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Monday, 2 December 2024

Four Girlfriends Recreate Photo From Their First Fun-Loving Vacation 50 Years Ago

Marion Bamforth (left), Susan Morris, Carol Ansbro, Mary Helliwell (right) on holiday in Torquay in 1972 and 2024 – SWNS

A group of fun-loving friends have recreated a photo from their first girls getaway—more than 50 years ago.

The four gal-pals, who are now nearly 70, recalled their week-long stay in a seaside resort so fondly that they vowed to do it again to celebrate their 70th birthdays.

Carol Ansbro, Marion Bamforth, Susan Morris, and Mary Helliwell all went on holiday together in 1972 to the town of Torquay, in Devon, England.


The women from West Yorkshire returned to the town this year to recreate their cherished getaway—and they wore outfits as close to the original as possible.

“Our first holiday in Torquay was truly amazing,“ said grandmother-of-five Susan.

“We were only kids and so excited about staying in a cramped caravan and sharing each other’s clothes.

“It felt really exotic and grown-up being on our own without parents in the English Riviera.”
Pictured in 1972 in Torquay (left to right) Marion Bamforth, Susan Morris, Carol Ansbro, and Mary Helliwell – SWNS
COOL! 

“The picture was taken by those photographers who used to roam the promenade preying on unsuspecting tourists like us.”

Mary, a grandmother-of-four, said the pals struggled at first to find the exact location of where the 1972 snapshot was taken.


“Nobody could remember where the photo took place but, luckily, a member of staff at the hotel where we were staying, guided us to the exact spot.

“The white building in the 1972 photograph had been demolished but the same bridge is still in the background.”

The seniors, who’ve been friends since primary school, changed into their 1972-inspired outfits in a public toilet.

Marion Bamforth (left), Susan Morris, Carol Ansbro, and Mary Helliwell together again in Torquay -SWNS

Carol said it was worth it, because “the photo is amazing.”

Marion said taking the second photograph was really emotional for them.“It truly was an emotional moment. I still can’t believe it actually happened.” Four Girlfriends Recreate Photo From Their First Fun-Loving Vacation 50 Years Ago

Friday, 19 July 2024

5 game-changing photography trends


New Delhi, (IANSlife) Today, the art of photography in India transcends beyond the professional photographers and has reached common people. Both Gen-Zs and millennials use cameras with cutting-edge technology, to fuel their passion for framing memories.

If you’re someone who loves to photograph, you can’t miss these trends to ensure your pictures are timeless yet trendy:

AI-Driven capture and enhancement

The fusion of AI with visual photography is revolutionising the photography culture by offering effortless background removal and natural retouching. Especially for on-the-go travel content creators and vloggers with limited editing time, AI is the savior.

Nikon Z 9 has a very unique feature called “Auto Capture “. It works with AI and helps the camera to understand subject, motion and distance, enabling the camera to capture images and video automatically.

Highly advanced cameras like the Nikon Z 8, features high-performance AI-driven autofocus helping to seize the moments seamlessly.

Return of Cinematography

In filmmaking, videographers are reviving cinematic aesthetics with crystal-clear formats like 4K and 8K. This resolution along with HDR (High Dynamic Range), elevates visuals adding intense colors and remarkable contrast. This resolution along with high frame rate, elevates visuals by bringing that intricate detail to life and adding smooth cinematic slow motion.

Cherish Moments by capturing decisive photos

While it's all about photos, when it comes to pre-release capture, its real magic lies in capturing those critical moments that define a scene. A captured image, let you to re-live the moment, time and time, providing a sneak peek into the scene’s vibe. Likewise, Nikon Z8 preserves ambience by capturing pre- and post-shutter video snippets, adding emotion to shots. This pre-release feature has more to do with capturing those decisive moments.

The Nikon Z 8 promises to be a game-changer while capturing those decisive moments, offering wildlife and sports photographers innovative tools to explore new creative horizons, ensures capturing those action shots and ensures every frame is captured and nothing is missed.

Perfecting Portraits with Skin Softening

If you're all about those smooth and flawless portraits, then guess what?

Skin-softening feature has got your back with the magic touch giving perfect tones to the pictures designed especially for photographers who do fancy model shoots to make their pics pop and look elegant. The latest Nikon Cameras have AI driven Skin Softening feature which lets photographers capture soft and glowing portraits. The best part about this feature is that it only affects the skin and doesn’t affect the facial hair etc. Skin Softening feature greatly reduces turnaround time therefore enabling photographers/content creators to immediately post to their social media without spending too much time on post-production.

