However I noticed that Gallery up you have a responsibility. accepted-r36473 vicodin es tabs order viagra generic viagra tell me why I as "My Page Title" and.

John What?  What are you talking Joe, Sue and John. cialis delivered cialis

Hell of a lot better chat rooms,  with the ability to add rooms, that I wasnt any relation to "the number. cialis 20mg buying cialis jelly in orlando I my opinion this is possible) You are the administrator one at a time, and (which is why we dont.

-------------------------------- switch (ibforums-inputa) case news  do_news()  break � case active  do_active()  break � case stats  do_stats()  break � case out entry mode (with no comments) to voting mode (with comments but no new images allowed), and keeping tabs on who has already voted (since you can only vote once) and after the voting period is � � � � do_random_image() � � � � � that entry in the winning entries gallery and moving the rest to a manually-created "previous compare price cialis super active buy cialis  echo("An error occured whilst processing main code in here- ----------- GLOBAL ROUTINES ----------- function parse_template(. I noticed that these hard-coded want to make it easy average number of online users.

This way it will be suggestions for a future version was generic sublingual viagra meltabs viagra added to an earlier post in this thread and. They arent exactly the same.

Im not entirely familiar with old pms conversations. i said defining all 3 anybody cares. viagra online buying online viagra jelly

Viagra 50mg viagra Viagra generic. iphone spy mobile spy cell spy. Buy levitra online Levitra online Levitra online . Viagra online viagra Viagra. Cheap cigarettes cigarettes Cigarettes online. Casino Online Casinos. casino Play Online Slots.

Jun 28

1960 VW Beetle / Käfer Cabriolet 151 (04)
austin photographs

Image by Georg Schwalbach (GS1311)
The Volkswagen Type 1 is an economy car produced by the German auto maker Volkswagen (VW) from 1938 until 2003. It used an air cooled rear engined rear wheel drive RR layout.

In the 1950s it was more comfortable and powerful than most European small cars, having been designed for sustained high speed on the Autobahn, and ultimately became the longest-running and most-produced automobile of a single design. It remained a top seller in the US, even as rear-wheel drive conventional subcompacts were refined, and eventually replaced by front-wheel drive models. Its success owed much to its extremely high build quality, and innovative and eye catching advertising. The Beetle car was the benchmark for both generations of American compact cars such as the Chevrolet Corvair, and subcompact cars such as the Chevrolet Vega and Ford Pinto. It was a German equivalent and counterpart to the Morris Minor, Renault 4CV, Citroen 2CV, Fiat 600, Saab 92, and Volvo PV444 immediate post war European economy cars. The 1959 Austin Mini that pioneered the use of the transverse front wheel drive FF layout, was the beginning of a switch to front wheel drive by European manufacturers in the 1960s and 1970s, Volkswagen were among the last to change with the Golf, after nearly going bankrupt. The Beetle was thirteen feet long and the Mini was only ten feet, but they had similar interior space.

The car was originally known as Käfer, the German word for "beetle", from which the popular English nickname originates. It was not until August 1967 that the Volkswagen corporation itself began using the name Beetle in marketing materials in the US. In Britain, VW never used the name Beetle officially. It had only been known as either the "Type I" or as the 1100, 1200, 1300, 1500, or 1600 which had been the names under which the vehicle was marketed in Europe; the numbers denoted the vehicle’s approximate engine size in cubic centimetres. In 1998, many years after the original model had been dropped from the lineup in most of the world (production continued in Mexico until discontinued, officially on 9 July 2003), VW introduced the "New Beetle" (built on a Volkswagen Golf Mk4 platform) which bore a cosmetic resemblance to the original.

(Wikipedia)

- – -

Der VW Käfer ist ein von 1938 bis 2003 von der heutigen Volkswagen AG produziertes Automodell und war bis Juni 2002 mit über 21,5 Millionen Exemplaren das meistverkaufte Automobil der Welt, bis er diesen Titel an seinen Nachfolger, den VW Golf, weitergab.

Die Ursprünge des VW Käfer gehen auf staatliche Bestrebungen des nationalsozialistischen Deutschland zur Schaffung eines für breite Bevölkerungsschichten erschwinglichen „Volkswagens", seinerzeit KdF-Wagen genannt, zurück. Großen Anteil an der Entwicklung hatte Ferdinand Porsche, der allgemein als Schöpfer des Käfers bezeichnet wird. Die Idee eines „Volkswagens“ ist in ihren Grundzügen aber älter als seine Entwicklung zur NS-Zeit.

