View allAll Photos Tagged reverb
To be honest, I have no idea what I am doing, I just really love these boots and glasses right now and I'm not even showing you the best texture on the glasses. I'm good like that.
Wearing ~
LeLUTKA Avalon Head 3.0
[theSkinnery] Esty (LeLutkaEVOX) sorbet
Jack Spoon. La Boheme Moles
SKN - Sharon Glasses *Coming Soon*
_CandyDoll_ Siane Pants Black
.Shi Hair : Qarah . Essential 1 @ Uber
(.miss chelsea. Lisl Sweater Colour Pack 1 @ The Fifty
BOYS TO THE BONE fluffigast stole - fatpack
@ Kustom9
EQUAL - Jenna Boots FATPACK @ Access
Lyrium. Love Fluffy Coin Purse @ Equal10
Pose - Del May
7 - Amp 701A - Blue Dream
7 - MicroAmp-78-C Leopard
:::ChicChica::: Bourbon with cig
©: reignedelanuit.wordpress.com/2016/10/31/reverb/
Insta: www.instagram.com/kelsey.nocturne
Mah booty says hi ;)
Impressionistic guitar style...or the essence of making music. I play quite often and the guitar somewhat becomes an extension........
.hard to strum while holding the camera though! :)
Join me on Erik Witsoe Photography
HEY ;)
you can support my commercial work by liking my facebook page: www.facebook.com/pbvmedia
THANKS :D !!
The panorama of the Aletsch Glacier and the Fiescher Glacier in the Swiss Alps belongs to the most spectacular mountain landscapes in Europe.
The promising thunderstorm conditions in August 2015 were ideally suited to photograph this panorama from the summit of the Eggishorn (2,869 m, 9,413 feet). The active thunderstorm line was still about 6 km (3.7 miles) away while these images were taken. The heavy rainfall of the thunderstorm can be seen in the unstructured gray clouds at the left side of the image behind Bettmerhorn (2.857 m, 9.373 feet). This seems to have left enough time to complete the 57 individual shots of this 220° panorama and to start the descent from the summit in time.
However, what was not visible even to the trained meteorological eye in this dynamic and rapidly changing cloud cover was the new formation of a thunderstorm cell directly above the Eggishorn. Working behind the sturdy metal tripod I first noticed a tingling sensation running from my feet up to my head, whereupon my hair stood up. What I felt was the pre-discharge of the building up lightning channel running from bottom to top. Intuitively I threw myself to the ground, but immediately recognized that the metal tripod was now standing above me. At the same moment there was a deafening bang as the lightning struck and the thunder rolled through the wide glacial valley and echoed back from the opposite mountain walls. As I slowly rose, I noticed flames of St. Elmo's fires sparkling from my fingertips. These rare and ghostly light phenomena, caused by electric charges, gleam blue-violet due to the spectral lines of the atmospheric gases oxygen and nitrogen. Never before had I come closer to being struck by lightning. I could literally smell and taste the electric charge inside and around me while my body was flooded with adrenaline. In feverish haste I finished the missing two shots of the panorama, threw the photo equipment unsorted into my backpack and rushed from the summit towards the valley, when the next lightning bolts already struck way too close. On the way down the heavy rain finally poured down on me. But the thunderstorm gradually lost its activity and gradually drifted away.
With a length of 22 km (13.7 miles) and a width of 1.500 m (4.900 feet), the Aletsch Glacier is the biggest and longest glacier of the European Alps.
The feeling of experiencing this stormy atmosphere on the summit of the Eggishorn high above the Aletsch Glacier was intoxicating. The looming light of the scenery and the incisive experience of almost being hit by lightning makes the adventure behind this shot unforgettable and unique.
Canon 5DMkII, Rokinon 14 mm, f/16, 1/30 to 1/125 seconds, 220° panorama from 57 frames, 12091x3629 pixels, 44 megapixels, ISO 100, Manfrotto 055B tripod with Manfrotto 410 3D geared head
I hadn't noticed the ripples in the reflection when I took this shot... that's what makes it for me. I rotated it to give a more satisfying composition.
*Grand Opening:*
saturday August 30th
7-9pm!
Many of the greatest moments of our lives exist just below the view of others. Although we participate in mass culture, relate to each other through mass media, and bond over a shared appreciation for supposedly universal truths, our deepest connections are often made in smaller circles. With our closest friends we can revel in songs that only we know, scenes that only we can see, and interpretations of the world that make sense only to us. When then are these experiences real? Are we real yet? Perhaps we should be content to relish what we will and leave the questions of legitimacy to the academics.
Bill Wehmann converts a tiny gallery (ICEBERGER) into a record store (PRS) full of rare and unrefined music. A meeting place for a secret society of reverberation full of mix tapes and zines, all selling for under five american dollars. It may last only a month and our catalogue will certainly not be the largest, but since the room is small enough everyone inside will surely hear the music.
Pacific Reverb Society at ICEBERGER GALLERY
Regional Assistant Manager: Bill Wehmann
Saturday August 30 - September 21
3150 18th St. #109 (18th & Treat)
San Francisco 94110
415-225-8392