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Silbersalz35, 250 ASA as 125 ASA, M7 1.4/50 Asph, Lago Maggiore, Switzerland

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Adox Color Mission, M7 1.4/50Asph, Baltic Sea, Darss

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Silbersalz35, 250 ASA as 125 ASA, M7 1.4./50Asph

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Talking about trains, here a couple of pictures of the colourful central station of Liege, Belgium.

 

 

 

 

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Edited by 4r36
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Kunsthaus Zürich, Extension ( by David Chipperfield) ; Detail of door. 

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MP; CZ C-Sonnar 50mm f 1,5 ZM; FP4; Rodinal 

Edited by Kl@usW.
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One more ‘everyday’ style shot

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m3, noctilux 50 f1.2, portra 400
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8 minutes ago, Aryel said:

One more ‘everyday’ style shot

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m3, noctilux 50 f1.2, portra 400

This will be a nice memory, and the frame through the frame focuses well on the main protagonist. Though she has some written rules to obey …

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2 minutes ago, christoph_d said:

This will be a nice memory, and the frame through the frame focuses well on the main protagonist. Though she has some written rules to obey …

Thank you. The rules are quite scary (do not tell my wife 🤪). Luckily, it doesn’t say that these have to be obeyed. 

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Meilein, Isle of Harris.  Entering the more remote part of Harris, a favourite of mine for walking and wild camping with Mrs O. There is a a lot of archaeology here including Bronze Age hut circle remains and prehistoric walls, shielings, cairns and  feannagan.  It's a peaceful area, the haunt of golden and white-tailed eagle, red deer & otter.  A place where you can immerse yourself in the surroundings without interference.

Feannagan is a Scots Gaelic word for the ancient method of cultivation seen in the lower part of the image; sods of earth would be dug by hand and piled up into long ridges to increase the soil depth and improve drainage for growing crops such as potatoes, turnips, oats etc.  Seaweed would be spread on the feannagan as a fertiliser.  Runrigs and lazybeds were also created in the same way, it's a system that goes back to prehistoric times and was extensively used until the late 19th century and still is in a few places.

For anyone who's ever dug a garden, a hole or a ditch , you can only wonder at the strength and tenacity of the people who inhabited these islands in ancient times.

Leica iiif Red Dial

Red Scale 50mm f3.5 elmar

Delta 100 in DDX 1:4

 

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Your descriptions remind me of the efforts of the early settlers on the coast bordering the Wadden Sea in northern Germany, Friesland and Holland. The masses of peat, earth and sand that were shoveled to build dikes and drainage ditches and to raise mounds, locally called "Warften" to provide elevated places for the farms to keep them from being swept away by storm floodings.
Unimaginable for most screen workers (including me ;) )

Edited by verwackelt
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I'm wondering how many tricycles were photographed after Eggleston's famous shot

Nikkor N80, Nikkor 35/2 AFD, Fuji 200

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4 hours ago, Ouroboros said:

Meilein, Isle of Harris.  Entering the more remote part of Harris, a favourite of mine for walking and wild camping with Mrs O. There is a a lot of archaeology here including Bronze Age hut circle remains and prehistoric walls, shielings, cairns and  feannagan.  It's a peaceful area, the haunt of golden and white-tailed eagle, red deer & otter.  A place where you can immerse yourself in the surroundings without interference.

Feannagan is a Scots Gaelic word for the ancient method of cultivation seen in the lower part of the image; sods of earth would be dug by hand and piled up into long ridges to increase the soil depth and improve drainage for growing crops such as potatoes, turnips, oats etc.  Seaweed would be spread on the feannagan as a fertiliser.  Runrigs and lazybeds were also created in the same way, it's a system that goes back to prehistoric times and was extensively used until the late 19th century and still is in a few places.

For anyone who's ever dug a garden, a hole or a ditch , you can only wonder at the strength and tenacity of the people who inhabited these islands in ancient times.

Leica iiif Red Dial

Red Scale 50mm f3.5 elmar

Delta 100 in DDX 1:4

 

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I so want to be there.  

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