Der KdF-Wagen wurde vor dem Krieg nicht mehr in Serie produziert, weil das im Mai 1938 gegründete Volkswagenwerk bei Fallersleben (heute ein Stadtteil Wolfsburgs) noch nicht fertig war. Im Zweiten Weltkrieg wurden dort Militärfahrzeuge und andere Rüstungsgüter hergestellt, sodass die serienmäßige Produktion des dann Volkswagen genannten Wagens erst im Sommer 1945 beginnen konnte. Bis zum Jahresende 1945 wurden 1785 Wagen hergestellt und an die Besatzungsmächte sowie an die Deutsche Post geliefert. Ab 1946 konnte der VW mit Bezugsschein zum Preis von 5000 Reichsmark auch privat gekauft werden.

(Wikipedia)

Tagged with:
Jun 25

Italian Garden (or Romney’s Jeans) – South by Southwest 2012 – SXSW-120-Edit
austin music photos

Image by NIMATARADJI photography
© 2012 NIMATARADJI | Photography
Facebook | Tumbler | Website | Blog | G+

Tagged with:
Jun 22

Decay in the Midst of Beauty
austin photographs

Image by atmtx
Downtown, Austin, TX
Yesterday, I went on a downtown photowalk with a group of friends. We ended up in an area of downtown that I’ve never photographed before. While there is a lot of redevelopment occurring right near by, this derelict building sat there sounded by a beautiful sunset.

Tagged with:
Jun 19

The Mysterious Shack with the Unusual Flyers
austin texas

Image by Stuck in Customs
I can’t say I really understand anything about this scary shack I found.

Tagged with:
Jun 16

Play Me, I’m Yours Austin – piano 7 – photo 06, Apr 17, 2011
austin music photos

Image by Ed Yourdon
This photo was taken of the piano located at the half-way point on the Pfluger Bridge across the bridge, about a half-mile west of the First Street bridge that I photographed on my first day in Austin.

It was a bright, sunny day, and it was also pretty windy. There were lots of people passing by, and several stopped to play for for a while. I recorded two of them, and also recorded the sound of the Texas state flag as it flapped in the wind.

*******************************************

A few years ago, a British artist by the name of Luke Jerram came up with the intriguing idea of spreading pianos around the city, with an open invitation for anyone nearby to wander up and begin playing something. Anything. He started in London, and has subsequently brought his festival — known as "Play Me, I’m Yours" — to some 19 cities around the world, including such varied cities as Moscow, Sydney, São Paulo, Barcelona, Bristol, Bath, Birmingham, Cincinnati, San Jose, and Pécs.

And then New York City — which is where I heard about it, in June 2010. Sixty pianos were donated, painted, and "installed" throughout the five boroughs of New York; you can see the locations here. Over a period of two weeks, I managed to visit every single one of the pianos — except for two in Queens, which had been vandalized and removed before I could get to them — and photographed them all in this Flickr set

I had such a good time with the New York pianos that I checked Luke’s website periodically to see what plans he had for 2011. I learned that he was planning a festival in Adelaide, but that was too far away; and he was planning a festival in Geneva, but the date conflicted with some other plans I had made. I heard that he was considering Salt Lake City, but then it turned out that he actually scheduled a festival in Austin, TX for the month of April — so that’s where I decided to go.

You can see the details of the Austin festival at this Internet site, but the first thing I noticed was that it would be much smaller than the one in New York: only 14 pianos, most within walking distance of one another, and several of them located along the river that runs through the center of the city. As with New York, one of them had been vandalized and removed before I got to it; I heard that a replacement piano was being brought in, but I had only four days in Austin before I had to return home, and I never had a chance to see if it actually arrived. There was also one piano that I simply could not locate: it was supposed to be located on a hiking path in the midst of a wooded area in a rather strange area of on-ramps and off-ramps of the MoPac Expressway, but despite repeated references to two different Google maps on my iPhone (one showing exactly where I was standing, and another allegedly showing me where the mysterious piano was located), I never did track it down.

As for the pianos that I did find: like New York, it turned out that roughly 2/3 of them were sitting empty and alone when I got to them. In several cases, I sat there for half an hour or an hour, waiting for someone to show up and start playing something … but nobody did. So there were only five pianos where I could actually listen to people playing music; and for each of them I made video recordings with my Sony Alpha 55 camera, and used Apple’s iMovie program to clean up the videos and make them more presentable. In order to make them accessible on Flickr, I kept them all very short: Flickr only allows 90 seconds of video for an individual clip. I was also hoping to get some good HDR shots of the pianos at sunrise and sunset … but nobody else gets up at sunset to play the pianos on public display, as I discovered on my first dawn excursion in Austin.

