View allAll Photos Tagged simble
Age: 16
Height: 5'10
Hair: Golden Blonde
Eyes: Light Blue
Hometown: Germany
For the girls first test shoot, they were stripped back and raw. Their first Photo for their portfolios was asked to be simble and show them as a product, their brand, their market.
They wore simple styling and shot in black and white.
Vote for the girls you want to move through to next week! This week, the 5 girls with the lowest votes will be up for elimination, with 3 of them leaving!
Age: 17
Height: 5'11"
Hair: Black
Eyes: Lavender
Hometown: Russia
For the girls first test shoot, they were stripped back and raw. Their first Photo for their portfolios was asked to be simble and show them as a product, their brand, their market.
They wore simple styling and shot in black and white.
Vote for the girls you want to move through to next week! This week, the 5 girls with the lowest votes will be up for elimination, with 3 of them leaving!
Who did the best!? Let me know!
Age: 17
Height: 5'10"
Hair: Dark Brown
Eyes: Blue
Hometown: Barcelona
For the girls first test shoot, they were stripped back and raw. Their first Photo for their portfolios was asked to be simble and show them as a product, their brand, their market.
They wore simple styling and shot in black and white.
Vote for the girls you want to move through to next week! This week, the 5 girls with the lowest votes will be up for elimination, with 3 of them leaving!
Who did the best!? Let me know!
Age: 17
Height: 5'11"
Hair: Dark Blonde
Eyes: Hazel
Hometown: Santa Monica
For the girls first test shoot, they were stripped back and raw. Their first Photo for their portfolios was asked to be simble and show them as a product, their brand, their market.
They wore simple styling and shot in black and white.
Vote for the girls you want to move through to next week! This week, the 5 girls with the lowest votes will be up for elimination, with 3 of them leaving!
Who did the best!? Let me know!
The Temple of Hathor (aka the Small Temple) at Abu Simbel, located some 860 km (534 mi.) south of Cairo on the shore of Lake Nasser in Aswan Governorate, Egypt. Four colossal statues of Ramses II and two of his wife, Queen Nefertari, grace the facade. The temple, and the adjacent Great Temple of Ramses II (Ramses the Great, ruled 1279-1213 BC), was constructed during Ramses II's reign on the true left bank of the Nile. Over time the temples were nearly buried in sand. In March, 1813, the Swiss geographer Johann Ludwig Burckhardt discovered the upper portion of the Great Temple extending above the sand and told the Italian explorer Giovanni Battista Belzoni of his find. In 1817 Belzoni succedded in entering the temple. By the turn of the century both temples had been fully excavated. The site faced permanent inundation due to construction of the Aswan High Dam between 1960 and 1970 some 280 km (174 mi.) downstream and UNESCO undertook to move the monuments to higher ground. Between 1964 and 1968 they were dismantled, with each piece numbered, and then reassembled some 65 m (213 ft.) higher. An artificial mountain with the contours of the original location was built and the temples were oriented exactly as they had been, thus replicating the original site. The temples at Abu Simble are included in the UNESCO World Heritage Site inscribed in 1979 as Nubian Monuments from Abu Simbel to Philae.
last day i went my favroiet tea stall,and i see it"s closed for today...then i notice the shope is loked by this lock......lock..is simble of qite.....lock is simble of distace...
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©Asadujjaman Pappu
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Amo Dulce *--* , eu fiz uma make up bem simples e a tipo é o sÃmbolo da paz :D Espero Que Gostem ! :D
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AMo Dulce *--*, yo hice una make up simples, e la tipografiaes el sÃmbolo de la paz, Espero que les gustem :D
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I Love Dulce *--*, I did a simple make up, and the font is the peace simble , I Hope you Like it :D
The story of the following photos goes like this. We were all relaxing on the deck of our ship, tanning in the harsh Egyptian sun, when we hear some yelling, and see a whole collection of these boats coming towards us while we were waiting to pass through the loch. These men had absolutely no reservations about hooking on to our still moving boat, and they were obviously seasoned professionals! It was quite thrilling to witness this, being that I had never experienced it before. They all collected around our ship once they realized we were willing to purchase items, and began throwing things up on deck for us to look at. We could then haggle with them over the price, and they would throw another item up for us to put money in (they were in plastic bags), to throw back down. It was quite a fascinating experience! The following portraits are of these amazing men who make their living on the magical waters of the Nile.
The great folks at the The Dell Farm with a home made cutter sleigh and miniature pony. It was a dark dusk at this point and a cold February evening to boot so out come the radio slaves with a speedlight on a stand behind the horse and click a simble image gets interesting.
General store simble Christmas tree near the front windows..
Holiday in history..
Pinecrest Historical Village, Manitowoc Wisconsin
The sun passes over the statue of Ramses was happening on October 21 and 21 February before in 1964 and after the transfer of the Temple of Abu Simbel from its old to its current location within the project of Save the Monuments of Nubia, the incident is repeated on 22 October and 22 February, in order to change the latitude and longitude,
The story of the following photos goes like this. We were all relaxing on the deck of our ship, tanning in the harsh Egyptian sun, when we hear some yelling, and see a whole collection of these boats coming towards us while we were waiting to pass through the loch. These men had absolutely no reservations about hooking on to our still moving boat, and they were obviously seasoned professionals! It was quite thrilling to witness this, being that I had never experienced it before. They all collected around our ship once they realized we were willing to purchase items, and began throwing things up on deck for us to look at. We could then haggle with them over the price, and they would throw another item up for us to put money in (they were in plastic bags), to throw back down. It was quite a fascinating experience! The following portraits are of these amazing men who make their living on the magical waters of the Nile.
