Upon her return home, de dames realiseren zich dat ze niet in de stad kunnen blijven. But Gable was under contract to MGM, but he seldom could do much with the scene So George just told David he gone with the wind pdf download not work any longer if the script was not better and […]
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Gone with the wind pdf download
Gone fishing: Olympus TG-4 gallery updated
We’ve just expanded our real-world Olympus Tough TG-4 sample gallery with underwater images from the sparkling blue waters of Maui. The TG-4 is Olympus’ 16MP rugged compact with Raw support and built-in Wi-Fi with GPS, making it a truly road-ready travel companion. Read more
Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)
Gone Fur Good: 10 Abandoned Petting Zoos & Game Parks
[ By Steve in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]
Generations of adults cherish childhood memories of these now-abandoned petting zoos. As for the animals fed & petted there, maybe they remember, too…
White Pines Deer Park near Oregon, Illinois is remembered fondly by several generations of kids who enjoyed feeding the 200-odd deer kept in a spacious enclosure. “It’s excellent,” stated 8-year-old T.J. Turner in the summer of 1992. “Deer come right up to you. Outside you never get to pet them or see them.” Inside too, nowadays.
Flickr user BillsExplorations visited what remains of White Pines Deer Park in February of 2013, about two decades after the park closed in the mid-1990’s. Though it adjoins White Pines Forest State Park (an Illinois Nature Preserve since 2001), Bill didn’t see any deer roaming about – blame it on carelessly disposed-of Polaroid film waste.
Gotta Flat
Flickr user Quinn Dombrowski (quinn.anya) brings us this curious “Flat Petting Zoo”… says they sell furs there. Better not tell PETA or Elaine Benes.
Benson’s Hedges
Benson’s Wild Animal Farm in Hudson, New Hampshire, opened in 1926 and closed in 1987 following a decades-long decline. In 2009, the town of Hudson acquired the property and it’s gradually being redeveloped as a public park and nature area sans petting zoo.
Some of the much-deteriorated old buildings including the Old Lady in the Shoe’s house are to be restored though non-native plants, animals and animal-petters are no longer welcome.
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Gone Fur Good 10 Abandoned Petting Zoos Game Parks
[ By Steve in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]
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Gone Green: Vacant 50 Years, Chinese Village Conquered by Ivy
[ By WebUrbanist in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]
Nestled in the hills on a remote island at the mouth of the Yangtze River in China and full of rich foliage, one could imagine this small fishing hamlet to be an idyllic place, at least for nature if not for people – it has been abandoned by humans now for nearly half a century.
Ivy has become the dominant and defining feature of both the natural and built environments of this place, slowly but surely creeping over sidewalks and streets, up walls and roofs, and ultimately taking over the town.
In some cases, collapsed portions of structures have made it all the more easy for the greenery to work its way over the sides of buildings and into their empty floors.
Set on Gouqi Island, one of hundreds of small islands in the area, the Houtou Wan Village was a victim of changing times and circumstances, a combination of urbanization and depleted fish populations that drove its inhabitants to seek work elsewhere.
Today, it is enjoyed only by visitors who seek it out explicitly, like photographer Jane Qing, chartering boats to travel to its shores and document the decay as well as the rebirth the place is now home to in its second life.
[ By WebUrbanist in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]
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Don’t Miss Out: Soon These 12 Photography Training Deals Will Be Gone Forever
As 2014 races to an end – so too are our amazing 12 photography deals of Christmas.
In just on 48 hours (as the calendar ticks over into 2015 US Eastern Time) these fantastic deals will close forever.
Among them are some great savings to be had – up to 88% off resources that will help you make 2015 the year of great photos!
The Most Popular Deals of 2014
Each year we get readers ask for our recommendation on the best deals to pick up so as this all comes to an end we like to reveal the best selling deals so you can see what is hot!
Of course the best deal is what is right for you. All these deals come with 60 day money back guarantees so if you’re not quite sure if a deal is for you you can pick it up and then get your money back if you find it doesn’t meet your expectations.
