View Full Version here: : February Photo Challenge - Voting *Pick 3*
Photo Challenge
01-03-2011, 08:51 AM
Voting for the February Challenge.
View the Entries here: February - "Door" (http://www.iceinspace.com.au/forum/showthread.php?t=71587)
Rules:
1. Don't vote for yourself.
2. Don't reveal which entry you voted for.
3. Pick your 3 favourite entries.
4. Winner will be announced at the end and gets to choose this month's subject.
Good luck!
supernova1965
04-03-2011, 09:17 AM
Congrats Gary
rcheshire
04-03-2011, 11:40 AM
Well done Gary.
Photo Challenge
04-03-2011, 12:05 PM
Congratulations once again Gary !
What an artistic shot, lovely colours, textures and composition.
Indeed "a thing of beauty" !
Also well done to Tony, again lovely composition.
Good round everyone and thanks for your participation.
Gary you get to choose the theme for this month.
Thank you Photo Challenge Moderator and to everyone who participated, voted in
or who took time to look at the images in the February challenge.
Thank you Warren and Rowland for your kind remarks.
What a great set of images there were and I was delighted to see some "Australiana
themes" with Al's shot of the barn door in Sofala (for those who live outside of
NSW, Sofala is only a few km down the road from where the South Pacific Star
Party is held and was the location for Peter Weir's first feature film in 1974, "The
Cars That Ate Paris") and Ken's wonderful silo/wood shed. Rowland's treacherous
looking aircraft door was in technological juxtaposition to those and represented
the type of diversity in subjects I hoped the topic would bring. (Mind you,
if I was about to board that aircraft, I would be more alarmed by the wing icing than
the snow on the steps. :lol: ). Keith continued with the snow theme and I bet rarely
does a door look so welcoming than when one has been out in a blizzard.
Tony went above and beyond in the assignment and his "John West" shots alone
were fabulous compositions that are testimony to the effort he put into
it and his final entry was absolutely beautiful. Well done Tony! And well done to
everyone else.
I guess that many who propose a Photo Challenge topic have in the back of their
mind some entries that they would love to see and hope someone might capture. :lol:
I was hoping one of our macro imagers might capture a trapdoor spider. :lol:
What might be hard to trump would be the "big door" featured in the Tron
films. "Now that is a big door!" See http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ehRJcFYJ0Bk :thumbsup:
Which brings us to the Photo Challenge for March.
They are found in virtually every town in the world, from Tibooburra to Timbuktu.
Some serve meals and coffee, others serve nothing but Internet.
The theme for March's Photo Challenge is "cafe".
So get thinking, get clicking and good luck! :thumbsup:
sheeny
04-03-2011, 04:33 PM
Congratulations Gary. Its a lovely image. Tony's wasright up there with it though IMHO.
:thumbsup:
Al.
firstlight
04-03-2011, 09:19 PM
Congratulations Gary. A worthy winning shot, I liked the pastel look and feel to the image.
I did think of a trapdoor spider, but opportunity didn't present itself, and I'm not sure that if we had a shot, I would have taken it.. Another idea I had, and this came from working in the bush when I was younger, was of a dunny door with redback and webs etc (have a few memories of those).
Thanks for the kind words everyone, I was pretty happy how it came out.
Hmmm... Cafe... another tricky one... not sure how to attack it.
bartman
05-03-2011, 03:47 AM
Congrats Gary!!!!
I have a few Ideas for the Cafe challenge ......just you all wait!!!!:rofl:
BTW not to disrespect your entry.... but is it really a door?
Tis more like a window with shutters.....:confused2:
A Loading dock door would have some water or some loading ramp at the bottom of the frame:screwy:.
Are there carts in Cambodia that have a height that matches the lower part of the door?
Gary, once again no disrespect......
Once again .... great pic visually:thumbsup:
Bartman
Hi Bartman,
Thank you.
There was a recent thread (http://www.iceinspace.com.au/forum/showthread.php?t=39060&highlight=coffee) in General Chat where people talked about how much coffee they drank.
Coffee and astronomy go together and it got me thinking about how ubiquitous cafes were. For some, they will be a daily ritual.
Looking forward to your submission!
No problem. :lol: Indeed it is a door where a cart would have pulled up to the side of
the building. The town is right on the river, so back in the French colonial days
the boats would come up the river, goods and produce and champagne or
whatever would then get loaded onto carts and then rather than get unloaded through the
main entrance of the shop at the front where it would disturb the clientèle, in the
alleys at the side they had a more discrete loading door. There is a little
concrete plinth on the side to allow them to step up. Architecturally, the
French were undoubtedly interested in style, so superficially they would make them
look similar to a window. However, with the windows, they would make the
shutters louvered to assist with ventilation (it is very hot and humid there) and
with any on the lower floors, also added iron bars.
Indochina in the 20th century is a fascinating chapter in history.
Though it may not be immediately apparent to some, if one asks why there are no bases
on the Moon today, one can trace part of the answer all the way back to the
follow-on ramifications from those French colonial days! For interested readers,
please bear with me. :)
The French colonials, like many empire builders, were hard taskmasters in those days.
All the manual labour, including the burdensome task of loading the cart, pulling
it by hand and then unloading carts through that loading dock door, was done by "coolies".
To give some sense of how brutal life was like in that part of the world in the early 1900's, on the
southern coast of Cambodia the French wanted to build a casino/hotel as
a "hill station" on top of a mountain called Bokor but to reach the top, they needed
to blaze a road up through the jungle. Built between 1917 and 1925, construction
of the 40km stretch of road reputedly resulted in the deaths of several thousand
labourers! Just for the colonials to enjoy the cooler breeze at the top whilst
they drank cocktails and played baccarat. Today Bokor is a ghost town and you can
find some images here I posted a while back -
http://www.iceinspace.com.au/forum/showpost.php?p=285284&postcount=17
http://www.iceinspace.com.au/forum/showpost.php?p=285286&postcount=18
http://www.iceinspace.com.au/forum/showpost.php?p=285287&postcount=19
http://www.iceinspace.com.au/forum/showpost.php?p=285289&postcount=20
In the end, it all comes crashing down for the French Indochina Empire in May
of 1954 in a famous, or infamous, valley called Dien Bien Phu (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Dien_Bien_Phu) in what is now
the north-west of Vietnam. The French had airdropped 9,000 of their elite
paratroopers into the valley. The Vietnamese, under the command of a brilliant
military strategist, General Giap (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V%C3%B5_Nguy%C3%AAn_Gi%C3%A1p), pulled off the seemingly impossible and
wiped them out. Surrounded by mountains, the French believed they were safe,
but Giap, in a maneuver similar to the impossibility of Hannibal crossing the
Alps with elephants, had 50,000 Vietnamese troops man-haul huge artillery guns up the
other side of the mountains. A monumental effort. It may not at first seem likely,
but the follow-on effect of this battle ultimately has a connection with manned space
travel. Dien Bien Phu leads to the 1954 Geneva Accords, which then leads
to the division of Vietnam, which leads to American involvement in Vietnam
and eventually war and the Vietnam/American War eventually becomes a major
distraction and concern for the American public that eventually takes a lot
of the wind from the sails of the Apollo Project, resulting in it being canceled earlier than
planned. It was not the only reason why Apollo came to an end, but it was
an important historical factor. Otherwise, who knows, we may have had bases
on the Moon by now.
vBulletin® v3.8.7, Copyright ©2000-2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.