The story of the following photos goes like this. We were all relaxing on the deck of our ship, tanning in the harsh Egyptian sun, when we hear some yelling, and see a whole collection of these boats coming towards us while we were waiting to pass through the loch. These men had absolutely no reservations about hooking on to our still moving boat, and they were obviously seasoned professionals! It was quite thrilling to witness this, being that I had never experienced it before. They all collected around our ship once they realized we were willing to purchase items, and began throwing things up on deck for us to look at. We could then haggle with them over the price, and they would throw another item up for us to put money in (they were in plastic bags), to throw back down. It was quite a fascinating experience! The following portraits are of these amazing men who make their living on the magical waters of the Nile.
This picture is of my 1977 Grand Prix's PARTS BOOK!!!! If you own a PONTIAC, this is a MUST HAVE. . www.gardenofspeed.com OR 1(800) MOTORHEAD (6686743) to get the Book: Pontiac Parts Locating Guide: for all Full Sized Grand Prix, Ventura, Catalina, Bonnevile, GTO, Tempest, LeMans, Firebird & Trans AM. The book covers all years! Find any Part.... You can see my old school RALLY II rims in picture with nice DUST CAP. New lug nuts & "SJ" simble is NEW and added. PONTIAC is a modle J (standard modle). I just wanted more emblems on the car. NEW tires too.
These photos uploaded by Real Egypt Tours
Read our guests reviews at: www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g294201-d1603031-Re...
Real Egypt for tailor made tour programs provides advices and custom services to ensure you get the most out of your holiday in Egypt. We offer Tailor-Made Tour programs tailored to your needs and interests. We guide you to the must-see locations and beyond the usual tourist destinations, into a world that only local people know .
How Intelligent phenomenon; on the coronation of Ramses II the Sun passes on the face of a statue of King Ramses II inside his temple at Abu Simbel, south of Aswan
tactical squad on the side of the helmit is a little yellow patch this is there tactical badge, this squad bares the tactical diamond, assault squads have a clubs simbal and devastator have a hart simble (from a deck of cards) i found the fluff for this online it dates back to the times just after the horus heresy
Auto Custom Carpets Inc. made me some cool mats. In fact I just ordered some for my 1976 Mercury COUGAR RX-7 b/c i like there work so much. This time around though I'm gunna ask for MORE logo's to be put on the mats, like a COUGAR and a rx-7 simble. My 1977 Grand Prix by PONTIAC looks SOOOOO much better on inside with these mats. HIHGLLLLY RECOMENDED 2 get...
The Temple of Hathor (aka the Small Temple) at Abu Simbel, located some 860 km (534 mi.) south of Cairo on the shore of Lake Nasser in Aswan Governorate, Egypt. Three of the four colossal statues of Ramses II and one of the two of his wife, Queen Nefertari, which grace the facade are seen here. The temple, and the adjacent Great Temple of Ramses II (Ramses the Great, ruled 1279-1213 BC), was constructed during Ramses II's reign on the true left bank of the Nile. Over time the temples were nearly buried in sand. In March, 1813, the Swiss geographer Johann Ludwig Burckhardt discovered the upper portion of the Great Temple extending above the sand and told the Italian explorer Giovanni Battista Belzoni of his find. In 1817 Belzoni succedded in entering the temple. By the turn of the century both temples had been fully excavated. The site faced permanent inundation due to construction of the Aswan High Dam between 1960 and 1970 some 280 km (174 mi.) downstream and UNESCO undertook to move the monuments to higher ground. Between 1964 and 1968 they were dismantled, with each piece numbered, and then reassembled some 65 m (213 ft.) higher. An artificial mountain with the contours of the original location was built and the temples were oriented exactly as they had been, thus replicating the original site. The temples at Abu Simble are included in the UNESCO World Heritage Site inscribed in 1979 as Nubian Monuments from Abu Simbel to Philae.
The story of the following photos goes like this. We were all relaxing on the deck of our ship, tanning in the harsh Egyptian sun, when we hear some yelling, and see a whole collection of these boats coming towards us while we were waiting to pass through the loch. These men had absolutely no reservations about hooking on to our still moving boat, and they were obviously seasoned professionals! It was quite thrilling to witness this, being that I had never experienced it before. They all collected around our ship once they realized we were willing to purchase items, and began throwing things up on deck for us to look at. We could then haggle with them over the price, and they would throw another item up for us to put money in (they were in plastic bags), to throw back down. It was quite a fascinating experience! The following portraits are of these amazing men who make their living on the magical waters of the Nile.
First simble of sikhs at 300 saal guru de naal at takhat sachkhand Sri Hazur Sahib. 2008. foto by A.S.Cheema .
See our You Tube Chanal:- AirSoundVisionEnt / ASCheema
The story of the following photos goes like this. We were all relaxing on the deck of our ship, tanning in the harsh Egyptian sun, when we hear some yelling, and see a whole collection of these boats coming towards us while we were waiting to pass through the loch. These men had absolutely no reservations about hooking on to our still moving boat, and they were obviously seasoned professionals! It was quite thrilling to witness this, being that I had never experienced it before. They all collected around our ship once they realized we were willing to purchase items, and began throwing things up on deck for us to look at. We could then haggle with them over the price, and they would throw another item up for us to put money in (they were in plastic bags), to throw back down. It was quite a fascinating experience! The following portraits are of these amazing men who make their living on the magical waters of the Nile.