It’s also worth saying that while the first 4 in the list stood out from the rest of the pack considerably – there wasn’t a great deal between the other 8 in the list!
- 70% off the Photoshop Artistry Course – this was our biggest deal over on SnapnDeals when we ran it earlier in the year and again was clearly the hottest deal of the 12 days. Pick it up while you can at this never before seen price.
- 88% off Hacking Photography’s Lightroom Presets Bundle – our biggest discount of the year and a no brainer if you’re a Lightroom user as it gets you 100 professionally designed Lightroom presets for just $ 10.
- Landscape Photography eBooks for $ 10 – our best selling Landscape Photography eBooks normally retail for $ 30… in this deal they are yours for $ 10 or both for $ 19 with a bonus.
- Portrait eBooks for $ 7! – this deal gets you any of our 4 Portraits eBooks for $ 7 or you can pick them all up with a bonus for $ 21
- $ 10 eBook Day – no surprises here, we put 10 great dPS eBooks up for just $ 10 each. Also hot in this day was our Photo Nuts bundle (4 great eBooks for $ 25).
- Ed Verosky’s Macro eBook for $ 7 (or his library at 78% off) – Ed’s eBooks are always very popular – this year was no different to previous times we’ve featured them.
- Natural Light for $ 7 – this best selling eBook is gorgeous and sold like crazy when we set it live on day 5!
- Essential Guide to Black and White Photography – one of our newest eBooks at a price never before seen.
- 60% off our Going Pro eBook – if you’ve ever dreamt of making money from your photography this one is for you.
- Save $ 40 on Gavin Gough’s Post Lightroom Tutorials – perfect if you want to brush up on your Lightroom post processing skills.
- Save $ 60 on KelbyOne 12 month Membership – get 365 days of amazing photography training for just 55 cents per day.
- Save 50% on Lighting on Location Course – while it is at the bottom of the list this course is one of our favorites. Written by our own editor and PACKED with some of the most practical and actionable information on Lighting Portraits – a bargain at this price.
These deals all end at midnight US Eastern time 31 December (as we see in 2015) so act now to pick up yours!
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The post Don’t Miss Out: Soon These 12 Photography Training Deals Will Be Gone Forever by Darren Rowse appeared first on Digital Photography School.
Don’t Miss Out: Soon These 12 Photography Training Deals Will Be Gone Forever
With the countdown to the end of 2013 we’re also closing in on the time that our 12 Photography Deals of 2013 will be ending.
In just a few hours (as the calendar ticks over into 2014 US Eastern Time) these fantastic deals will close forever. Among them are some great savings to be had – up to 77% off resources that will help you make 2014 the year of great photos!
The Most Popular Deals of 2013
A number of people have messaged me for my personal recommendations on which deals I think are best. Of course it will depend upon your needs but here are the deals in order of ‘best sellers’ so you can see what others bought this year:
- Day 12: $ 10 Day – where we offered 10 dPS (including our portrait lighting, travel photography and kids photography eBooks) for $ 10 each as well as a couple of great $ 10 bundles of eBooks from Ed Verosky and Andrew Gibson.
- Day 7: 77% off Living Landscapes – this $ 7 Landscape Photography eBook deal almost took our servers down it was so popular! There’s also an option to bundle it with 4 Jay Patel eBooks.
- Day 9: 77% off Photo Nuts and Post – another $ 7 deal, this one on Post Production Techniques is perfect for those of you looking to learn some great Post Processing Techniques (there’s also an option to get all 5 Neil Creek eBooks for $ 90 off!)
- Day 11: $ 40 off Kelby Training – this deal gets you hundreds of hours of photography training from some of the world’s best photographers for just cents a day.
- Day 5: 65% off Portraits, Making the Shot – our 2nd most popular eBook ever and yours for just $ 7.
- Day 6: 75% off The Art of Black and White Photography – for just $ 24 you can get Udemy’s most popular course.
- Day 3: 60% off Going Pro – thinking of making money from your photography? This one is for you.
