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A simplified roofline creates interest with thoughtfully placed gable accents. Tapered columns highlight the front porch and welcome guests to the sidelight framed entry. Inside, the floor plan is equally thoughtful, with a spacious great room, open kitchen with island, and single dining space. The master suite is expansive with dual walk-in closets and a bathroom comfortably suited for two. Additional features include a walk-in pantry, oversized utility room, three-car garage, and an inviting screened porch with cathedral ceiling, skylights, and a fireplace. Two additional bedrooms and a study round-out this classic design.

*Photographed home may have been modified from the original construction documents.* www.dongardner.com/house-plan/1415/the-lucy

See number 38.

 

Also, I don't recommend using a Fisher Space Pen to write on your hand unless you need it to stay there for a long time.

Church of St Mary

 

Monument to Armine Styleman †1819. Marble, West wall of south transept. Commissioned by Styleman family

 

A simplified version of his mother’s monument, with a fluted urn and little architectural detail around the inscription. As Sir Nicholas’s younger son he had been christened with his mother’s name (on the inscription the wording ‘by Armine’ is more suitable for horse breeding) and had followed the traditional career for a younger son in the church as rector of Great Ringstead for 48 years and vicar of East Basham. His wife Anne, who had died in 1795, was placed in the same vault.

   

Another from today's G for green shoot. I played with the Topaz Simplify Cartoon filter.

Yoko Ono exhibit at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts

Another Simplify pillow...except this one's staying with us!

Radicals in simple language is root. Radicals are irrational numbers like [sqrt(8)] [root(3)(5)] .....This radicals can be written in exponent form as [sqrt(8)] = [8^(1/2)] , [root(3)(5) = 5^(1/3)] .Radical expression will have their power or index or exponents as [1/2] , [1/3] , [1/4] ----- etc.Radical expression will contain radical numbers and variables.To simplify those simplifying radical expressions with exponents, we need to know the following formula:

Playing with Topaz on this picture using Adjust and Simplify.

Viem Xa Village / Bac Ninh City / Vietnam

2012 - 2012

Have a nice weekend

 

Nikon 70-210 F/4 Serie E manual lens Handheld

I have to remind myself to smell the phony fabric roses, to slow down and simplify my life.

Self Port composite with Topaz Simplify applied

Show the effect of Beta01 preset -- this is the original image

I loves socks, so mostly this was about rediscovering old friends I had not seen in ages that had been buried in the back, but I made a point of culling some I could live without anyway.

The Bingling Temple (simplified Chinese: 炳灵寺; traditional Chinese: 炳靈寺; pinyin: Bǐnglíng Sì) is a series of grottoes filled with Buddhist sculpture carved into natural caves and caverns in a canyon along the Yellow River. It lies just north of where the Yellow River empties into the Liujiaxia Reservoir. Administratively, the site is in Yongjing County of Linxia Hui Autonomous Prefecture in Gansu province, some 100 km (62 mi) southeast of Lanzhou.

The caves were a work in progress for more than a millennium. The first grotto was begun around 420 CE at the end of the Western Qin kingdom. Work continued and more grottoes were added during the Wei, Sui, Tang, Song, Yuan, Ming, and Qing dynasties. The style of each grotto can easily be connected to the typical artwork from its corresponding dynasty. The Bingling Temple is both stylistically and geographically a midpoint between the monumental Buddhas of Bamiyan in Afghanistan and the Buddhist Grottoes of central China, Yungang Grottoes near Datong and Longmen Grottoes near Luoyang.

 

Las cuevas de los Mil budas de Binglisi. Bingling significa "mil de Budas" ó "diez mil Budas" en lengua tibetana. Es uno de los complejos budistas más antiguos y una de las diez grutas más grandes de China. Gran cantidad de estatuas y frescos mostrando las diferentes culturas y vestimentas de los dioses adorados en varias épocas. Monjes y budistas,

procedentes de Asia Central a lo largo de la Ruta de la Seda, fueron estampando y tallando en cuevas naturales los ídolos de la cultura budista e india. Las grutas, talladas dentro de las montañas de arenisca roja, se encuentran a ambos lados del final del valle de Dasigou. Destaca uno buda sentado de 27 metros de altura con 1.200 años de antigüedad.

