Sunday, September 12, 2010

Creative Coat Rack Ideas

That day, Willy Ronis was missing from the beach on the island of Oleron, so ...

The main beach on the island of Oleron, a day of August 2010 (photo MS)

That day I found myself a little, Willy Ronis . I had just seen an exhibition of his pictures in Paris. My little Canon in my hand was hanging idle, as suddenly, I heard behind me a thundering, "Go," followed by "hop! hop! hop!" vigorous. Then, this band of thugs swept at a frantic pace, was thrown into the sea, out without leaving his hectic pace. I cocked and shot. I'm not there. And then, surprise, this picture fell by chance I liked, although I humbly ask forgiveness of the subjects who did not ask and end up on this blog unknown. Willy Ronis

I opened the door.

The Little Book of Willy Ronis that day (Folio) reveals just below the photos of this photographer died in 2009. There are those where it is still considered an amateur but are formidable (Montmartre at night) and others, where he missed the shot and is still posted and see that other opportunities arise, and then he picks up the weapon and 'poetic moment (Place Vendome those legs of a woman who straddle a puddle), and still others who have toured the world and where ever the subject is contacted him (Le Petit Parisien 1952 which runs with a baguette) . At that time people talked less right in the image is true, and it would have been if photographers had been the case?

The beach gives me the opportunity to return to tai chi to say that it was rarely for me the right place to practice. One year, I was bitten by an army of mosquitoes delighted to jump on their prey in the hands busy ... it is laughter that defeated me. Another time, my ankles were twisted in the soft sand ... I still had to give. But another time I overheard an advanced practitioner, alone. From a distance, I really enjoyed watching it move slowly with this strange soothed me without me trying to understand why. I did not know that discipline.
His image is now engraved in my imagination, I can not share it because my hands were bare. What a beautiful picture escaped.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Fingerboards For Sell

Paris from the heights of Pere Lachaise

Paris from the heights of Pere Lachaise by Josephine Louise Belmont (1790-1870) - Musée des Augustins in Toulouse.

Pere Lachaise ... a place of inspiration constantly evolving, like life.

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Boobs Of Old India Actress

Roads and trails (historical and cultural dictionary)

For centuries, until the 1850s, the Queyras was lacking passable roads. This situation was not unique in the Alps. Then, the valleys were related to each other by paths, some of which were metalled and remained, using public men and pack animals, mules, mules, donkeys, horses : Hence the name "mule trails" that is given.
In Gallo-Roman Escoyères were accessed, the center of Queyras, two paths that avoided the Gorges du Guil: one from Guillestre another Eygliers. The second, which borrowed the right bank, is believed he is the oldest. He leaves Eygliers, to hamlets of Big and Pra-Riont. Then it rises into the forest, goes to Girard, Chaston, Villeneuve, Garnier reached the pass (2280 m) and from there into the valley of Furfande, located in the town of Arvieux, and Escoyères . This ancient path is now the GR 541; the path of great Hiking, who joins the GR 58 and GR 5.
The trail rises into the left side of the mountain Guillestre up the "Vista" (or, in French, "Sight"), where we have a wonderful view over the valley Durance and Guil Gorge. Then it descends to the House of Roy by steps cut into the rock. The move, called the turnstiles, was very dangerous in winter. The mule blankets stretched out on the ice of fear that their animal does not slip into the abyss near. After the stone bridge (built in stone in 1460), the present road follows the bottom of the Combe. The old path was over, to mid slope, and repeatedly crossed the Guil, from one bank to another to avoid areas too dangerous, which, a few kilometers upstream of the House of Roy, the claim "no death , where travelers were exposed, wet weather or during periods of thaw, avalanches or falling rocks.

In 1783, according to the priest Albert, there were about twenty bridges on the Guil. On the map of Dauphine, drawn by Jean de Beins in 1633, are represented eight bridges between the Maison du Roy and the Guardian Angel. At the end of the XIXth, there were only six. Pillars remain downstream of the Guardian Angel.
Trails and bridges were often damaged. Under the ancien regime, maintenance of trails and bridges in the Combe was the cause of many disputes between communities and those of the Queyras and Guillestre Eygliers, must understand why. The trail was on the territory of the Community and Guillestre Eygliers but it was mainly used by Queyrassins, which on several occasions, have given notice and communities Guillestre Eygliers and authorities to repair the trail and bridges, as shown by the records of Queyras: "1750: application to the Minister, Marquis d'Argenson, to obtain relief to restore bridges Combe away. The Combe is dangerous ... Seven or eight times a year, one is obliged to send 80 men to repair the roads in order to draw out the need for both the garrison is in the valley for its inhabitants "(quoted by Tivollier, The Queyras, II, p 331).
These problems arise from road still in the Queyras at the end of each winter, after a flood or an avalanche where you have to clear the road, repair, rebuild a dam. The terrible flood of 1957 took away large portions of the road and many bridges.

Work to fill the Queyras of roads started in 1833. Road was inaugurated in Chateau-Queyras in 1855. An engraving, reproduced in Le Queyras General William, was made the occasion to record the event. Six years ago, in 1849, carriages pulled by horses were circulated for the first time between Old Town and shelter. It took eight years from 1845 to 1853 to build the road to Old Town in Saint-Veran. In 1852, Arvieux road was opened, in 1903, that of Roux Abriès in 1911, that of Murten. In 1864, further work has been done to move the road between Needles and Old Town on the right bank of the Guil, where it still is.
Until 1911, the road Queyras was drawn out of Guillestre until the House of Roy, on the ancient trail. To avoid the turnstiles and allow passage of automobiles, each new road was built lower down in the cliff, which required the drilling of four tunnels. In the twentieth s, other roads have been constructed: that of the top Bucher, the Col Izoard, that of Escoyères (the carriage road was built in 1967 by the residents themselves), the Col Agnel (tourist route open only in summer, which opened recently). To this should be added the old project, a veritable sea serpent, road and tunnel under the collar Cross to link to the Queyras Piedmont valleys nearby.

This work, which lasted for over a century and a half, gradually broke the isolation of Queyras. Economic relations with the valley of the Durance and the rest of France have intensified at the expense of traditional relations with the Piedmont valleys, which have declined and almost virtually ceased in recent times. In addition, construction of roads has had an impact on activity. S in the nineteenth, in villages, artisans were making dresses, headpieces, lace, utensils kitchen, to meet the needs of the people of Queyras. The road has allowed the introduction of manufactured goods, less expensive, which ruined the small local craft. In addition to these economic consequences, the road has had effects on demography. In 1831, the Queyras had 7637 inhabitants. Fifty years later, in 1881, there were only 5032 inhabitants. While the road was supposed to boost the economy of the valley, making travel easier, it also prompted Queyrassins to leave their village.