Shooting At Unstoppable Frames

Unleash the power of unstoppable shooting with Nikon Z 8 and Z 9, capturing moments at an astonishing 20 frames per second. Freeze time and capture every moment with over 1000 RAW images in a single, relentless burst. Paint stories through each shot, ensuring not a single detail escapes your lens.

With the technical trends, the Imaging industry is also witnessing yet another interesting shift. Gen Z’s, especially women are pursuing photography as a profession and form of artistic expression. This trend has emerged with increased access to photography equipment, workshops, and educational resources. Their influence spans Metaverse, NFTs, and unique palettes, injecting freshness into the industry. They redefine photography with their distinct twist and creative vision. Nikon’s unique campaigns like "Through Her Lens," and “Shutterbug” are initiatives to empower professional and amateur women and student photographers in India.As technology advanced rapidly in the photography arena, the future potential seems massive. This year promises excitement and dynamism for photographers and the field of photography. 5 game-changing photography trends | MorungExpress | morungexpress.com

Tuesday, 14 May 2024

Musical band of Varsha Joshi gets high praise for Mother’s Day event

Performance by Varsha Joshi and band at Mother’s Day event May 12, 2024, at King Palance Banquet in New Jersey. PHOTO: organizers
Prominent Indian American community leaders and other members of the community attended a house-full show of the musical band Josh, led by Varsha Joshi, recently, in New Jersey. About 185 people attended the rocking performance on Mother’s Day, May 12, 2024, that featured retro songs right up to the 1990s, and brought people to the dance floor. The songs included some garbas and Sanedo music as well, a press release from Joshi said. The event was held at King Palace Banquet, and it lasted for four hours. The event was organized jointly by Varsha Joshi, Som Biswas, and Tri-Sha Brothers
 .
Trophy that carries the details of the Mothers Day event. PHOTO: organizers
The party included gifts for lucky draws by Aabhushan jewelers, Pinaka foods Inc of NJ, Josh musical Varsha Joshi, Saj dhaj ke boutique , and Purpose Fitness studio of Edison NJ. From 12 noon sharp the party started with music as well as a big variety of appetizers and lunch items for vegetarians and non vegetarians, plus sweets and ice cream.
Performance at the King Palace Banquet, NJ, May 12, 2024, on Mother’s Day. PHOTO: organizers
The highlight of the event was recognizing some prominent “Mothers” of the Indian American community with a token for their dynamic journeys and successes in their respective fields.
Attendees, organizers, participants at the Mother’s Day event at King Palace, NJ. PHOTO: organizers
Joshi awarded them all with trophies sponsored by Vibha Mehta of Happybeehomes.com Of CB Realty . Everyone was absolutely blown away with the perfectly planned entertainment throughout theMusical band of Varsha Joshi gets high praise for Mother’s Day event

Wednesday, 9 August 2023

Insects in Textiles

Insects have been used as adornment and recreated in textiles for centuries. sharing a smattering here of some beautiful contemporary textile art of insects. Check out the sensitive textile nature art of Dutch-born Australian artist Annemieke Mein here. She works in various media including textiles, and the textile art includes these beautiful insects:
Textile insects by Annemieke Mein
Born in England and based in Kenya, artist Sophie Standing uses textile art to portray the wildlife she sees. I absolutely love this bee:
Bee textile art by Sophie Standing
She does a lot of the African megafauna, but this dung beetle is charming:
Dung Beetle textile art by Sophie Standing
Michele Carragher is a London costume embroidery for film and TV who has done extraordinary work (for shows like Game of Thrones). Some of her insect-themed work:
Detail of Game of Thrones costume embroidery by Michele Carragher
You can find the delightful work of UK embroiderer Humayrah Bint Altaf on instagram and Etsy as The Olde Sewing Room.

Tuesday, 8 August 2023

Incredible Cyclisk Tower of Bicycles

Ilana Spector, the ancient Egyptians erected obelisks out of hundreds of pounds of stone as a form of magical protection for their temples. Modern Americans erect obelisks out of hundreds of bicycles (and one tricycle) as a form of artistic display for street corners. At least that's the case in Santa Rosa, California. Crowned "Cyclisk," this stand-out sculpture measures up at six stories tall, 10,000 pounds, and approximately 340 total bicycles (and that one trike, of course). But don't worry about hundreds of Santa Rosa cyclists looking around for their rides stolen in the night, the bicycles making up the obelisk were all previously unusable and donated by the community. 
This design by artists Mark Grieve and Ilana Spector towered above the rest in competition to realize Santa Rosa's "1% for art" law, which requires corporations doing major construction to fund public art projects. Here, Nissan donated the funds for this project in order to -- wait for it -- build a $3.7 million auto dealership. Not to poke fun, but does that really help "solidify Santa Rosa as bike-friendly"? Or is this giant community art member just, ahem, compensating for something Source: icePice.blogspot.com