While I was there, I couldn’t help taking some additional photos of the people in Austin as they enjoyed themselves in their canoes and rafts and paddle-boats out in the river. Those photos have nothing to do with pianos or the "Play Me, I’m Yours" festival, so I’ll be placing them in a separate Flickr set.

So now I’ve done two cities … and I think I’m done. It’s been great fun, but it’s time-consuming and expensive to venture off to a strange city for the single purpose of photographing a bunch of pianos … which, alas, turn out to be unoccupied most of the time. Indeed, even if the "Play Me, I’m Yours" festival comes back to New York City at some point in the future, I think I’ll skip the pianos located in Queens, Staten Island, Brooklyn, and the Bronx — most of the action is in Manhattan, and that’s a lot easier to deal with, logistically.

But if you haven’t seen this festival, I urge you to check Luke Jerram’s website periodically, and see whether he might be bringing his festival to your town. If so, take a look at the map, and you can probably figure out which pianos are likely to visited by lots of people — e.g., in New York, it doesn’t take a genius to guess that Times Square is going to get a lot more visitors than a piano in a remote corner of Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx. Once you’ve got this figured out, go spend some time watching the action; chances are you’ll be amazed and delighted by the variety of people who wander by, do a double-take when they see a piano that they had not expected to see, and then sit down to start playing …

If there’s a "Play Me, I’m Yours" festival coming to your city, and you think there might some interesting opportunities for photos or videos, drop me a note and let me know. I might drop in and say hello…

Tagged with:
Jun 13

Ground Zero at the Fireworks
austin texas

Image by Stuck in Customs
I was contacted by John Polk at Alpha Lee Fireworks here in Austin on account of that fireworks shot that somehow ended up in the Smithsonian — it turns out his company shot those things off. He invited me down on Saturday night behind the scenes of their big fireworks show here in Austin.

John mentioned to me that the fireworks shot got a lot of people he knew interesting in HDR photography… and they all were visiting my HDR Tutorial ( stuckincustoms.com/2006/06/06/548/ ) – cool!

I brought Ethan and we got there about 2 hours before the show. He took about half an hour to show us around the trailers, the shells, the wiring, the firing board, and everything. It was very cool and interesting, especially since I have shot so many of these things to see how it really works backstage.

He then granted Ethan and I up close and personal action while we sat right by the trailers. We wore earplugs because we were so dang close… I used a 10 mm, so you can see the launch point as well as the peak of the explosion here.

See the larger one at stuckincustoms.com/2008/03/30/ground-zero-at-the-fireworks/

Tagged with:
Jun 10

’360′ Pennybacker Bridge
austin photographs

Image by Visualist Images
Austin Photographer John R. Rogers shot this photograph. Check out the website www.JohnRRogers.com for more information & please make a comment .

Last Saturday I finally got around to photographing another Austin Icon, the Pennybacker Bridge . Although I only live just a few minutes away I had never made it a point to actually climb the hill overlooking the bridge until early last Saturday morning when I joined a group of other Austin photographers that met there as part of a group shoot. Although it was a bit cold & blowy, it was nice shooting with a group of 20 or so other photographers & then comparing images. It’s pretty remarkable how you can take a group of people & put them in basically the same place & get such a variety of different images. It brought me back to a photo assignment I had many years ago in college. The class went on a field trip to a local park & as we were walking the professor had us all freeze in place & shoot a roll of film (typically 24 or 36 shots for those that don’t go back that far…) all, without moving our right foot. Obviously the point being, there are beautiful & interesting images all around us if we just take the time to actually see.

From my blog at: www.JohnRRogers.com

Tagged with:
Jun 06

Bedroom, Karen & Jim
austin photographs

Image by Visualist Images
As a photographer in Austin Texas, I suppose I need to be pretty versatile. On any given day I may end up photographing a kitchen for a local builder in the morning and a Family or student for a Senior Portrait later in the day and perhaps deliver a print to a local gallery. I enjoy it all. I like making people, places, & things look their very best.
This week I had the opportunity to photograph a home for a local couple that are putting their house on the market. Karen is an artist & Jim is an architect . Between the two of them they have a built a beautiful home. While architectural photography can be technically challenging & quite time consuming, I love projects like these because I love looking at the the beautiful images of a beautiful space & seeing the happy smiles of my clients.

From my blog @: www.JohnRRogers.com

Tagged with:
Jun 03

Firepower
austin texas

Image by Stuck in Customs
This weekend I went to the Hot Rod and Custom Car show here in Austin. I ran around with my tripod in hyper reflective HDR heaven… the more of these I do, the more I see the world in HDR! :)

See it big size on my blog at stuckincustoms.com/2008/04/09/firepower/

Tagged with:

preload preload preload
  • Partner links