- Day 2: 60% off James Brandon’s ’10 Most Common Photography Mistakes and How to Fix Them’ – just $ 12 for this great course.
- Day 8: Save 30% on Fro Knows Photo Beginners Guide – if you’re new to photography then this is a great introduction to get you hands on.
- Day 1: 65% off our Natural Light eBook – another $ 7 dPS eBook on one of our most popular eBooks. It’ll help you take great natural light images (there’s also an option to get your hands on all 3 Mitchell Kanashkevich eBooks and save $ 35.
- Day 10: Save 37% on Mastering Photography eBook By Andrew Gibson – a great beginners guide to using your digital camera.
- Day 4: Save 50% on the Amazing Fundamentals of Digital Photography course – 5 massive days of training for just $ 74. The perfect way to set up 2014.
See all these deals on our 12 Days of Christmas page but don’t delay, these deals end as the clock strikes midnight and we see in 2014 (US Eastern time).
The post Don’t Miss Out: Soon These 12 Photography Training Deals Will Be Gone Forever by Darren Rowse appeared first on Digital Photography School.
Gone to the Beach
Christmas has come and gone and being based in Australia – where Summer is in full swing – most of the dPS team are all feeling the call to the beach after what’s been a busy year!
I know it might be hard to hear for some of us snowed in in the Northern Hemisphere but the sun is shining and the temperature is rising in Melbource and most Aussies take a couple of weeks off at this time of year. Me, I don’t get to see the beach until the end of January and I have to fly to Cuba to do that!
But don’t fret – while we’re at the beach we’ve lined up some great content for you here on dPS so you can get your photographic ‘fix’.
Here’s what will happen:
1. Between Christmas and New Years – The dPS best of 2013 Series
Over the next week we’ve lined up a bit of a look back on the year that has been. In 2013 we published over 500 tutorials here on dPS – too many to have really taken in. So over this next week we’ll be presenting some ‘best of’ posts where we’ll publish themed collections of our best stuff from the last year.
Tomorrow we’ll kick it off with a collection of our hottest landscape photography posts written this year. Each day there will be a new theme.
2. The First Couple Days of 2014 – Reduced Posting
After the New Year we’ll be posting some great new content – but we’ll just post once a day until the 3rd, instead of our normal twice a day schedule.
Also please note: over the next two weeks you may not see a newsletter from us – but we’ll make the following one a great one!
All will be back to normal come January 3rd though! In fact it’ll be better than ever as we’ll hopefully be returned relaxed, healthy and rejuvenated.
Happy New Year!
Lastly – let me take this opportunity to you a very Happy New Year. I hope that 2013 has been a good one for you and would like to send you our best wishes for 2014!
Keep shooting and keep reading, we appreciate you sticking around!
The post Gone to the Beach by Darlene Hildebrandt appeared first on Digital Photography School.
Goldfish all gone? Turn that empty tank into an underwater housing
If you have a digital SLR and don’t want to blow two grand on an underwater housing, check out the alternative the folks at Digital Camera World came up with. Just put your camera into a clean fish tank, attach a remote shutter release cable, lower the tank into the water, and fire away. Naturally, this only works in calm water, so don’t take it into the ocean unless you fancy buying a new camera. Details and a photo after the link.
News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)
Gone Fission: 11 Unfinished Nuclear Power Plants
[ By Steve in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]
These 11 unfinished, abandoned, canceled, mothballed and/or suspended nuclear power plants will, for better or worse, never know the warmth of split atoms.
Lemoniz Nuclear Power Plant, Spain
(images via: Jasonmcconnie, JosebaZ and Wikipedia)
Construction of the Lemóniz Nuclear Power Plant, located on the Bay of Biscay on Spain’s northern coast, began in the mid-1970s but was dogged from its inception by violent opposition from ETA, the terrorist organization dedicated to the independence of Spain’s Basque country. The group managed to smuggle bombs into the facility on several occasions in 1978 and 1979 resulting in a number of fatalities and delaying the plant’s construction.