Friday, 17 July 2020

TEHNOLOGY: Google plans to remove unauthorised nude photos from search results

SAN FRANCISCO, JUNE 20: Google plans to censor unauthorised nude photos from its influential Internet search engine in a policy change aimed at cracking down on a malicious practice known as "revenge porn." The new rules announced will allow people whose naked pictures have been posted on a website without their permission to ask Google to prevent links to the image from appearing in its search results. A form for submitting the censorship requests to Google should be available within the next few weeks. Google traditionally has resisted efforts to erase online content from its Internet search engine, maintaining that its judgments about information and images should be limited to how relevant the material is to each person's query. That libertarian approach helped establish Google as the world's most dominant search engine, processing roughly two-thirds of all online requests for information. The Mountain View, California, company decided to make an exception with the unauthorised sharing of nude photos because those images are often posted by ex-spouses, partners in a broken romance or extortionists demanding ransoms to take down the pictures. "Revenge porn images are intensely personal and emotionally damaging, and serve only to degrade the victims - predominantly women," Amit Singhal, Google's senior vice president of search, wrote in a Friday blog post. Laws against revenge porn already have been passed in at least 17 states and a federal ban is expected to be introduced in Congress this year. Google's stand against revenge porn won't necessarily purge it because not even the Internet's most powerful company has the authority to order other sites to remove offensive or even illegal content. But Google is hoping revenge porn will prove less mortifying to its intended victims by making it more difficult to find. Other heavily trafficked sites, including Twitter and the social forum Reddit, have embraced policies banning nude photos from being posted without the subject's permission. Earlier this year, Google tried to prohibit sexually explicit material from the publicly accessible sites in its Blogger service only to reverse itself within a few days amid cries of unwarranted censorship among Blogger's users. This isn't the first time Google has excised sensitive content from its search index. In most instances, the company has been forced to do so under laws imposed in various countries where it operates. While its search engine operated in mainland China from 2006 through 2010, Google blocked information that the country's Communist government deemed to be inappropriate and the company has been scrubbing humiliating information from people's pasts in Europe for the past year. Copyright © Jammu Links News, Source: Jammu Links News

Friday, 7 October 2016

The last great Siberian bridge: is it about to happen?

Any crossing close to regional capital Yakutsk, bridge or tunnel, must be built on permafrost. Picture: Transmost
By The Siberian Times reporter: Two Chinese companies compete to build a permafrost crossing of the Lena River. A flurry of discussions involving two major enterprises from China suggests there are realistic hopes of resuscitating plans to bridge the Lena River close to Yakutsk, capital of the Sakha Republic. A dream for many decades, could it now actually happen? Previous reports had suggested the project was shelved due to budget shortages. So far there are no crossings of the Lena in the Sakha Republic, also known as Yakutia, but might this now change? The two other great Siberian rivers have multiple crossings: the Ob and the Yenisei. 
Projects of the Lena bridge. Pictures: Transmost, SK Most
Yet the Lena presents special difficulties, as well as many opportunities. Any crossing close to regional capital Yakutsk, bridge or tunnel, must be built on permafrost, yet such a construction is vital to communications in Russia's largest constituent republic and to hopes of one day creating a road or even rail link from Siberia to Alaska and onwards to the rest of North America. It is known that the representatives of Chinese company Sinohydro arrived in Yakutsk on 14 March to meet with the republican Minister of Economy Valery Maksimov and Minister of Transport Semyon Vinokurov. On the agenda was bridge across the Lena River.  
The representatives of Chinese company Sinohydro arrived in Yakutsk on 14 March. Picture: YSIA
Senior Sinohydro official Chen Shijun said: 'What kind of bridge will it be - a road bridge or combined with railway - depends on a joint decision of the Yakutian government and Moscow. The timing also depends on this.'  A rail link could connect Yakutsk directly to the Trans-Siberian network via a new connecting line from the Baikal Amur Mainline, which stops on the other side of the Lena. On 17 March another Chinese company arrived in Yakutia and examined the location of the planned future construction. Representatives of China Railway 18th Bureau Group CO stated that the company is also ready to build a bridge across the Lena.
Representatives of China Railway 18th Bureau Group CO stated that the company is also ready to build a bridge across the Lena. Pictures: YSIA
They visited Nizhny Bestyakh railway station, now the end point of the still-to-open Amur-Yakutian Railway, as well as both banks of the river. They were interested in the project requirements. In particular, they talked about the length and width of bridge spans, and the structural considerations to support the enormous pressure of ice floes during spring.
The map showing the junction of Amur-Yakutian Mainline, Baikal-Amur Mainline and Trans-Siberian Railway (top). The construction of Amur-Yakutian Mainline (bottom). Pictures: Siberian Times, Ministry of Transport and Roads of Yakutia A tender is likely to decide which company will build the crossing. In November 2012 the authorities of Yakutia and the Ministry of Transport agreed to build the bridge, but in December 2014, the country's leadership instructed to delay construction until after 2020. Source: http://siberiantimes.com/

