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Photography has helped me overcome extreme arachnophobia. I started with crab spiders hiding in flowers and moved on. At first I had problems actually looking at my photos, but I persevered and I am amazed at how far I've come in a short time.

 

This is just as well, as someone added a picture of mine to their gallery and when I looked, there was Flori right next to a photo of a tarantula! A couple of years ago I would have had an extreme reaction :-) HBW!

She'd be so thin she'd die.

 

146/365

A card I created using inspiration from Lisa's CARD I used some of my new PTI goodies. More details on my BLOG!

Just launched a mini-website for Austin Eastciders, in collaboration with Simon Walker.

 

www.austineastciders.com/

after having the same layout for 5 years I finally updated my website last week using Format. go check it out @ www.laurencephilomene.com/

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I rarely do architecture and when I did, i ruefully failed...So it's time to make an new attempt and to start a new series on this - in my eyes - very difficult subject of photography.

    

This first pic is a rear/side view of the Paul Klee Zentrum in Bern, Switzerland, which consists of three undulations blending seamlessly into the landscape. And it's the first pic I took with my new 5D Mark II.

    

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The Zentrum Paul Klee is a museum dedicated to the artist Paul Klee, located in Bern, Switzerland and designed by the Italian architect Renzo Piano. It features about 40 percent of Paul Klee’s entire pictorial oeuvre.

Livia Klee-Meyer, Paul Klee's daughter-in-law, donated her inheritance of almost 690 works to the city and canton of Bern in summer 1997. Additional works and documents donated and loaned by the family and the Paul-Klee-Foundation and a further 200 loans from private collections contributed to creating a very large collection of works by the artist. The decision to build the museum in the Schöngrün site on the eastern outskirts of the city was made in 1998, and renowned Italian architect Renzo Piano was contracted the same year. A preliminary project was elaborated in 2000. The building was completed in 2005. It takes the form of three undulations blending into the landscape.

    

Paul Klee (18 December 1879 – 29 June 1940) was born in Münchenbuchsee, Switzerland, and is considered both a German and a Swiss painter. His highly individual style was influenced by movements in art that included expressionism, cubism, and surrealism. He was, as well, a student of orientalism. Klee was a natural draftsman who experimented with and eventually mastered colour theory, and wrote extensively about it; his lectures Writings on Form and Design Theory (Schriften zur Form und Gestaltungslehre), published in English as the Paul Klee Notebooks, are considered so important for modern art that they are compared to the importance that Leonardo da Vinci's A Treatise on Painting had for Renaissance. He and his colleague, the Russian painter Wassily Kandinsky, both taught at the German Bauhaus school of art, design and architecture. His works reflect his dry humour and his sometimes childlike perspective, his personal moods and beliefs, and his musicality.

[Source: Wikipedia]

    

Canon EOS 5D Mark II

Canon EF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM

Aperture: f/8

Exposure time: 1/250s

Focal length: 105mm

ISO Speed: 100

Processed with PS CS5

the new www.patperry.net is now live! I hope you all enjoy taking a look through it.

My Website - Aaron Yeoman Photography & Image Prints for Sale

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Aldwych Underground Station, London, England

 

Drumroll please...........this is my first Full Frame image with my new Sony A99! Such a great camera and I really enjoyed it. The fact it was not too different from my A77 allowed me to get working with it straight away. Also this image was taken with my new Samyang 14mm which is a great lens on initial impressions but I have to get use to it a little bit. Also the low light handling capabilities made it a joy to use the A99.

 

Anyway, back to Aldwych Underground Station. I went to this station December 2012 and went again couple of days ago as I really enjoyed the tour so much, if you have never been before I suggest going as they have a lot more days available this month, just book your tickets via the London Transport Museum. This tour was as popular as last year with about 20 people in my tour. We got to visit the same stuff as last year but the tour guide did surprise me and said he has some new stuff to show us, will show you these uploads in the next couple of days. The only thing I felt is that the paint work of parts of the station has deteriorated a little since I was there last year. Also what amazes me how this station was so over engineered when it was built as they expected it to busier than it actually turned out to be, sadly it was never to be. Anyway, I better get ready to go out, back out with the camera again today :-).