(image via: Txarama)
In early 1981, ETA members kidnapped and later killed José María Ryan, the plant’s chief engineer. This proved to be too much for Iberduero, the plant’s builder and operator, who temporarily halted construction pending action from civil authorities… it never came. In 1983 the election of Spain’s first left-leaning government since the Spanish Civil War resulted in the project’s official cancellation. Watched over by automatic CCTV cameras and protected by spirals of razor wire, the Lemóniz Nuclear Power Plant sits silently as vegetation takes root in accumulating dirt and debris.
Marble Hill Nuclear Power Station, Indiana, USA
(images via: Craig Moyer and Ulule)
From 1977 to 1984, Public Service Company of Indiana (PSI) spent approximately $ 2.5 billion to build the Marble Hill Nuclear Power Station near Hanover, Indiana, and by the time the financial tap ran dry it was only half-finished! The political and environmental landscape had changed quite a bit over those 7 years with the biggest speed bump being the Three Mile Island crisis in 1979. With costs spiraling out of control and the state government reluctant to provide funding, PSI abandoned the project and auctioned off most of the salvageable material for a mere pittance.
(image via: The Vanishing Point)
Equipment and parts from the Marble Hill Nuclear Power Station continued to be sold off in the early to mid-1990s but by the year 2000 everything of value had been sold. Since 2008, slow and steady demolition under the auspices of MCM Management Corp. has seen first the fuel-handling building and then the twin reactor containment buildings gradually reduced to mounds of scrap. The bright side, if any, is that none of the demolished material is radioactive.
Bataan Nuclear Power Plant, Philippines
(images via: Philippine Defense Forum, The Pinoy Explorer and Discover)
Back to Bataan? Let’s hope not: conceived in 1976 as the Philippines’ first nuclear power plant, construction was halted on the BNPP in 1979 just after the Three Mile Island nuclear accident. An official safety inquiry revealed the existence of over 4,000 defects, plus the fact that the plant was being built atop active earthquake fault lines and uncomfortably close to then-dormant Mount Pinatubo. The latter’s surprise awakening on June 15th of 1991 turned out to be the second-largest volcanic eruption of the 20th century.
(images via: C.Wolf21)
Repairs prompted by the safety inquiry’s findings ended up adding time and cost to the project, the latter of which had ballooned to $ 2.3 billion US by 1984. Nothing could stop dictator Ferdinand Marcos’ pet project, however, until Marcos himself was toppled and exiled in 1986. One of the first acts of the new “People Power” government was to respect the will of the people and mothball the power plant – the costs weren’t paid off in full until mid-2007. In 2011, the plant was re-opened as a tourist attraction with a significant number of visitors coming from Japan.
Belene Nuclear Power Plant, Bulgaria
(images via: Expats, Sophia Echo and Cryptome))
Located in northern Bulgaria near the Danube river and the border with Romania, the Belene Nuclear Power Plant was intended to replace four older reactors at the Kozloduy Nuclear Power Plant shut down as a prerequisite of Bulgaria’s joining the EU. Construction began in 1987 but in 1990, after Bulgaria’s transition from a communist to a capitalist state, the project was put on hold.
(image via: Maxwell Woods)
Existing infrastructure was preserved pending a possible restart of construction and this actually came to be in the fall of 2008. However, fierce wrangling over construction costs and the Bulgarian government’s insistence on the inclusion of an American or a European contractor once again derailed the project. Even though the plant was more than half complete, the decision was made in March of 2012 to revise the Belene Nuclear Power Plant as a gas-fired conventional power station.
[ By Steve in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]
[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]
Gone Fission: 11 Unfinished Nuclear Power Plants
[ By Steve in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]
These 11 unfinished, abandoned, canceled, mothballed and/or suspended nuclear power plants will, for better or worse, never know the warmth of split atoms.