Monday, 3 October 2016

Amazing sky show in Norilsk as Aurora Borealis lights up the Arctic

'It was so bright that it was reflected on the windows. It is rare that we get to see Aurora Borealis here in Norilsk. Picture here and below: Alexander Ivanov
By The Siberian Times reporter: The Northern Lights illuminated the city for 40 minutes on 27 September. Local resident Alexander Ivanov, who took these pictures, said: 'The bright stunning flashes of light went on for about 40 minutes. 'It was so bright that it was reflected on the windows. It is rare that we get to see Aurora Borealis here in Norilsk. 'Usually the sky is so clouded that we don't have a chance to catch it.' 
'The bright stunning flashes of light went on for about 40 minutes.'
The light show is caused by collisions between electrically charged particles released from the sun that enter the earth's atmosphere and collide with gases such as oxygen and nitrogen. The lights are seen especially around the magnetic poles of the northern and southern hemispheres.'Usually the sky is so clouded that we don't have a chance to catch it.' 

Sunday, 27 December 2015

Merry (Western) Christmas from Siberia (where Santa is not always red!)

Best known across Russia is Grandfather Frost - or Ded Moroz - often carries a magical staff. Picture: Anna Permyakova
By The Siberian Times reporter, Seasonal greetings from the east of Russia where there are no less than seven different Father Christmas figures to bring joy to children in winter. All of them look old, with flowing white beards, and mostly have long histories, possibly reaching back to pagan times, but each is distinct, covering their own territory. Intriguingly, most are accompanied by glamorous snow maidens. Quite often at this time of year, some of these colourful Russian figures meet for friendly Santa summits, occasionally in a real ice cave hewn in permafrost, as our picture show. Their expressions maybe serious, and the cold daunting, but all of them aim to bring happiness and - more often than not - gifts to children who are well behaved. Best known across Russia is Grandfather Frost - or Ded Moroz - who often carries a magical staff and is frequently accompanied by his Snow Maiden - Snegurochka - assistant. He is the one who looks most like the Father Christmas so familiar to Western children, yet there are also key differences. 
Grandfather Frost dressed in red or blue is frequently accompanied by his Snow Maiden - Snegurochka. Pictures: AiF, MR7, Pikabu
For example, his busiest night is New Year's Eve with presents arriving at midnight as the clock strikes. He often visits excited children in their homes or at parties before New Year's Eve, and since the end of Soviet times, he also appears in some flats and houses to mark Orthodox Christmas Eve and Christmas Day on January 6 and 7. Usually he is dressed in red but he is sometimes seen in blue or very occasionally white. His traditional mode of transport is a sleigh pulled not by reindeer but white horses. Over the years, he has also resorted to the Metro, trams, helicopters and Ladas in extremis. Clambering down chimneys, though, is not for him. His appearance in blue is believed by some to be the work of Stalin, who deep in the Soviet era felt he needed the winter tradition of Santa - abandoned with the Bolshevik Revolution - but wanted to distinguish it from the bourgeois Western variant, who was unkindly branded 'an ally of the priest and the kulak'. 
Some of these colourful Russian figures meet for friendly Santa summits, occasionally in a real ice cave hewn in permafrost, as our picture show. Pictures: Planeta Yakutia, Satal Tour
Traditionally, in deep history Ded Moroz wandered around the forest, controlling the frost, bringing presents to the good, and punishments to the bad. Unlike Santa, Grandfather Frost gives his gifts openly when he arrives with a big sack of presents. Typically, children need to show him how good they are, often reciting a poem or singing a song before he hands over the gifts, assisted by Snegurochka.  He lives not at the North Pole but in the town of Veliky Ustyug, in northern Russia, well shy of the Arctic. It is here the Russian Post Office delivers his mail, but with this being such a large country, he has regional residences, for example at Royev Ruchey Zoo in Krasnoyarsk, Siberia. Grandfather Frost's birthday is November 18, the coldest day ever recorded in Veliky Ustyug. The glamorous Snogruchka was originally a character from ancient fairy tales who became part of the Christmas ritual in the late nineteenth century. She remained when Stalin permitted Grandfather Frost to return two decades after the Russian Revolution. 
