machinery. Yi’s installation populates the space with machines once again. Floating in the air, her machines – called aerobes – are based on ocean life forms and mushrooms. They re-imagine artificial intelligence, and encourage us to think about new ways machines might inhabit the world. Yi has also created unique scentscapes which change weekly, with odours linked to a specific time in the history of Bankside.

 

Yi is known for her experimental work which explores the merging of technology and biology. Through breaking down distinctions between plants, animals, micro-organisms and machines, she asks us to think about further understanding ourselves as humans and the ecosystems we live in.

  

... this is a rehash of an image taken almost 10 years ago with my first mirrorless camera (Nikon 1 V1)

LACPIXEL - 2021

 

Fluidr

 

Please don't use this image without my explicit permission.

© All rights reserved

Meisterhaus Gropius (Neubau)

 

"By managing to turn their ideas of blurriness and imprecision into well-detailed three-dimensional buildings, that need to be per se sharp and precise, the architects have managed with this design to avoid creating anything like an idyllic recreation of the Bauhaus’ perfect modernist world. This is no Disneyfied Gropius, at the same time it is no memorial trying to conserve or rehash the spasms of the 20th century. The Bauhaus’ architecture was a provocation in its time – and the new Gropius House is again thought provoking, being a reinterpretation rather than a reconstruction.

It is, most of all, a highly controversial piece of architecture, that hopefully will keep the controversies of early modernism, German history, and the Bauhaus itself, alive."

www.uncubemagazine.com

• Robbie Williams • The Road To Mandalay •

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=KohurXfPb7s

 

Save me from drowning in the sea

Beat me up on the beach

What a lovely holiday

There's nothing funny left to say

This sombre song would drain the sun

But it won't shine until it's sung

No water running in the stream

The saddest place we've ever seen

 

Everything I touched was golden

Everything I loved got broken

On the road to Mandalay

Every mistake I've ever made

Has been rehashed and then replayed

As I got lost along the way

 

Bom bom bom ba da dup bom bom

Bom bom bom ba da dup bom bom

Bom bom bom ba da dup bom bom

Bom badom

 

There's nothing left for you to give

The truth is all that you're left with

Twenty paces then at dawn

We will die and be reborn

I like to sleep beneath the trees

Have the universe at one with me

Look down the barrel of a gun

And feel the moon replace the sun

Everything we've ever stolen

Has been lost, returned or broken

No more dragons left to slay

Every mistake I've ever made

Has been rehashed and then replayed

As I got lost along the way

 

Bom bom bom ba da dup bom bom

Bom bom bom ba da dup bom bom

Bom bom bom ba da dup bom bom

Bom badom

Bom bom bom ba da dup bom bom

Bom bom bom ba da dup bom bom

Bom bom bom ba da dup bom bom

Bom badom

Bom bom bom ba da dup bom bom

Bom bom bom ba da dup bom bom

Bom bom bom ba da dup bom bom

Bom badom

 

Save me from drowning in the sea

Beat me up on the beach

What a lovely holiday

Taken in 2014 with my Nikon D7100 and 35mm f1.8

...I am enchanted...

...of course...(rehash, rehash)...

...really!...

...yes, my Dear...(rehash)...

...do you listen to me?...

...yes, you are bewitched...(rehash, rehash)...

...are you sure?...

...definitely, my Dear!...

 

in the moment "Explore page 35"

I've posted a shot of this car before, when it was at last years Goodwood Revival. In that shot the light was quite harsh, so I thought I'd upload this image from the 74MM, taken when the light was much better.

 

I won't rehash the details of the car here, but as always you are welcome to check out the previous post here to read a bit about this Ferrari.

 

________________________________

Dave Adams Automotive Images

a reference to the arctic front approaching with sub-zero temps. this is a rehash....thanks for your patience.

At East Wemyss, Fife. Having been struck down with flu/cold for the last 10 days or so, I have been getting on with the photo filing so I'm rehashing a bit - apologies if you have seen these before

Explore

A rehash of one from my archives, a new crop and slieght hdr effect. this is one of my fav pics.

I got my first look at Reading and Northern 2102 this past and let's just say it exceeded expectations. Much has been written about the rebirth of this stout 4-8-4 built in the Reading Railroad's own shops in 1945 so I won't rehash a long history now.

 

I had seen many recent photos from this location just compass east of Haucks, but had never actually been here on prior visits so decided I wanted to see it for myself. There was a big crowd as could be expected but everyone was friendly and respectful of photo lines. So here is my take on her leading 19 cars with a sold out train of 750 passengers headed back to North Reading from Jim Thorpe. They are seen here approaching the Church Road crossing at about MP 106.2 on the modern day Reading and Northern Railroad's Reading Division mainline, near the west end of the former Central Railroad of New Jersey Railroad branch built from Mauch Chunk in 1870 as Nesquehoning Valley Railroad Company.

