The season of darkness is approaching is once again, so to pass time I took still life shots of an onion. I tried different lightings and contrast. Can you tell me which on is most to your liking?
Category: Photography
behind the clouds
end of the season
zen
blue shadow
Seurasaari Island
These photo’s are from the open-air museum of Seurasaari, it is located on a beautiful green island just a few kilometres from the heart of Helsinki. The island is a tranquil oasis in the midst of the city and at the museum the traditional Finnish way of life is displayed in the cottages, farmsteads and manors of the past four centuries that have been relocated from all around Finland.
tar boat from 1800s
Tamminiemi
Tamminiemi (Villa Ekudden in Swedish), is a villa located in the Meilahti district of Helsinki. It was one of the official residences of the President of Finland from 1940 until 1981. From that date, until his death, it served as the residence of President Urho Kekkonen. It is now the Urho Kekkonen Museum. It is located in a park by the sea. Tamminiemi’s floor area is about 450 square metres. Designed by architects Sigurd Frosterus and Gustaf Strengell, the jugendstil villa was built in 1903 for the Danish-born businessman Jörgen Nissen. The villa was later owned or rented by a number of individuals, before being acquired by the publisher and artistic patron Amos Anderson in 1924. Anderson donated Tamminiemi to the Finnish State in 1940, to serve as a presidential residence. Although Presidents Ryti and Mannerheim resided at Tamminiemi, the villa is particularly associated with President Kekkonen – due in large part to the fact that it was his home for around thirty years.
yellow door
end of summer
at the dock of a bay
Clouds
Bird watching
A long corridor
The Weekend in Black and White
Details from a blue room
how about this room
Welcome in
How to place a vase
Värikollaasi 186 – Summer
I won a challenge at Viewbug with one of the photos in this collage, so I thought I would my joy about that by sharing this post again.




