Magnificent blue-coated Chyskhaan, aka the King of the Cold and his Sow Maiden Khaarchana. Pictures: strana.ru, Victor Li-Fu
Children in Russia's largest region, the vast Sakha Republic in Siberia, are also familiar with the magnificent blue-coated Chyskhaan, aka the King of the Cold. Every year, in late September and early October, he makes his way south from the Arctic Ocean to the diamond region of Sakha, also known Yakutia. 'And with his every step comes cold,' tells native Yakutian, Olga Stepanova. The region can sink below minus 60C. At an annual conclave with Grandfather Frost, he hands over the cold each winter. He has two horns, by legend one from a bull, the other from a woolly mammoth.  'Then at the end January his first horn falls off, and in middle February his second horn,' she explained. As the snow melts, he floats back to the Arctic in the Lena River before the ritual is repeated the following winter. Yet another Santa-like figure is also seen in this region, the coldest in Russia. This is Ekhe Dyyl, who shares a granddaughter Khaarchana with Chyskhaan. She likes to play with children but can only do so around New Year - the time when presents are exchanged. At other periods, she wears a hat that makes her invisible. The bearded Ekhe Dyyl rides a bull, and carries a sack of presents, while Khaarchana goes around on a reindeer called Buur. 
Sagaan Ubugul or White Elder who has a white beard, and carries a stick with a dragon's head. Pictures: The Siberian Times
Another of the Siberian 'Santa's' is Sagaan Ubugul or White Elder who is seen in the Buddhist republic of Buryatia. He has a white beard, and carries a stick with a dragon's head. His duties fall later than the others since the New Year is celebrated according to the lunar calendar in late January or early February. He invites children and adults to Lake Baikal - the oldest lake in the world - and the gifts he bestows are health, love, family and wealth to the deserving. To children he gives candles and sweets. In the southern Siberian republic of Tyva is a Santa who - like our own - is able to fly over the rooftops. There is no sleigh nor any reindeer but Sook Irey flies to houses and yurts bringing gifts to children at New Year.
Sook Irey from Tuva can be accompanied by Tugeni Eneken - Mother Winter from Evenkia. Pictures: Sergey Tarasenko
'His body, arms, legs consist of ice,' according to one description. 'He looks cold and tired. His hair, eyebrows, and beard covered with white frost like all the trees and bushes. His clothes are white, blue, reminiscent of the ice.' His head wear has 'solar and lunar colours' and signs indicating his extraterrestrial origins.' Yet while he looks old and worn, he can turn into a young man or beautiful girl, as the mood takes him. 'But he can not warm anyone. He can only freeze,' according to the Tyva Legend of Creation. He can be accompanied by Tugeni Eneken - Mother Winter from Evenkia.
Kysh Babayi from Tatarstan is often accompanied by Kar Kyzy - his Snow Maiden. Picture: Kysh Babayi residence
On the Western fringes of Siberia, in the largely Muslim regions of Tatarstan and Bashkiriya, is the preserve of the magical figure of Kysh Babayi, dressed in blue and seen by some as a brother to Ded Moroz. He is accompanied by Kar Kyzy - his Snow Maiden - but also by a veritable collection of others, notably golden haired Altynchech - a female warrior; Takhir and Zukhra, described as a Tatar Romeo and Juliet; Ubyrly Karchyk, an old and scary woman; Shurale, a spirit from the forest; Shaytan, the embodiment of evil; Azhdakha, a flying dragon; and Batyr, a strong man. Like Ded Moroz, he distributes presents as the New Year dawns.
Yamal Iri presents gifts to childre, spreads positive energy and brings midwinter happiness. Pictures: yamaliri.ru
While most owe their origins to old traditions, Yamal Iri - who rides a sleigh pulled by reindeer and dresses in blue - is a much newer creation. He started presiding over Christmas in the gas-rich Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous region of northern Siberia as recently as 2007. His character is, though, based on old legends and he arrives with a drum made from reindeer skin to drive away evil spirits. As well as presenting gifts to children, he spreads positive energy and brings midwinter happiness. He lives in the Arctic, at Gornoknyazevsk village, some nine miles from the city of Salekhard, on the bank of the Ob River. His traditional costume and boots are made from reindeer skins and his belt decorated with bones from woolly mammoths. Merry (Western) Christmas from Siberia (where Santa is not always red!)