Photo Hunt

>Photo Hunt #20: Glass

Posted by on Apr 7, 2008 in Kep, Photo Hunt, travel | 0 comments

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I’m late, but here it is anyway 😀

A shot glass of B-52

glass 1

Gone in seconds…
glass 2

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>Photo Hunt #19: High

Posted by on Mar 29, 2008 in Around the World, Photo Hunt, rural, sights | 0 comments

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In 2004, my husband went on a cycling tour of western Europe starting from his native England, to France, Spain, Portugal and ending at the Rock of Gibraltar. He sent me this photo while he was on a pilgrimage to the Camino de Santiago. This photo was taken in Cebreiro, Spain, in between Ponferrada and Sarria on the Camino de Santiago. It was a tough day for him – a full-day climb, 60 miles from Ponferrada to Sarria, with this hill in between. You can find more on his cycling tour here.

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>Photo Hunt #18: Metal

Posted by on Mar 23, 2008 in Cambodia life, people, Phnom Penh, Photo Hunt | 0 comments

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weddingrings

My entry for this week is — drum rolls please — our wedding rings! My husband and I decided to have our wedding rings handmade to our own choice of design, and both were made by the same person. Our rings were made of silver and gold – crafted by a local jeweler here in Cambodia. We chose gold and silver because we thought it is a significant symbol being in a mixed race marriage. Each one coming from a different worlds and cultures, each one bringing a new and different dimension to each other. It’s like the ring – two different metals molded into one.

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>Photo Hunt #17: I Spy

Posted by on Mar 14, 2008 in Cambodia, culture, faces, Photo Hunt, sights, travel | 0 comments

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Okay, I am posting my Photo Hunt entry this early to make up for last week. I was meaning to post one but somehow got lost amidst the weekend frenzy, plus I have friends visiting. This week’s theme, I have to say, is one of Photo Hunt’s most challenging themes. One of the PH participants suggested this theme for us participants to shoot a picture of something hidden for the viewer to find. So here’s my take:

bayon images

Go get your spyglasses or magnifying lenses and explore the picture a la Lara Croft of the movie, the Tomb Raider. Tell me what you can see in this picture. Can you make anything of it? Click the picture and select large size for your viewing pleasure 😀

I will post on Monday a close up of one of the spires.
Till then, ta-ta. Happy hunting, and have a great weekend!

Update:

The photo above is of the Bayon Temple, one of the popular temples inside the Angkor Wat complex. It was built in the late 12th century or early 13th century as the official state temple of the Mahayana Buddhist King Jayavarman VII. The Bayon stands at the centre of Jayavarman’s capital, Angkor Thom. From afar, as you can see in the photo above, it looks nothing but stones jutting out to the sky.

bayon close up3
Click here for a larger view.

But up close, one is mesmerized by the mysticism and the enigmatic expression surrounding the images. Angkor scholars said that that the images have an uncanny resemblance to the King Jayavarman VII.

bayon close up

For those who might want to know more on the temples of Bayon, here’s a good starting point.

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>Photo Hunt #16: Street Party

Posted by on Mar 1, 2008 in Everything Pinoy, festivals, Photo Hunt, sights | 0 comments

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This is the Ati-atihan Festival’s street party!

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Thanks to my sister, MamaGirl, for providing me the photos. It’s been a long while since I last went home and I sure miss the merrymaking and celebrations there. Her story on the Ati-atihan festival can be found here, and more photos here.

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>Photo Hunt # 15: Wooden

Posted by on Feb 24, 2008 in Cambodia, culture, Phnom Penh, Photo Hunt, sights | 0 comments

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Hi guys. I am finally back again, and this time I am posting my entry for this week’s Photo Hunt. This week’s theme is “wooden”. It reminds me of the song “Wooden Heart” by the Bizarre Love Triangle in the 90s, if I am not mistaken.

But I digress now. Here is my take for this week’s theme:

The wooden cells of Tuol Sleng Prison:

narrow aisle ed

narrow aisle 2ed

Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum used to be a high school in the 70s but was transformed into the infamous prison and interrogation center called the Security Prison 21, or S-21, during the Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia. Classrooms were divided and made into crude prison cells (see above photo). Survivors of S-21 describe the horrors that they and countless others had suffered while in prison. Today, these wooden cells still bear signs of cruelty and torture; it stand as witness to the many atrocities committed by the Khmer Rouge. In my 8 years here in Cambodia, I have visited it twice, and that’s because my friends were here and I had to take them around. Visiting Tuol Sleng is not for the faint-hearted. Those who were brave enough to visit left with a heavy heart.

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