 

Rush Township, Pennsylvania

Saturday July 2, 2022

Had a head cold all week so do I feel like plodding the streets taking pointless pics..nah! This pic seemed to hit the spot a few weeks ago, so I Snapseeded it all over again.. just lazy I guess.

This is a theme I am used to shooting since I started taking photos so I thought this would be a breeze when the prompt came through.

 

But even today I was puzzling what I could do with it...the horrendous Sydney wild and wet weather for since Friday didn't help...especially today. This is a rehash of a shot I've done before but when I have no other ideas by Sunday afternoon then a rehash it is.

rehashing my shots of the kids as i continue the massive edit. notice i'm doing my best to avoid calling this "bow wow tie". i knew if i didn't mention it, someone else would.

This is a tiny detail on a painting we have titled 'Monday Experts' In the style of Van Gough, thick layers of paint are mixed and scraped to create the illusion of a solid object such as a newspaper, hand and table but if you look close they are just blobs of paint. The only detail in this illusion is the headline-Sport-the rest is totally unidentifiable. As a whole the picture makes perfect sense in it's composition of three old men at a table in a kitchen, two sitting one standing rehashing, what you can only see up close is the weekend sports results

an old one i'm rehashing since it reminds me of yesterday's living room floor.

Given the news of the day regarding the donation of a large amount of Union Pacific equipment to the new museum complex in Silvis, IL (railfan.com/up-donates-two-steam-locomotives-to-non-profi...), I thought that I'd rehash this image of mine from 2008.

 

Here, UP's Centennial #6936 is leading a Wimmer Inspection Train eastbound through Topeka, KS on the Kansas Sub. I seem to recall that it had just come off of the Golden State from Herington, but perhaps I'm misremembering this.

 

Unfortunately, I was photographing with an early, point and shoot digital and deleted the full-sized image, but this at least works well for the Web, and I'm happy to have this memory. This was a NEAT engine to see out on the road, and hopefully, the Railroading Heritage of Midwest America organization will get it out on the high iron again.

Here is another shot from my trip out to see RBMN 2102 for my first time. Much has been written about the rebirth of this stout 4-8-4 built in the Reading Railroad's own shops in 1945 so I won't rehash a long history now.

 

Here she is looking good on historic ex Reading Company home rails leading 19 cars with a sold out train of 750 passengers headed back to North Reading from Jim Thorpe on the second of a series of modern day 'Reading Rambles'. They are seen here approaching the Wildcat Road crossing at about MP 94.5 on the modern day Reading and Northern Railroad's Reading Division mainline at a place known as Zenners on the railroad.

 

Walker Township, Pennsylvania

Saturday July 2, 2022

A rehash of a prior posting. Fun with the photo editor.

A "slight" rehash of an earlier shot :-)

 

Rehash of an old Post over 7 years ago. Taken by Myself originally 8 Sept 2014

I can tell my February mosaic is going to look pretty black. Rehashing my pencil shot cause it's dark and I've no inspo.

salt Columns and Lichen. © Copyright 2021 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

 

Yellow lichen growing on the basalt columns of Devils Postpile National Monument

 

This is the second of two photographs that “reemerged” from a recent look back to raw files from a trip to Devil’s Postpile National Monument a few years ago. The first was, in essence, a “new” photograph in that I had not taken it through my post-processing workflow back when I first captured the image. At the time I was more interested in one or two other photographs from the session, so I left it behind. But when I went back and looked again this year I “discovered” it anew, and now it did not seem a like file to simply archive! This one has a different story. I did finalize a photograph of this image shortly after I made the exposure. But now, some years later, I see it differently than I did originally… so here is a new interpretation of the subject.

 

To rehash the old story in brief, we ended up at Devil’s Postpile essentially by accident… after sleeping in and enjoying a leisurely breakfast rather than heading out into the pre-dawn cold as I usually do. And when we got to Devil’s Postpile, at first I wasn’t even going to photograph! The geometric forms of the “post pile” are fascinating, and they are even more interesting in soft light and when sections of the formation are isolated, here with a long lens. The pattern of columns in this scene reminds me of various things — the pipes of an organ, some sort of stairway, and so forth.

 

G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, “California’s Fall Color: A Photographer’s Guide to Autumn in the Sierra” is available from Heyday Books, Amazon, and directly from G Dan Mitchell.

A rehash of an old favorite composition ...

a rehash from a few years back. i was cruising thru the files and found it, chuckling at the stash we created shortly before we realized we can't handle the stuff anymore. 1970 mellow it ain't.

Aptly the last train to this weekend's engineering trains, was the ballast headed by 66779 Evening Standard. Oddly I was talking to someone last week who said they had not seen this loco for ages.