Lemoniz Nuclear Power Plant, Spain
(images via: Jasonmcconnie, JosebaZ and Wikipedia)
Construction of the Lemóniz Nuclear Power Plant, located on the Bay of Biscay on Spain’s northern coast, began in the mid-1970s but was dogged from its inception by violent opposition from ETA, the terrorist organization dedicated to the independence of Spain’s Basque country. The group managed to smuggle bombs into the facility on several occasions in 1978 and 1979 resulting in a number of fatalities and delaying the plant’s construction.
(image via: Txarama)
In early 1981, ETA members kidnapped and later killed José María Ryan, the plant’s chief engineer. This proved to be too much for Iberduero, the plant’s builder and operator, who temporarily halted construction pending action from civil authorities… it never came. In 1983 the election of Spain’s first left-leaning government since the Spanish Civil War resulted in the project’s official cancellation. Watched over by automatic CCTV cameras and protected by spirals of razor wire, the Lemóniz Nuclear Power Plant sits silently as vegetation takes root in accumulating dirt and debris.
Marble Hill Nuclear Power Station, Indiana, USA
(images via: Craig Moyer and Ulule)
From 1977 to 1984, Public Service Company of Indiana (PSI) spent approximately $ 2.5 billion to build the Marble Hill Nuclear Power Station near Hanover, Indiana, and by the time the financial tap ran dry it was only half-finished! The political and environmental landscape had changed quite a bit over those 7 years with the biggest speed bump being the Three Mile Island crisis in 1979. With costs spiraling out of control and the state government reluctant to provide funding, PSI abandoned the project and auctioned off most of the salvageable material for a mere pittance.
(image via: The Vanishing Point)
Equipment and parts from the Marble Hill Nuclear Power Station continued to be sold off in the early to mid-1990s but by the year 2000 everything of value had been sold. Since 2008, slow and steady demolition under the auspices of MCM Management Corp. has seen first the fuel-handling building and then the twin reactor containment buildings gradually reduced to mounds of scrap. The bright side, if any, is that none of the demolished material is radioactive.
Bataan Nuclear Power Plant, Philippines
(images via: Philippine Defense Forum, The Pinoy Explorer and Discover)
Back to Bataan? Let’s hope not: conceived in 1976 as the Philippines’ first nuclear power plant, construction was halted on the BNPP in 1979 just after the Three Mile Island nuclear accident. An official safety inquiry revealed the existence of over 4,000 defects, plus the fact that the plant was being built atop active earthquake fault lines and uncomfortably close to then-dormant Mount Pinatubo. The latter’s surprise awakening on June 15th of 1991 turned out to be the second-largest volcanic eruption of the 20th century.
(images via: C.Wolf21)
Repairs prompted by the safety inquiry’s findings ended up adding time and cost to the project, the latter of which had ballooned to $ 2.3 billion US by 1984. Nothing could stop dictator Ferdinand Marcos’ pet project, however, until Marcos himself was toppled and exiled in 1986. One of the first acts of the new “People Power” government was to respect the will of the people and mothball the power plant – the costs weren’t paid off in full until mid-2007. In 2011, the plant was re-opened as a tourist attraction with a significant number of visitors coming from Japan.
Belene Nuclear Power Plant, Bulgaria
(images via: Expats, Sophia Echo and Cryptome))
Located in northern Bulgaria near the Danube river and the border with Romania, the Belene Nuclear Power Plant was intended to replace four older reactors at the Kozloduy Nuclear Power Plant shut down as a prerequisite of Bulgaria’s joining the EU. Construction began in 1987 but in 1990, after Bulgaria’s transition from a communist to a capitalist state, the project was put on hold.
(image via: Maxwell Woods)
Existing infrastructure was preserved pending a possible restart of construction and this actually came to be in the fall of 2008. However, fierce wrangling over construction costs and the Bulgarian government’s insistence on the inclusion of an American or a European contractor once again derailed the project. Even though the plant was more than half complete, the decision was made in March of 2012 to revise the Belene Nuclear Power Plant as a gas-fired conventional power station.
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Gone Fission 11 Unfinished Nuclear Power Plants
[ By Steve in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]
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