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Source: joyreactor.com
Courage and power. Reblogged from guzzigazz.tumblr.com
Photoshoot for ReVeal Crochet by photographer Aleksandr Mavin, in Athens.
Models: Viki Odintcova and Theodor. Source: instagram.com/a_MAVIN.
Making the run to shore. Source: fav.ink.
Source: tumblrgallery.com
Source: pinterest.com.au
A Gartside 10 foot traditional clinker dinghy on the beach at Dove Lake in Tasmania. The Gartside 10 is hand-crafted by the team at Denman Marine in Kettering. The iconic Cradle Mountain is in the background of this photo. Source: denmanmarine.com.au
Photo by Frederica Erra, a young photographer from Milan, Italy, who specialises in capturing emotion in portraiture. Source: flickr.com
Time out for mango. Source: tumblr.com
1930 Alfa Romero race car. The Alfa Romero P2 was powered by a straight 8, twin supercharged engine of 1987 cc producing 140-155 bhp. The P2 won 15 major victories in Europe in the period 1925-1930.
Photo Credit: Reblogged from guzzigazz.tumblr.com
Boats at the Wooden Boat Festival in Hobart, Tasmania, which has been held every second year in Hobart (in pre-COVID times). The festival planned for January 2021 has been cancelled until further notice.
Source: grandoldduke.com.au
A red-headed beauty. Source: freexcafe.com
A resort beach at Cape d’Agde in the south of France in high-summer.
Source: tumblrgallery.com>tumblrblog>gallery
Source: reblogged from mia-down-under.tumblr.com
In 1515, a live rhinoceros arrived in Lisbon as a gift to King Manuel I of Portugal from Sultan Muzafar II of Gujarat in western India. When the rhino died shortly after arrival, Albrecht Durer in Nuremberg drew this image from a brief sketch and description included in a letter from Lisbon. He never saw the animal either alive or dead. The image was widely circulated throughout Europe as a woodcut print. Durer gave it many of the armour pieces worn by contemporary German knights, but surprisingly not unlike the Indian rhinoceros of the time. Source: The Boilerplate Rhino, Essays by David Quammen, 2000. Photo Credit: pinterest.com.
South Solitary Island Lighthouse off the coast of New South Wales, Australia. The island is about 15 kilometres north-east of Coffs Harbour and the lighthouse is a cylindrical concrete tower 20 metres high (66 feet) which was finished in 1880. For a large part of its life the light was powered by kerosene, then in August 1975 it was converted to 12 volt solar power, still managing an output of 38,000 candela. At night, it flashes a white light every 5 seconds. Source: southsolitaryisland.com.au
Design plans for the construction of South Solitary Island Lighthouse, from 1878. It includes a spiral cast-iron staircase and a store room at ground level.
Source: pinterest.com
Source: Reblogged from cavemanfeet.tumblr.com.