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Some people might get some pleasure out of hate
Me, I’ve enough already on my plate
People might need some tension to relax
[me? ] I’m too busy dodging between the flak
What you see is what you get
You’ve made your bed, you better lie in it
You choose your leaders and place your trust
As their lies wash you down and their promises rust
You’ll see kidney machines replaced by rockets and guns
And the public wants what the public gets
But I don’t get what this society wants
I’m going underground, (going underground)
Well the brass bands play and feet start to pound
Going underground, (going underground)
[so] let the boys all sing and the boys all shout for tomorrow
This image shows the nice illuminated underground of the engine hall at the colliery Zollern II/IV.
This HDR shot was processed from 5 different exposures.
This one is actually from my extensive Image Archives, taken in 2015. Nevertheless, I feel it is worth to being issued.
Sony ILCE-7M2 and Zeiss 16-35mm F4 ZA OSS at F=16.0.
The MOC is heavily inspired by Pendragon's Life Below MOC. This is my first entry in the Landscaping contest ran by Bruno and hosted by the LCN, my second one will be castle themed. :)
Constructive criticism would be appreciated. :)
Check it out on the Brickarms Forums too! www.brickarmsforums.com/viewtopic.php?f=33&t=10549 ;)
my walk through the city of Hamburg (Germany), Alter Elbtunnel (old tunnel under the river "Elbe")
M9 P / Summilux 50mm 1:4
The station was opened on 29 May 1999 and is situated in Trudering-Riem.
It was named after a piece of swamp nearby.
The walls and the ceiling are made of concrete that is painted red on one side and grey on the other side. On the red side in grey letters the name of the borough is written down ("Am Moosfeld") while the colors are inverted on the other side.
creative commons by marfis75
Twitter: @marfis75
License: cc-by-sa
you are free to share, adapt - attribution: Credits to "marfis75 on flickr"
Well, only a little underground, the cave imaginatively named Smugglers Cave can be found in the Ochils high above the village of Alva.
Jump aboard the miniature Mail Rail train and travel through the tunnels underneath London's Mount Pleasant sorting office. The track stretches all the way from Paddington to Whitechapel.
During the First World War, the Mail Rail tunnels were used to store art treasures belonging to the Tate, British Museum and National Portrait Gallery to protect them from German attacks.