 

Sadly this train left the area some 204 minutes late with congestion in the Rotherham area starting around Saturday afternoon. With the timetable already rehashed, the last thing the railway operators wanted was idiots stealing signalling cable. It will also no doubt lead to further lost photographic opportunities with more fencing.

Fractal created in Fractal Explorer.

 

It must be the time of year, long dark nights and cold wintry days have me, in my spare time, sitting and doodling at the pc instead of getting out there shooting. So it's either rehash and deep dive all of my stuff shot over the last 18 months or try mucking about with my fractal programmes to see what new and wonderful stuff I can come up with. Fractals won :D

A rehash of an old shot but it's one of my favourite Peak District views.

Not here for a few days - in the meantime...

 

I've got several exposures of this over as many minutes - all with different skly and waves - can't seem to find a combination I like! That goes for composition and colours - Doesn't work as a mono either

 

Friends may View On Black

A black and white rehash of the row of long abandoned downtown stores in the ghost town of Folsom,NM. This is an old scanned Kodak print, so please excuse the over the top editing! Hope everyone is having a great holiday weekend!

Taken from my Nieces house ,funnily enough called Arran View .Viewed over old Schoolhouse

Whirring of servo’s, soft purple light, the zap electric, a pinch, then a bite.....

Yes, I’m still at the Lego (although not as devoted to finding the time, specifically in this last year) and of course these black mecha spiders seem to spring forth quite naturally. Riffing on past builds this one feels quite familiar but hopefully interesting enough to excuse the rehashing of ideas.

When I saw this derelict boat in the moonlight I was reminded of a scene in my mind's eye from a story I read as a child of smuggler's on the south coast of England in about 1745. For the life of me I can't remember the title of the novel, but the scene it set has remained so vivid in my mind. Hunter's Moon? No! Could it have been Moonraker? Not the 007 Bond one! Or is my old mind rehashing some snippets I picked up long, long ago

www.historic-uk.com/CultureUK/The-Moonrakers/

Not feeling well today so had to stay in doors, so attempted a rehash of an old image. Hope you like :-)

Take a look at www.markmedcalf.co.uk

Just a Steam Sunday shot from six months ago on my first of two trips in 2022 to see Reading and Northern 2102. She was a sight to behold and exceeded my expectations and look forward to more opportunities to see her this year. Much has been written about the rebirth of this stout 4-8-4 built in the Reading Railroad's own shops in 1945 after a more than three decade slumber so I won't rehash a long history.

 

Here she is charging out of the north (compass west) portal of the 926 ft long Tamaqua Tunnel with 19 cars and a sold out train of 750 passengers headed from North Reading to Jim Thorpe.

 

This particular stretch is of Reading Railroad provenance and dates to 1854 so the stout T-1 is very much on home rails in service for the RDG both on coal trains and the famed Reading Rambles of the 1960s. Today it is known as the RBMN's Reading Division mainline, and this is about MP 100 at the north portal of the tunnel where they cross the Little Schuylkill River twice in short succession.

 

Rush Township, Pennsylvania

Saturday July 2, 2022

I’ve made a few walking tanks over the years and apparently I’m still not done rehashing the concept. For this shot I added a quick base and a fig for scale.

Just another Steam Sunday shot from last summer on my first of two trips in 2022 to see Reading and Northern 2102. She was a sight to behold and exceeded my expectations, and I hope to have more opportunities to see her this year. Much has been written about the rebirth of this stout 4-8-4 built in the Reading Railroad's own shops in 1945 after a more than three decade slumber so I won't rehash a long history.

 

Here she is charging out of the north (compass west) portal of the 926 ft long Tamaqua Tunnel with 19 cars and a sold out train of 750 passengers headed from North Reading to Jim Thorpe as her stack blasts leaves from the trees.

 

This particular stretch is of Reading Railroad provenance and dates to 1854 so the stout T-1 is very much on home rails in service for the RDG both on coal trains and the famed Reading Rambles of the 1960s. Today it is known as the RBMN's Reading Division mainline, and this is about MP 100 at the north portal of the tunnel where they cross the Little Schuylkill River twice in short succession.

 

Rush Township, Pennsylvania

Saturday July 2, 2022

I got my first look at Reading and Northern 2102 yesterday and let's just say it exceeded expectations. Much has been written about the rebirth of this stout 4-8-4 built in the Reading Railroad's own shops in 1945 so I won't rehash a long history now (maybe later), but I wanted to share a quick favorite from the day.

 

I got better shots, but what really makes this special was the pure sensory experience. This thing REALLY sounds impressive, and it put on a heck of a show here sending cinders to the heavens (and incidentally completely obscuring the blue onion domes of St John the Babtist Orthodox Church that I had framed up on the hill in the background) leading 19 cars with a sold out train of 750 passengers headed back to North Reading from Jim Thorpe. They are seen here at about MP 117 on the modern day Reading and Northern Railroad's Reading Division mainline, the former Central Railroad of New Jersey Railroad branch built in 1870 as Nesquehoning Valley Railroad Company.

