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Best Viewed Large, In the Short North part of Columbus Ohio. This is right north of the Mojo Lounge on the new Capstone over I6-670.
Taken on a Rainy Thursday Night...
NOTE: This photo made it into Flickr's 'Explore" as one of the top five hundred most interesting photos on a particular day. You can see all of my photo's that have made it into the Flickr Explore pages here.
The RX10M4 is such an awesome camera. Autofocus is comparable to the A9. Best travel camera with 24-600mm equivalent lens. Crop of the RX is 2.73.
Stangelville, Franklin Township, Kewaunee County, Wisconsin
This building has been abandoned for many years. It looks like it was a store of some kind. There are no houses next to it and it is at the end of the earth :-). I can’t imagine what was sold here. It might have just been a workman’s or farmer’s shed used for repairing equipment.
I was testing out a wide angle lens attachment, which I got for Christmas, which attaches to a 18-55 mm lens, Very interesting. I am standing on the stone road right in front of the building and still managed to get in the entire building and then some. It actually works quite well for an inexpensive attachment.
Colors, lines and shapes on the sunny side of the street in Galax, VA. For the love of the art in the ordinary.
Hrvati mercenaries in the 30 Years War (1618-1648) wore scarves with a characteristic knot, often tied for them by their ladies. This entranced Louis XIV and the French court, who adopted the style, calling it “cravat”. Somewhere along the line “Hrvatska” just proved too hard for non-Slavic speakers, and devolved into the English word “Croatia”, which isn’t as different from the original as it looks. The country is still rife with necktie stores like this one. The checked pattern is also traditional. Didn’t actually see a Starbucks anywhere.
03:30 UTC; 16 Jun 2023;
Storefront of the Kranhaus ("crane house"), a 17-story buildings in the Rheinauhafen of Cologne/Germany. Its shape, an upside-down "L", is reminiscent of the harbor cranes that were used to load cargo off and on to ships. The building is approx. 62 meters in height and is designed by Aachen architect Alfons Linster and Hamburg-based Hadi Teherani of BRT Architekten. (see Wikipedia)
For the ~ Abstract ~ challenge over at The Award Tree.
Three photos captured during my wanderings in 2019, of which I will be revisiting in a week's time.
Detailed viewing with the magnifier is soopa cool.