View allAll Photos Tagged windowframe
I like seeing reflections in the windows of large buildings. Here the day's clouds are reflected nicely in the windows.
Where does it end, when we keep walking in circles my friend.
Put in a frame, I´m sick and tired of taming the flame. And we burning, live without this change.
Watch me running, watch me brake away. What a story. In the wind now, like a paper plane. But now.
Sticks and stones could never break this bones, finally I made my way home.
This is where I belong.
This is where I belong.
So what do you say, you wanna break this circles with me?
Take of the pain, and turn this tears into summer rain.
Let a bird slowly drain away.
Give me colours, writtens mistories, what a story. In the wind where, just like paperplanes. But now. . .
Pic a mix of Scribbled Heart SL and Deviantart (windowframe with the girl and cat)
There's an awful lot of action on my sunny windowframe...(and yes, the picture is rather grey...I need to clean my windows!)
You can get specialty cuts here and many European goodies to accompany your meat purchase. Another nice local store, but meat is expensive. However, for those special occasions and hard to find cuts, this is the place to shop.
A monochrome portrait suspended between glow and shadow — the subject leaning into a window’s soft mercy while the darker room pulls at the edges. The light traces the cheekbone like a memory trying to return, while the curtain breathes its own quiet story. This is a moment of stillness that feels like a threshold: half confession, half invocation. A study in contrast, vulnerability, and the quiet power of being seen without armor.
I.
The window keeps its vigil, patient as an old friend,
letting the morning spill its truth across my face.
Shadow gathers behind me like a history I’ve outgrown,
yet still I lean toward the light, unafraid of its naming.
II.
Some rooms hold their breath when you enter,
as if waiting for the version of you that never arrived.
But here, the silence feels earned,
a soft throne carved from the ache of becoming.
III.
I tilt my head toward the brightness,
letting it map the terrain of my unspoken thoughts.
Every highlight a confession,
every shadow a promise I haven’t broken yet.
IV.
The curtain whispers its thin voiced blessing,
a veil between what I was and what I’m willing to claim.
Even the dust seems to rise in reverence,
catching the light like tiny, wandering saints.
V.
There is a tenderness in leaning,
in letting the world hold you without resistance.
The window frame becomes a quiet altar,
and I, a pilgrim of my own unfolding.
VI.
The dark behind me is not an enemy,
only the echo of rooms I’ve already survived.
It clings out of habit, not hunger,
and I no longer mistake its weight for destiny.
VII.
Light sketches me with deliberate hands,
as if sculpting a future I haven’t dared to imagine.
I feel the shape of myself returning,
slow, steady, sovereign.
VIII.
So I stay here, between glow and shadow,
letting both claim their rightful place.
For this is the portrait of a life in transition—
a face learning to remember its own radiance.
Another shot of this huge Ocean going Cruise ship. The Ovation of the Seas run by Royal Caribbean International. You can see it through the windows of this high rise Condo building as well as above the roof. It is the first time I have seen such a tall ocean liner here.
A revisit to some captures from Sri Lanka in 2019. Party atmosphere on this train not long before it departed. Clapping and singing from wonderful, friendly people.
“The Eye Moment photos by Nolan H. Rhodes”
“Theeyeofthemoment21@gmail.com”
“www.flickr.com/photos/the_eye_of_the_moment”
“Any users, found to replicate, reproduce, circulate, distribute, download, manipulate or otherwise use my images without my written consent will be in breach of copyright laws.”
It's been a long time since I got round to posting any photos of Cat on here, the reason for the lapse has been that I have been unable to get to the Totton and Lyndhurst events as I still have not been able to persuade anyone to give me a lift, and photos taken at home really don't seem to work well.
As always, a big thank you to all those people that have been commenting on earlier photos, I do try to comment on photos when the notifications appear but sometimes the quantity is a but overwhelming so apologies for all the ones I have missed!
Montevideo residential tower
The 152-meter high Montevideo residential tower (2005) is located on Wilhelminapier in Rotterdam. The design of the Montevideo is by Francine Houben of Mecanoo Architecten. The residential building with 192 apartments is built next to Hotel New York. Montevideo was the highest residential tower in the Netherlands at the opening on December 19, 2005.
A new bach of photos, from the January Totton meeting, unfortunatly I have not been able to get to anything else this year yet so I am rapidly running out of photos! Many thanks to all the people who commented on the previous ones, those comments are really appreciated, and I will try to comment on as many of yours as I can.
Thanks also to Grace King and Linda Long for taking the photos at Totton!
We went for a drive and stopped here for lunch.
The food was delicious and the view from our table was beautiful as you can see.
Happy Monday Everyone.
Taken with a Ricoh R.8
Where do i fit in?
