my shoes - your shoes
Qu’importe le désert de mes nuits solitaires Où je…
Brillants d'éclairs ou ténébreux Comme des ciels d…
Cloud variety
SeeHund
Fruit compote, Australia
Tractor, USA
Architecture of the dream
Wall with snow balls
January 17th
Union Pacific lumber train
Art diving
Grauzone
Winter Morning at the Sea
... zwischen den Zweigen ...
Disappearing
Festgefahren ?
Florentine details
Two boys and their wolf
Pier into the Unknown
Yes. Take it all in, folks...
Tires in landscape
Superluna roja
Sydney postcard
Bada Bing
Tree Phantasy (3/3) (2 PiP)
Tree Phantasy (2/3) (2 PiP)
Wohnzimmer-Vorhang
Alpenglühen
This is where they put grandpa
Watching the pink chair
Red sticks Red paint
Snow fun
Dream house
Snow angles @ 2 degreesF
Déterminé....!
upstairs
Old van in the industrial zone
The room
Drive Thru
Bad Attitude
Hanging on
01.01.2017 - Tower Airport München
Gnome des tufières
don't tell me lies !
1/120 • f/3.1 • 5.0 mm • ISO 64 •
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PLAYING WITH BRUSHES, TEXTURES, FILTERS, SPECIAL EFFECTS, etc
PLAYING WITH BRUSHES, TEXTURES, FILTERS, SPECIAL EFFECTS, etc
I LOVE IT ! ★ J'AIME CELA ! ★ DAS LIEBE ICH ! ★ MI PIACE MOLTO !
I LOVE IT ! ★ J'AIME CELA ! ★ DAS LIEBE ICH ! ★ MI PIACE MOLTO !
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496 visits
Former brothel
Two men passing by told me about this building. It was a brothel until well into the 20th Century. Ladies would stand on the balconies and yell to men on the sidewalk. It's now a restaurant.
Many of the 19th C. buildings of Sydney are reminiscent of New Orleans because of the use of iron balcony railings. When I mentioned this to an Australian woman, this is what she told me: The iron pieces came on the English ships that brought settlers (I guess as opposed to prisoners). They were apparently scrapped in England, used as ship ballast, then dumped into Sydney Harbor upon arrival and later fished out for use in construction. The story seems very convoluted, but that's what she told me.
Many of the 19th C. buildings of Sydney are reminiscent of New Orleans because of the use of iron balcony railings. When I mentioned this to an Australian woman, this is what she told me: The iron pieces came on the English ships that brought settlers (I guess as opposed to prisoners). They were apparently scrapped in England, used as ship ballast, then dumped into Sydney Harbor upon arrival and later fished out for use in construction. The story seems very convoluted, but that's what she told me.
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