Roma by StefaniaLoriga by StefaniaLoriga

Piazza San Pietro, Roma

http://ift.tt/1QIL3ub

Last one by FelixBouchardTremblay by FelixBouchardTremblay

Oceanarium – Lisbon Aquarium by dinoabmc by dinoabmc

Oceanarium – Lisbon Aquarium

The image is from the Lisbon Aquarium. It was taked during the sunset with a lot of cloud´s and some rain.

I take 4 images and put them together in LR using Merging to Panorama. The image was processed to mainten the light effect and to intensify the diferent tonnes in the clouds.

The Oceanarium was built and opened as part of Expo 98 , the last world exhibition of the twentieth century , with the theme ” Oceans a Heritage for the Future ” .

The conceptual designs , architecture and view are the American architect Peter Chermayeff . Its pavilion resembles an aircraft carrier and is installed on a pier surrounded by water .

http://ift.tt/1p4YTzC

Old Scituate Light by roncalder60 by roncalder60

The town developed a significant fishing industry by the late eighteenth century, owing to its small but protected harbor, sheltered by Cedar Point to the north and First Cliff to the south. Entering the harbor was difficult because of shallow water and mud flats.

Local citizens petitioned the town’s selectmen for a lighthouse in 1807. The selectmen convinced the federal government to appropriate $4,000 in 1810 for the building of a lighthouse at the harbor entrance at Cedar Point. Three men from the nearby town of Hingham built the lighthouse, finishing it in September 1811, two months ahead of schedule. The 25-foot-tall stone tower was accompanied by a one-and-a-half-story keeper’s house, an oil vault, and a well.

The Boston Marine Society was concerned that the new light be easy to differentiate from other lights in Boston Bay. In October 1811, a committee of the society met to discuss the situation with the local lighthouse superintendent. They asked that the light not be put into service until the following March, after sufficient discussion of its characteristic. The society recommended that an eclipser be installed to create a flashing light. Instead, Scituate Light went into service as a fixed white light in April 1812.

The first keeper was Simeon Bates, who stayed at the station until his death in 1834. Bates and his wife, Rachel, had nine children, including two daughters, Rebecca and Abigail. These two sisters would become heroic figures in the history of American lighthouses.

During the War of 1812, British warships frequently raided New England coastal towns. On June 11, 1814, British forces plundered and burned a number of vessels at Scituate. Keeper Bates fired two shots from a small cannon, angering the captain of a British warship as it departed.
Less than three months later, Keeper Bates and most of his family were away, leaving 21-year-old Rebecca and 15-year-old (or, according to some accounts, 17-year-old) Abigail in charge. The sisters were horrified to see a British warship anchored in the harbor. In a magazine article many years later, Rebecca was quoted:

“I’ll tell you what I’ll do,” says I to my sister, “Look here, you take the drum and I’ll take the fife.” I was fond of military music and could play four tunes on the fife — Yankee Doodle was my masterpiece. . . . “What good’ll that do?” says she. “Scare them,” says I. “All you’ve got to do is call the roll. I’ll scream the fife and we must keep out of sight; if they see us they’ll laugh us to scorn.”

There is more to the story of this lighthouse here: http://ift.tt/1M4srCQ

Yes, the sky was that blue! Have a wonderful week dear friends! Warm regards, Ron 😉

http://ift.tt/24O8BHv

Curvy. by jenniferbin by jenniferbin

Processed with VSCOcam with a9 preset

http://ift.tt/1TpkGz5

Sunset over Toronto’s skyline by roliketto by roliketto

The view from my friend’s balcony, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

http://ift.tt/1QE4abX

Parliament Hill East Block – Ottawa, Canada by tawatts by tawatts

I captured this scene the other weekend with a fellow photographer friend Chris Ward Photography. Chris lives in Kingston and was here wanting to get out and take some shots. We wandered around for a few hours last night in the winter storm, trying to find some interesting perspectives to shoot down around the hill and near the canal.

With the storm, there was not very many people out at all, so was nice to have the area pretty much to ourselves without worrying about people in the shots.

For this shot, I have my camera set down low to the snow, and just beside a street lamp. I couldn’t move it any closer to the buildings as I would have had very long shadows to deal with removing from the camera and tripod in post.

It was very windy last night, with lots of snow and blowing snow. I managed to catch the cloud streams nicely in this scene before it just became a mass of white above the building. Post processing was completed in Lightroom. I didn’t do that much to the shot, some dust/.snow removal from the lens, white balance adjustment, added clarity and contrast in the clouds to enhance the streaks.

http://ift.tt/1R3cT3q

Temple of the Italian Glories by GiuseppeTorre by GiuseppeTorre

Cathédrale Sainte-Cécile by monsieurmechant by monsieurmechant

Cathedral Basilica of Saint Cecilia in Albi, France.

Not what I usually like to shoot, but it looked so beautiful and eerie.

http://ift.tt/1Tpdlzp

Looking Up by rainier14411 by rainier14411