View allAll Photos Tagged towards
Dublin Bus ALX400s depart the city centre towards Ballinteer and Nutgrove on routes 16 and 16A. January 2012.
*Working Towards a Better World
Diversity: the art of thinking independently together.
Malcolm Forbes
When power leads man toward arrogance, poetry reminds him of his limitations. When power narrows the area of man's concern, poetry reminds him of the richness and diversity of existence. When power corrupts, poetry cleanses.
John F. Kennedy
Real cultural diversity results from the interchange of ideas, products, and influences, not from the insular development of a single national style.
Tyler Cowen
Today when I think about diversity, I actually think about the word 'inclusion.' And I think this is a time of great inclusion. It's not men, it's not women alone. Whether it's geographic, it's approach, it's your style, it's your way of learning, the way you want to contribute, it's your age - it is really broad.
Ginni Rometty
We need to give each other the space to grow, to be ourselves, to exercise our diversity. We need to give each other space so that we may both give and receive such beautiful things as ideas, openness, dignity, joy, healing, and inclusion.
Max de Pree
What I'm trying to do is get a change in the mindset so people move from a level of mere tolerance to total acceptance and eventually to celebrate diversity. If you feel comfortable with one another, it doesn't matter whether we live in which neighbourhood but we can interact with one another freely. It's a mindset.
Najib Razak
Diversity on the bench is critical. As practitioners, you need judges who 'get it!' We need judges who understand what discrimination feels like. We need judges who understand what inequality feels like. We need judges who understand the subtleties of unfair treatment and who are willing to call it out when they see it!
Debbie Wasserman Schultz
We need to reject any politics that targets people because of race or religion. This isn't a matter of political correctness. It's a matter of understanding what makes us strong. The world respects us not just for our arsenal; it respects us for our diversity and our openness and the way we respect every faith.
Barack Obama
Right now, when we're hearing so much disturbing and hateful rhetoric, it is so important to remember that our diversity has been - and will always be - our greatest source of strength and pride here in the United States.
Michelle Obama
Thank you for your kind visit. Have a wonderful and beautiful day! ❤️ ❤️ ❤️
Visit my Blog.
View Large. Walking from St Paul's Cathedral, London, towards the Millennium Bridge and the Tate Modern Art Gallery.
This is the building I work in. There is an interior balcony on the second floor that I took this from, looking towards the front door and the courtyard.
C506 and C504 make their way North towards Tungamah as 5CM5 empty SSR grain train from Port Kembla to Oaklands via Seymour.
Friday 15th September 2017
- www.kevin-palmer.com - This cave that connects to the Indian Tunnel was deep enough to be pitch black at the end. This is what it looked like when I came back towards the light.
We went out very early with our little dogs expecting a great day. Even if there was rain forecast for 7am until about 8am we might catch a nice dawn at Ramshaw Rocks. But the rain just got heavier and heavier. And so we headed to Millers Dale and took a walk into Chee Dale where the dogs could run free. There was some shelter from the incessant rain under the trees and inside the gorge but the mud was thick and slippery. However there was some respite in the long tunnel and we emerged briefly into weak sunshine. With muddy boots and dogs we then headed over towards Sparrowpit and immediately had to set off on foot into rain and a stiffening breeze. And then it just got wetter and worse, but here there was less mud and at least our boots got washed off even if our legs got soaked. We emerged onto a hillock to see a short splash of strong sunlight and then the heavy dark cloud came over us and it poured down once more as we made it back to our cars. We had got some fresh air and exercise, and the dogs tired themselves out, but it was not the morning we had planned for. I got home, had a hot bath, bathed the dog and climbed into bed for the lie-in I should have had this morning.
A close up of a Hippeastrum flower.
Thank you everyone who visits. Special thanks for your kind comments, awards and faves.
A glorious section of the South Downs Way as it heads in an easterly direction towards the village of Cocking.
This shows the view towards Helvellyn from inside the stone circle at Castlerigg, near Keswick. Looks OK viewed large.
The setting for this 4,000 yr old stone circle is so beautiful and the whole site has free public access.
There are superb views from the site, with Skiddaw to the north west, Blencathra to the north east, Helvellyn to the south east and the Derwent hills to the west.
The valley below is several hundred feet below and at a distance.
The field itself is grazed by sheep, and there were several ewes with their lambs.
Well worth a visit!
We wanted to get there early to catch some low lying mist and sunrise peace.
Shooting into a dark valley whilst the sun rises is indeed a challenge, more so without any filters to balance the light, even bracketing didn’t yield the results I’d hoped for. So, this is a single shot across the water towards the bridge, the morning sun bathing the mountain side in gold whilst the night held onto the shadows with its cold blue hue, the mist played across the water and despite the shooting difficulties,the clouds that were promised not making an appearance, and major amount of silt in my boots, we had a great morning!
this shoot i brought a other photographer. usually when i ask them about their best shoot it looks different than what they post. but in our group nobody is toughing me anymore. they always see my post is what they see right after the shooting. still a shoot with such low light and circumstances, demand some crop. then alignment, resize and watermark. nothing else edited
Taken on Rolleiflex T with T-max 400 B&W film. I updated the metadata using the LensTagger plugin for Lightroom and EXIFTool.
The view from Pentire Point across Padstow Bay towards Stepper Point and Trevose Head. A glorious vista worthy of being captured at a sunset
It was taken looking pretty much towards the sun or at least a very bright part of the sky by this point
© 2017 All images and use thereof are copyright of Daryl Hutchinson. Reproduction of them is forbidden without prior permission
Berliner Fernsehturm ( TV Panoramic Tower) -Germany
Best viewed original size or on black :
Analyse my DNA
More in my gallery at:
The most western point of Northern England is just over this cliff.
With this particular photo the detail is extrodinary, sharpness is the key here; detail on the far cliff is exemplorary, the photo would blow up far beyond expectation. You can almost pop the individual seaweed in the foreground!
Even though this is scaled waaaaay down for Flick, you need a big monitor and resolution to View On Black. Unfortunately I can't put the full res version up here.