View allAll Photos Tagged sections
Another small section of Idaho's Sawtooths reflected in Little Redfish Lake.
Shoulda put on a wider lens...
Barely got all this beauty in.
Heading out soon for my last major photo safari of the year. Hope to fill up lots of memory cards. Easy to do in beautiful Canada.
Have a wonderful couple of weeks. I know I will.
Thanks for taking a look!
Explored Nov 24, 2015 #7
2015-04-07 18.38.21
Support My Addiction...
Check Out My Photos
Thanx for Viewin, Favin, and Commentin on my Stream!
ZIBSKA
Inez Set @ Salon 52
The Inez set includes headpiece in 2 sections [A&B] and shoulders left & right with 15 colours via HUD for main & accent.
Laurentia Makeup @ The Vanity Event
The makeup packs include Omega appliers, tattoo & universal tattoo BOM layers. Eyemakeup 15 colours, Blush 18 Colours, Lips 18 Colours in two fits.
VENGE
Tigress Nail Appliers for Venge Mesh Nails @ Flourish
Beautifully detailed textures, 9 colours on hud, each nail can be textured separately.
Please see my blog for links to mainstores and events
Sansia Old Street” generally refers to the southern section of Minquan St., and is about 200 meters long. The buildings have stood since the earliest period of the Republic of China. Various words on the building fronts represent surnames, names, and shop names, and their signage is very different to today’s. The buildings are equipped with magnificent verandahs, which are the most impressive parts of the buildings along this street. Their decorated archways are rich in culture and they play a valuable role in reminding people of the need to preserve historical relics. The outer walls of the buildings are built with red brick, while the inner walls were made of clay. The outer parts of the buildings are decorated with a variety of patterns, and in particular the second-floor windowsills, making them all the more beautiful. There are many with traditional Chinese patterns, animal motifs, and even foreign patterns. Opposite Minquan St. is a smaller wall, known for its unique styling, featuring solid, hollow, and framed styles of decoration.
One section of the Crater Lake Circuit walk takes you through a dense stand of Eucalypts.
They are all leaning into each other, as if whispering, sharing a secret. The effect is like an embrace from nature, and if you listen, you hear the quiet hum of their talk, giving comfort and relief from a broken world.
I remember taking this image. I took it very quickly as I was trying to avoid people in the frame and it was quite dark. Consequently, it isn't terribly sharp. However it is the overall effect I wanted to share with you so alittle fuzz is O.K!
101 Warren Street (left-aka Warren Street Condominium) and 89 Murray Luxury Apartments (right) NYC - 2008 - Designed by Skidmore, Owings, & Merrill
Excerpt from www.oakville.ca/assets/general%20-%20business/1-Section%2...:
293 MacDonald Road (1857): Donald Campbell purchased the property from John Chisholm in 1856. The house was constructed in 1857. Campbell was previously a soldier with The Argyle and Sutherland Highlanders and settled in Oakville after his discharge in 1842.
This Georgian brick house has Flemish Bond brickwork on the south façade. North and south walls have a decorative brick cornice with gable returns. Windows are 6/6 wood with stone sills and wood shutters.
Baseball fans entering the stadium at a Texas Rangers game….let’s play ball.
Press "L" to play ball.
For WAH who are all about books today.
We have a shed full of books. And three overfull bookcases. This is the kids collection. Well, those that are not in their rooms.
An unusual subject that caught my eye whilst out wandering on a wet afternoon - the remains of an old punga tree fern stump that has been sawn through, wet with rainwater and with new life springing from within! Worth an image I thought.
© Dominic Scott 2022
Sliders Sunday
The Bass Section of the Albuquerque Philharmonic Orchestra. The Original photo I used is below.
backside of the Opera House in Cologne.
SECTION or SEGMENT is the theme for Thursday 20th August - 26th August 2020, Group Our Daily Challenge
The River Sow is a tributary of the River Trent in Staffordshire. Between 1816 and the 1920s, the section between Stafford and Baswich was navigable, and was known as the River Sow Navigation.
The river flows past Shugborough Hall.
part of a mural seen in Vancouver..in January 2022.
HCMWD !!!
Une section de murale vue au centre-ville de Vancouver en janvier 2022. Bon dimanche a tous.
Spiral staircase, Berlin, Hackesche Höfe - UNESCO Weltkulturerbe Hackesches Quartier
Unesco World Cultural Heritage "Hackesches Quartier", Berlin
This section along the shoreline south of Lost Villages Museum, Long Sault, Ontario. Open water on the St. Lawrence River that can be accessible for our canoe. Unfortunately snow falling the next 4 days making it difficult to paddle. Soon ice will form here too soon.
Below, where I scootered to view this. There is a long walk to the shoreline from Lost Villages, where my scooter is viewed below…
This is a cropped section of an image from this weeks adventure in Bentonville. Like much of the country lately, it was very windy.
Art Week Gallery Theme
"A Closer Look"
With heartfelt and genuine thanks for your kind visit. Have a wonderful and beautiful day, be well, keep your eyes open, appreciate the beauty surrounding you, enjoy creating, stay safe and laugh often! ❤️❤️❤️
Well that's a wrap on another week and a very welcome beginning to a long weekend.
Three final images from the last week of September 2020.
Watching baseball, sitting in the sun, eating popcorn,
reading Ezra Pound,
and wishing that Juan Marichal would hit a hole right through
the Anglo-Saxon tradition in the first Canto
and demolish the barbarian invaders
--Lawrence Ferlinghetti
The boom sections are capped and the head is in place. I just need to make the hook block, the counterweight and connect the boom ram to have a working crane.
Not long after the previous photostream photo was taken, the second section of the "Lakeshore Limited" also crossed the Vermilion River. For one living in the land of no daylight passenger trains in the 1970's, it was a real treat to see two passenger trains like 30 minutes apart (or something like that). Of course, it was anything but a treat for the passengers of the very late train. For some reason, Amtrak had decided to take the Boston section, train #449, and continue west all the way to Chicago this day as a separate train. They basically followed #49 as a second section, from what I recall. More details on that day, including an excellent shot, can be seen on my friends Flickr page as noted below.