 

Photo Details

Sony Alpha SLT-A99 / ISO800 / f/5.6 / 1/5 / Samyang 14mm F2.8 @ 14mm

 

Software Used

Lightroom 5

 

Location Information

Aldwych is a closed station on the London Underground, located in the City of Westminster in central London. It was opened in 1907 with the name Strand and was the terminus and only station on the short Piccadilly line branch from Holborn that was a relic of the merger of two railway schemes. The station building is close to the junction of Strand and Surrey Street. During its lifetime, the branch was the subject of a number of unrealised extension proposals that would have seen the tunnels through the station extended southwards, usually to Waterloo.

 

Served by a shuttle train for most of their life and suffering from low passenger numbers, the station and branch were considered for closure several times. A weekday peak hours-only service survived until closure in 1994, when the cost of replacing the lifts was considered too high compared to the income generated.

 

Disused parts of the station and the running tunnels were used during both World Wars to shelter artworks from London's public galleries and museums from bombing.

 

The station has long been popular as a filming location and has appeared as itself and as other London Underground stations in a number of films. In recognition of its historical significance, the station is a Grade II listed building.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aldwych_tube_station

We finally moved into a new cloudhouse! come visit us at www.meomi.com

A window into the five-month process.

Visit my website: www.macropoulos.com

 

I'm back! Me and my wife had a great time in Amsterdam last week, although I was attending an IT course for most of the day. During the next days, expect me to post some of my favorite shots of this city, which I found wonderful inspite of the fact that it lacked the green and blue colors (leaves and sky) which I'm sure I would've experienced had I visited a bit later, during springtime. It'll take a while before I manage to get through all my contacts' photostreams to see what I missed, so please bear with me :-)

 

These are your typical Amsterdam buildings, lining the sides of the canals. I loved these narrow and tall structures, all built following the same design logic, but each different than the next, each having its own character.

 

Best viewed Large, On Black.

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This photo is available for license on Getty Images

 

I took this photo from the window of my temporary office this morning. I wish I had a view like this back home in Houston ;-)

 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

KLCC Park is a public park located in the vicinity of KLCC, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The park has been design to provide greenery to Petronas Twin Towers and areas

surrounding it.

 

Design

 

The park is designed by the late Roberto Burle Marx. It is said that it is a last work done by the Brazilian architect.[1]. It is said when he design the park, he has only one desire which is to "leave the world a little more sensitive and a little more educated to the importance of nature".[2]

 

The park was designed to showcase a heritage of tropical greenery by integrating man's creation with nature. The park itself contrasts as a calm environment in midst of hustle and bustle of the major city. The park features many combination of man-made design such as cements, water features and also natural features such as trees, shrubs, stones and wood. Elements of shape and topography was created to give an illusion of space. Combination of trees, shrubs and sculptures were arrange to impose color and form in the park.[1]

 

Conservation and bio-diversity was given a thought in the creation of the park. 23 of the mature and rarer specimens was saved from the old Selangor Turf Club and transplanted on the park grounds. 1900 indigenous trees and 66 species of palms were planted at the park to promote bio-diversity. The trees was deliberlity selected to attract local and migratory birds.[1]

 

A man made lake was built in the middle of the park, right in front of Suria KLCC mall and Petronas Twin Towers towards the middle of the park. A 43 meter elevated bridge that cut across the lake provide a vantage view of the park and the twin towers.

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The Isle of Tindholmur is one of the Faroes most distinctive landmarks, due to its impressive relief and five individual, jagged peaks. It was believed to have once been inhabited, but legend tells of a small family who came to grief here. The legend tells of a man, a woman and a small child living here, when one day, whilst the father was out sea fishing, an eagle swooped the child away, back to its eyrie. The Mother, determined to rescue her child, climbed to the nest, where she found that the eagle had pecked out her child's eyes. The child later died from the injuries and the couple left the isle, marking the end of its habitation.

 

There’s a bit of a grisly tale for you, but as for the image-I don’t think I could have found a better composition! That may sound a little big headed but I’m really happy with it; everything seems to fit the frame.

  

Like the image? Press ‘L’ to see it large and ‘F’ to add it as a favourite, and feel free to leave a comment; it’s always nice to hear what you think.

  

Thanks for looking

  

Graeme

  

© Copyright 2014 All Rights Reserved. If you would like to purchase prints or use my work then please contact me through flickr or my website.

 

created with 3DMAX, Photoshop and ❤️ in Berlin, Geusenstraße 12, ;)

 

First website I made 2001. The Internet was a cracy, creativ place back in the days, with lots of graphicsites popping up all over. We all had our own websites and we were linking each other totally self-evident. Nothing to compare with today ... :/

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