Lost In The Dark (Lake Dumbleyung, Western Australia)

Clear night sky is full of magic and feeling that there are a lot of mysterious undiscovered things happening up there. There's no such feeling in the world like watching clear sky in the warm summer night. It reminds me of the greatness and incredible beauty of our wonderful planet!

 Radio Mast Milkyway (southern Finland)

 Southern Milky Way (Patagonia, Argentina)

 Thunderstorm Near Broken Bow, Nebraska, Usa

When Worlds Collide (Washington, USA)

 Galactic Dance (Mount Cook, New Zealand)

The Eye Of The Universe (180 Degree Panorama Over Australia)

Perseid Meteor Shower Over Denver, Colorado

Northern Lights, Iceland

A Dreamscape From Rila Mountain, Bulgaria

Arctic Sky In Lofoten, Norway

Aurora Over The Callanish Standing Stones, Isle Of Lewis

Galactic Panorama Taken In The Middle Of A Desert In Arizona

Ancient

Surreal Night At Easter Island

Aurora Borealis

Starry Night Sky

VLA And Milky Way (New Mexico, USA)

Milky Way Galaxy Hanging Cver The Devil’s Tower In Wyoming (western Usa)

Area 51 Stargazer

The Time Machine

The Search For Extraterrestrial Life Continues.

The Way To The Universe

Red Square In Moscow, Russia




Call of wandering

Janek Sedlar is a young self-taught photographer from the Czech Republic whose speciality is landscape photography with a surreal twist. He became a “serious” photographer only in 2011, and most of his captivating images were captured in his home region of Moravia and around the White Carpathians nature reserve.

“Inspiration I find in daily life, in NATURE, in my feelings and thoughts,” said for an interview with Interesting Photographers. “Being in these woods and meadows is a return to childhood, it regains my life energy and I am trying to share these moments with my camera, the process itself is like a meditation for me.”

 The path

 Shaman’s road on the other side

Place for dreaming 

 Mesmerizing poetry of autumn

 Forest conjuration

Hidden beneath the leaves

 Kingdom of silence

 Lane of elders

 Forest cathedral

 Feel of amber happiness

 Dream inside a dream

 Carpathian kingdom

 Carpathian dreaming

 Be on the road with warmly thoughts

 Awaken soul

 Angels alongside our path

 Autumn prayers

Autumnal ambient from within

Fog in the red forest

Thatching covers the walls as well as the roof at this house in Zoetermeer, the Netherlands, by Dutch architect Arjen Reas


Located on the edge of the city, the building was designed as a cross between a contemporary house and a traditional Dutch farmhouse. "We wanted to capture this rural and urban living in one design," said Arjen Reas.


The thatched cladding begins just above ground level and wraps up over all four sides of the two-storey gabled structure, interrupted only by projecting canopies, windows and a chimney.


"We used the thatch like a warm hat and pulled it down over the edges," explained Reas. "The benefit of this is that the thatch becomes touchable. Also when looking through the windows, it surrounds you."


Tall narrow windows create vertical slices into the roof and walls on the two side elevations. Meanwhile, glazed doors fold open from the rear elevation to connect the living room with a terrace and garden.


"One of the priorities while designing this house was to provide the residents with a magnificent view of the scenic landscape," adds the architect.


A rectangular volume projects forward of the front elevation to create a two-storey-high sheltered porch, while a ramped driveway slopes down to meet a parking garage in the basement.


Storage areas are also located on the lowest floor, while living and dining rooms occupy the ground floor and the first floor contains four bedrooms and a bathroom beneath its sloping ceilings.


Thatched roofs have cropped on a few recent architecture projects in the Netherlands. Amsterdam studio Inbo has completed a town hall with thatching covering five curved blocks, while Rotterdam studio Maxwan has renovated and extended a thatched cottage.


Photography is by Kees Hageman.




Here's some more information from Arjen Reas:

This project is a private assignment for an entrepreneur from the city centre, and the question was posed, how could the family find peace on the edge of that same city. The site located where the city and open planes meet, and therefore has an obvious recognition that cannot be ignored.

Above: basement floor plan

In the earlier times people here used to work with shapes for houses that were pure and plain, thatch was used as a cover for the roofs and the walls where made out of stones and a clay plaster.

Above: ground floor plan

We were challenged to fuse together traditional ideals with a contemporary house design, a cubistic shape placed in a desolate landscape, where all urban feeling is gone when you look at the surroundings. Contemporary rural living was chosen as a project to mix the two in pure form.

Above: first floor plan

New Dutch Design

When working with pure forms it's also important to look at simplicity, durability and expression. The mix of two very different but recognizable materials in the Dutch landscape results in a both a modern and traditional structure. The fine texture of the thatch in combination with the smooth white plaster surfaces a house is formed that is very modern and traditional at the same time. The compactness of the thatch gives optimal protection against the elements.


Above: section one

The interior successfully combines natural materials creating something unique. By designing a natural interior certain tranquility arises throughout each room and now there is also room left for the residents to restyle their space continuously.

One of the priorities while designing this house was to provide the residents with a magnificent view of the scenic landscape. This was successfully done within each room in the house. Daylight falls deep into the house and lights up the space within and gives it a dynamic character during the day, while by night the house radiates its light to its surroundings and thereby marking its position in the landscape.
Above: section two

Layout

Via the slope residents can park their car in the basement, where there are also two extra storage rooms and an entrance to go up by stairs and enter the main living space with a beautiful open kitchen where all the modern comforts are integrated in. When walking through this open space towards the large transparent slide doors, you immediately get pulled to go into the garden. Here you can sit and relax or walk on the plateau to oversee the whole landscape.

Above: west elevation

The main entrance is surprisingly spacious and with its transparent separation with the kitchen a lot of light is coming in. Here you can enter the scullery, toilet, wardrobe or walk straight up the stairs to the second level. On this level you can go to the main bedroom, the second bathroom and three other bedrooms.

In the master bedroom the residents can choose to go and have a spacious shower or to go and take a bath before or after going to bed. When sitting in bath or lying in bed, you still have a great open view at the landscape.

Above: east elevation

Designer: Arjen Reas
Location: Zoetermeer, The Netherlands
Project area: 744 m2
Floor area: ca 360m2
Project year: 2009-2010
Construction: Adviesbureau Docter
Contractor: C.L. de Boer & Zn BV
Thatch: Voogt Rietdekkers