I guess this is like an ode to my goodbye to highschool in a way. And im so proud of the way this edit came out! I hope you cant see too many mistakes but im really happy with it! Im kind of thinking i should have tried to get closer but the light was leaving and it was to dark in the bus shade. Owell i hope you guys like it!
i have photos from 37 and 38 to upload which i will do soon.
Lovely old red stone house by the edge of Roseburn Park near Murrayfield, the window frames painted red, and red winter berries on the plants next to them, and the golden winter light on the whole scene, so many shades of red, had to stop and take a pic.
Quality prints, greeting cards and many products can be purchased at >> kaye-menner.pixels.com/featured/framed-opera-house-by-kay...
Our beautiful Opera House I captured through a nearby window at golden hour with the moon rising on the right.
The Sydney Opera House was made a UNESCO World Heritage Site on 28 June 2007. It is one of the 20th century's most distinctive buildings and one of the most famous performing arts centers in the world.
The Sydney Opera House is on Bennelong Point in Sydney Harbour, close to the Sydney Harbour Bridge. It sits at the north-eastern tip of the Sydney central business district (the CBD), surrounded on three sides by the harbour (Sydney Cove and Farm Cove) and inland by the Royal Botanic Gardens.
Quality prints, greeting cards and many useful products can be purchased at >> kaye-menner.pixels.com/featured/waterfalls-through-your-w... OR www.lens2print.co.uk/imageview.asp?imageID=48223
Open up your house that has no views by placing a window view on your wall.
Adding a window framed image to your wall can create a sense of depth, light and openness to a room, especially a room where there are not many ..... or no windows.
Enjoy this tropical waterfall scene whilst relaxing in your living room or kitchen. Or, what a relaxing view for your office.
The tropical waterfall scene is also available without the window frame. The title is Hidden Beauty - kaye-menner.pixels.com/featured/hidden-beauty-kaye-menner...
The Fine Art America logo / my watermark will not show on prints or products purchased.
Een spiegeling van een bakstenen gevel in een modern raamkozijn. Door de strakke lijnen en de vervreemdende reflectie ontstaat een spel van vormen, lagen en texturen. Wat eerst gewoon lijkt, blijkt bij nader inzien abstract.
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A reflection of a brick facade in a modern window frame. The sharp lines and disorienting mirror image create a visual play of shapes, layers, and textures. What first appears ordinary, reveals an abstract quality upon closer inspection.
Rennes, capital of Brittany, Bretagne, France.
Rennes, capital of Brittany. The ancient settlement of Condate, built at the confluent of the Ille and Vilaine rivers in the first century B.C., was probably founded by the Redones, the people of Armorica, and the Romans, the new masters of the whole of Gaul. At the end of the third century, the town known as “Civitas Riedonum” was given its first 1200m-high city wall. In the 15th century, the town’s rapid growth led to the construction of two further city walls to the north-east and south of the Vilaine, increasing the area of the walled city from 9 to 62 hectares. The Tour Duchesne and Portes Mordelaises are the main fortified remains from this period.
The Metropolitan district of Rennes comprises 43 towns and villages including the city of Rennes and today has a population of almost 416,000 (the third greatest population increase in western France), spread over some 67,000 hectares (598 inhabitants per km). After the influx of 45,000 inhabitants over the past 15 years, a further rise of 60,000 is expected between now and 2015. This population growth can be witnessed in Rennes, across the département and throughout Brittany as a whole. “Greater Rennes” stretches out around the central city, which has 210,000 inhabitants and is separated from the rest of the district by a green belt. This style of town planning has preserved the essentially rural identity of the suburban towns and villages. The Metropolitan district of Rennes has preserved vast farmlands in a fertile area along with numerous natural sites, notably along the River Vilaine and its tributaries.
The distinctive centre of Rennes blends seamlessly into the district’s contemporary urban fabric, thanks to a tried and tested planning policy which favours natural spaces and emphasises public transport and environmentally friendly ways of getting around such as the metro and cycling. www.tourisme-rennes.com/en/home.aspx
My jaw just dropped when I first saw this amazing artwork on the gable end of a terraced house in Southport. It definitely beats the drab brick wall to the left.
If only everyone took such pride in their home, eh?
And, if only all (so-called) Graffiti was as great.
I researched the artists name (btm right of wall) and came up with some interesting info. So, I'm giving him a very well deserved plug @ the link below:
She's back on those Magic Boxes again!
Another batch of photos from Totton, there were quite a few so I split the batch in half and mixed in some local pics to add variety, the other half will follow at a later date. A huge thank you to the loveley people out there in Flickr land who commented on the previous photos and who post so many lovely photos themselves, I will try to commenton as many as I can!
Thanks also to Grace for taking the photos at Totton!