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Customizable vendors Coming to the Darkness Opens March 5th maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Zen%20Soul/239/16/24?fbcli...
This weekend ONLY!!
Want a chance at some free dresses?
Head on over to Third Eye at midnight SLT to score some!
Missed out? Don't worry there are last chance vendors.
Also get discounted add-on HUDs!
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/MONS/125/124/8
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Both free but limited to 1500 pieces!
(will be gone after this event)
Bandai Dress [Orange]
Goes live @ 00:00, Sept 9th SLT
Bandai Dress [Brown]
Goes live @ 12:00, Sept 9th SLT
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Last chance vendors (L$44) go live @ 00:00, Sept 10th SLT
Join the Third Eye. Update Group for 10% off
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Add-on color huds L$70 each!
HUDS WORK WITH BOTH DRESSES
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This dress (except Orange and Brown) will be placed in the mainstore after this event at full price.
Pentax ME w/ 50/1.7
Arista 200, bulk loaded
Home Developed in Blazinal/Rodinal, 1:25, 5 minutes, 20˚C/68˚F
Another street vendor who sells tea for a livelihood. Shot while coming back from a meetup with friends beside the M.A. Aziz stadium.
A market vendor smokes a cigarette in Kushtia, Bangladesh
Website: Dietmar Temps, photography
43/365
“Beer is made by men, wine by God.” Martin Luther
Macro is difficult so here we go again - back to basics. Nice French vendor christmas present 2+2. Cheers :)
Strobist: Elinchrom DLite 1 with gridded beauty dish from camera left. DLite 1 with gridded spot from camera right.
Marketplace popular with locals and tourists alike. The market's more than 250 vendors sell fresh fruits and vegetables; baked goods; fish, meat and cheeses; nuts, seeds, and spices; wines and liquors; clothing and shoes; and housewares, textiles, and Judaica. It's the main market in the Israeli capital.
Police woman keeping order in La Alameda historical quarter Mexico City, Mexico
If you like this shot please go see my ALBUM "Street Shots"
“Gingihha Vendor” — A woman selling ginginha from her doorway in the Alfama, Lisbon.
One can never be sure things like ginginha are tourism constructs or actual traditions — or perhaps a bit of both. (Parallels include Portugal’s pastel de nata, San Francisco’s Sourdough bread, Belgium waffles, and more.) But I understand, both from reading about it and from seeing it, that gingihna is a traditional drink in many places in Portugal. It is a sweet, cherry liqueur that is often sold on the street, either in small shot glasses or in little chocolate cups that you simply eat when you are done. (Nice way to solve the litter problem!)
You can step up to small ginginha shops and buy one all over the place. But there also appears to be a less formal sales force operating from their front doorways. On our recent visit we saw several women set up this way to sell it, including this woman sitting in her doorway in the Alfama district.
Hà Nội, Vietnam, 2008 - Leica M7, Elmarit-M 90, Fuji Reala
How could I forget the unfortunate street vendors in my photobook on the Vietnamese people Vietnamese We - Người Việt Nam chúng tôi - Nous autres Vietnamiens? Chased nowadays by the police and often discredited in daily life, they actually deserve like the cyclo drivers as well, a better existence and remind me so much of my earliest childhood in Vietnam. I prefered to symbolize this blurred woman with her traditional conical hat and neck yoke heavily loaded. The bokeh rendered by this small lens is remarkable, isn't it?