Over the centuries, earthquakes, erosion, and looters have damaged or destroyed many of the caves and the artistic treasures within. Altogether there are 183 caves, 694 stone statues, and 82 clay sculptures that remain. The relief sculpture and caves filled with buddhas and frescoes line the northern side of the canyon for about 200 meters. Each cave is like a miniature temple filled with Buddhist imagery. These caves culminate at a large natural cavern where wooden walkways precariously wind up the rock face to hidden cliff-side caves and the giant Maitreya Buddha that stands more than 27 meters, or almost 100 feet, tall.

The Great Wall of China (simplified Chinese: 长城; traditional Chinese: 長城; pinyin: Chángchéng; literally "long city/fortress") or (simplified Chinese: 万里长城; traditional Chinese: 萬里長城; pinyin: Wànlǐ Chángchéng; literally "The long wall of 10,000 Li (里)"[1]) is a series of stone and earthen fortifications in northern China, built, rebuilt, and maintained between the 5th century BC and the 16th century to protect the northern borders of the Chinese Empire from Xiongnu attacks during various successive dynasties. Since the 5th century BC, several walls have been built that were referred to as the Great Wall. One of the most famous is the wall built between 220–206 BC by the first Emperor of China, Qin Shi Huang. Little of that wall remains; it lay farther north than the current wall, which was built during the Ming Dynasty.[2]

 

The Great Wall currently stretches over approximately 6,400 km (4,000 miles)[3] from Shanhaiguan in the east to Lop Nur in the west, along an arc that roughly delineates the southern edge of Inner Mongolia, but stretches to over 6,700 km (4,160 miles) in total;[4] a more recent archaeological survey using advanced technologies points out that the entire Great Wall, with all of its branches, stretches for 8,851.8 km (5,500.3 mi).[5][6][7] At its peak, the Ming Wall was guarded by more than one million men.[8] It has been estimated that somewhere in the range of 2 to 3 million Chinese died as part of the centuries-long project of building the wall.

 

Source: Wikipedia

 

Location: Badaling, Great Wall, People's Republic of China

 

Photography: Keith Cabillon www.keithcabillon.multiply.com

1-click BuzSim Preset in Topaz Simplify turns a snapshot into... something better.

 

See the original version.

macro taken with sigma 105 macro lens - effect acheived with Topaz Simplify plugin

Viem Xa Village / Bac Ninh City / Vietnam

2012 - 2012

Morenewmath.com explains words differently.

 

'Baked fresh every monday' at www.morenewmath.com

Keep things simple.

E-PL5

MZD 14-42

"Lately I have realised

That I need to simplify.

Thoughts pass like ships in the sky.

Do, or do not, there is no try.

 

Life became complicated

When modern times arrived.

Board games are underrated.

I want a different life.

 

They say, 'Well, get out of the city!'

We say, 'Well, there's no such thing as a house in the country.'

 

Simplify your life."

 

- Marina & the Diamonds

I took this rosehip shot for the Topaz software challenge on vivid. I used Topaz Simplify's cartoon preset and a small amount of detail boost from the sliders.

Consolidate. Reduce. Eliminate unnecessary and redundant elements.

With the help of my cat Yorick, nine stacks of shirts.

This is an amazing picture that was created by provideofx on the Topaz Adjust forum.

Camera :: Nikon D200

Lens :: Nikkor AF-S 17-55mm f/2.8 DX

This building has fascinated me since my childhood days. The Bolshoi theatre in Moscow, Russia. Because of my Russian heritage and my interest in ballet this theatre never left my mind. When I stood before it in the summer of 2019, I was more than just impressed from its sight.

I chose to sketch it in the two-point perspective as required with special focus on the main building. I left out quite some details, since the main task of this section is to prove an understanding of perspective.

 

(Digital and traditional study)

 

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