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backstage setting by Artoleria for table setting

Having unloaded passengers for a photo stop, Y112 drags its train clear of the points in Somerton yard so it can run around.

Y Not Try Again Steamrail Tour with Y112 - Sunday 21st March 2021.

last night at Uchinada beach in Ishikawa-ken

Pretty much every little thing I've ever wanted to change or customize on my phone is here. There aren't really unnecessary customizations anywhere, just enough really. I think most users would be satisfied. And many others will seldom come here, that's probably why it's the last button on the phone before the tantalizing empty space.

Arrived early to stake out a decent spot.

Playing around with flashes to light up the Wheeling Metra station.

Kepnock High School 1983 N Qld trip

Playing with raw images, LR presets, and DOF.

 

ISO 400, 1/4000, f4.5

Cropped, LR4 user presets

cala gonone, sardinia, italy

The film speed setting was wrong for the film I was using but it still just works.

 

I'm hoping here to appeal to the geordies out there.

Setting out on Day 2 from the horse camp at Dutch Miller trail head.

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Day 2 of our Overcoat climb.

Setting up the potatoes

I fully admit that I love this shot. Turner and Stewart prep the M240B. LSA Anaconda, Balad, Iraq, 21Sep2007.

Setting up an installation before photographing.

 

In this photo: Sarah Crocker, Caroline Kurtz, Peter Foe, Barbara Cardinale.

    

photo by enaam

Production designer Lou Downe checks out a shot being lined up by co-creator James Lark. (Out of sight bottom left is a monitor that Lou's looking at.)

Inveraray enjoys a picturesque setting on the shores of Loch Fyne, where it meets Loch Shira. It was built on the site of an earlier fishing village in the mid 1700s by the 3rd Duke of Argyll, Chief of the powerful Clan Campbell. He demolished the original village to give his rebuilt castle more space, and rehoused the population in a new town that is one of the most attractive in Scotland.

 

The original village of Inveraray stood in the parkland that now extends south east from Inveraray Castle to the main A83. It had grown following the move of the Campbells to "old" Inveraray Castle in the mid 1400s from their previous stronghold at Innis Chonnell Castle on an island in Loch Awe.

  

Inveraray was well enough established to become a burgh of barony in 1472 and a royal burgh in 1648. With a good natural harbour and lying at a key focal point in the limited road network across Argyll, it had effectively become the legal and administrative centre for the county by the early 1700s. Its development went hand in hand with the growing power of the Campbells and the importance of their seat at Inveraray Castle.

 

The idea of replacing the 1400s tower house with a modern residence befitting the status and power of the Dukes of Argyll first occurred to the 2nd Duke in 1720. When the 3rd Duke of Argyll succeeded to his title in 1743 he commissioned an architect, and work began in 1745. As part of the project he created open parkland by demolishing the existing village of Inveraray, which stood between the castle and the sea.

 

The new town of Inveraray was built on a site to the south than its predecessor, out of sight of the castle. The new town had two main elements - Front Street ran almost west from the harbour to a large inn placed near the gates to the park for Inveraray Castle and the very grand Main Street ran parallel with the shore of Loch Fyne and at right angles to Front Street.

 

This comprised large white-harled buildings on both sides while in its centre it bulged out into Church Square to accommodate the classical bulk of the Glenaray and Inveraray Parish Church, built between 1792 and 1802 by Robert Mylne. This was originally built as a double church, with one half worshipping in Gaelic while the other half worshipped in Scots.

 

The area between Main Street and Loch Fyne is a warren of small streets, but a large part of it is occupied by Inveraray Jail. To the west, Main Street backs onto The Avenue, now the village's main car park.

 

www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/inveraray/inveraray/index....

 

phil sets up the sound system in the old shaw library @ LSE in London, May 22 2006.

A nice walk inside Avida Parkway Settings Nuvali

Aquarium of the Pacific Photographer's Night, 2015

Finally convinced Mrs C to let me set up my kit in the dining room and turn it into a little photo studio.

 

Took about 2 hours to tidy up the clutter that was already in there.

 

Have set up my two umbrella boxes, flashes with remote triggers that I can adjust from a controller on the camera. Tomorrow I'll put up the stands that hold my black or white backgrounds.

 

Exciting!

 

Day 7 of my 365 Project XLV

Sunday night sun set from the point at Heritage state park

The setting sun reddened the sky.

日本 東京 大岡山 Japan Tokyo Ookayama

RICOH GXR P10

Pumpkins in the Park

 

Beloit Daily News - Jack-o'-lanterns light the way for new event - By Holly Johns

 

Community members are bringing a new illuminating event to downtown Beloit Saturday. Beloit's first ever “Pumpkins in the Park” will be held from 5:30-7 p.m. at Horace White Park.

 

Bill Dorr suggested the idea to help raise funds to beautify and sustain the park. About a decade ago, he had visited a small town named White Fish Bay where an older gentleman called “the pumpkin man” would carve pumpkins and display them in the park.

Photo of workers lifting and setting the 125 foot long truss which spans a 21 lane firing range and supports overhead baffles at a small arms firing range. U.S. Army photo by Joan Coffing, Feb. 2004, Albuquerque, N.M.

Camera: Minolta XD-11; Lens: Helios 44M-4 58mm f/2; Film: Lomochrome Turquoise @ 200;

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