 

Nesquehoning, Pennsylvania

Saturday July 2, 2022

Reworked with Snapseed/iPad from an original HDR image taken some years ago, Nikon D90 and Tokina 12-24.

 

This was a 3exp image processed to within an inch of its digital existence in PhotoMatix, back then i quite enjoyed blasting viewers' retinas with garish renders.

 

I sold the D90 but still have the Tokina which I think I'll dust off this weekend, I reckon it's about time I took the Nikon gear out for a spin.

I got my first look at Reading and Northern 2102 yesterday and let's just say it exceeded expectations. Much has been written about the rebirth of this stout 4-8-4 built in the Reading Railroad's own shops in 1945 so I won't rehash a long history now (maybe later), but here is another shot from a fabulous day.

 

Here she is charging out of the north (compass west) portal of the 926 ft long Tamaqua Tunnel with 19 cars and a sold out train of 750 passengers headed from North Reading to Jim Thorpe

 

This particular stretch is of Reading Railroad provenance and dates to 1854 so the stout T-1 is very much on home rails in service for the RDG both on coal trains and the famed Reading Rambles of the 1960s. Today it is known as the RBMN's Reading Division mainline, and this is about MP 100 at the north portal of the tunnel where they cross the Little Schuylkill River twice in short succession.

 

Rush Township, Pennsylvania

Saturday July 2, 2022

Rehash of a post from my Archives. Taken with Lumix G2 Mirrorless Camera

Beat me up on the beach.

What a lovely holiday-

there´s nothing funny left to say.

 

This sombre song would drain the sun

But it won't shine until it's sung

No water running in the stream

The saddest place we've ever seen

 

Everything I touched was golden

Everything I loved got broken

On the road to Mandalay

Every mistake I've ever made

Has been rehashed and then replayed

As I got lost along the way

 

There's nothing left for you to give

The truth is all that you're left with

Twenty paces then at dawn

We will die and be reborn

 

I like to sleep beneath the trees

Have the universe at one with me

Look down the barrel of a gun

And feel the Moon replace the Sun

 

Everything we've ever stolen

Has been lost returned or broken

No more dragons left to slay

Every mistake I've ever made

Has been rehashed and then replayed

As I got lost along the way...

  

ROBBIE WILLIAMS- Road to Mandalay

 

this is a really great song, but i´t also has a quite sad note hasn´t it?

Healthy wild fruits..Crab apples... rosehips .... blackthorn ..

 

Crab apples... are edible...they are bowel cleansing ... metabolism-enhancing and contain pectin that binds toxins in the gut.

Rose hips :

From the shell of the hip can make a vitamin-rich tea, which is slightly diuretic and laxative because of its high content of vegetable acids and Pektiden. He helps with bladder and kidney ailments and colds.

The Mus is particularly suitable because of its sprouting and effect is like a rehashing against gout and rheumatism uses.

The jam promotes appetite ..is rich in vitamin C and lycopene.

 

Blackthorn: ... The flowers, bark and fruits have an astringent diuretic, laxative weakly, antipyretic, stomachic and anti-inflammatory. A flower infusion is used especially in children with diarrheal diseases in bladder and kidney problems, and stomach discomfort. Blackthorn elixier is considered suitable tonic after infectious diseases.

by wikipedia

  

Gesunde Wildfrüchte..Zieräpfelchen...Hagebutten....Schlehen..

Zieräpfel :

sind essbar..sie sind darmreinigend...stoffwechselfördernd und enthalten Pektin das Giftstoffe im Darm bindet.

Hagebutten :

Aus der Schale der Hagebutte kann man einen vitaminreichen Tee machen, der wegen seines hohen Gehaltes an Pflanzensäuren und Pektiden leicht harntreibend und abführend ist. Er hilft bei Blasen- und Nierenleiden und bei Erkältungskrankheiten.

Das Mus eignet sich besonders wegen seiner austreibenden Wirkung und wird wie der Aufguss gegen Gicht und Rheuma verwendet.

Die Marmelade fördert den Appetit ..ist reich an Vitamin C und Lycopin.

Schlehdorn :

...Die Blüten, Rinde und Früchte wirken adstringierend (zusammenziehend), harntreibend, schwach abführend, fiebersenkend, magenstärkend und entzündungshemmend. Ein Blütenaufguss wird besonders bei Kindern bei Durchfallerkrankungen, bei Blasen- und Nierenproblemen und Magenbeschwerden eingesetzt.Schlehenelixier gilt als geeignetes Stärkungsmittel nach Infektionskrankheiten.

Infos von wikipedia

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