Nice Parenting Tips photos
Some cool parenting Tips images:
About parenting Tips,This blog is about healthy baby food and Newborn Baby Clothes. a crappy photo of the house where i grew up
Here you can choose to skip this, because not is parenting Tips,But funnyFriendship is like earthenware: once broken, it can be mended; love is like a mirror: once broken, that ends it. (Josh Billings. American humorist)Love is photogenic. It needs darkness to develop.The tyrant dies and his rule ends, the martyr dies and his rule be-gins. (Soren Kierkegaard, Danish religious philowopher) One meets its destiny on the road he takes to avoid it..Don’t claim to know what you don’t know.。!!Reminded :Improve your indoor air quality and maintain a healthy household environment
Wonderful parenting Tips:

Image by tbone_sandwich
My home 1975-1989
as seen late December 2007
The house was built in 1975 and was part of the Laurel Hill subdivision in the Chicago suburb of Deerfield, Illinois. All of the new streets had tree names. Ours was Burr Oak.
Some cool parenting Tips images:
Here you can choose to skip this, because not is parenting Tips,But funnyA dress is like a barbed fence. It protects the premises without restricting the view.An ounce of luck is better than a pound of wisdom. Birth is much, but breeding is more..Money is not everything. There‘s Mastercard & Visa. 。!!Advice : Encourage your baby to allow herself to be held and interacted with by family, friends and neighbors. Royal Albatross
Refinement :

Image by Anita363
The tip of the Otago Peninsula (off Dunedin) hosts the only mainland nesting colony of the threatened Royal Albatross. These tremendous birds have up to a 3-meter (yes, >9 ft) wingspan. The colony itself is accessible only via guided tour from the Royal Albatross Centre , although you can see birds on the wing (like this one) without taking the tour. This year there were ~half a dozen nesting pairs, plus the ’singles scene’: unpaired birds soar and swoop above the colony at speeds up to 115 kph (70 mph), seeking the mate of their dreams. (Me, I’ve found mine now — hence the honeymoon.) It’s quite a sight (and not an easy shot)! They mate for life, not starting until ~age 15, and can live to over 60. A pair typically raises only 1 chick every 3 yrs: 11 wk to incubate the egg and 9 mo to raise the chick to fledging. Once the young bird takes off on its maiden flight, it will not touch dry land again for at least 2 years: it circumnavigates the Antarctic, feeding on the rich Southern Ocean. Its parents do likewise, and it probably takes them all 2 yrs to recover from the experience before they’re ready to begin the cycle again!
This location also host the only mainland nesting colony of the Bronze Shag (Stewart Island Cormorant).
These are useful by me!,In the blog: healthy baby food or Newborn Baby Clothes. Can’t you see that I just want to be left alone? Go away, would you, please?
The following are not relevant to the content of some parenting Tips,But meaningfulFriendship is like earthenware: once broken, it can be mended; love is like a mirror: once broken, that ends it. (Josh Billings. American humorist)The wise never marry, And when they marry they become otherwise. Caution is the parent of safety..Money is not everything. There‘s Mastercard & Visa. 。!!Tips : Encourage your baby to allow herself to be held and interacted with by family, friends and neighbors.
Beautiful:

Image by Ed Yourdon
Note: this photo was published in an undated (mid-Nov 2010) blog titled "5 Excellent Tips to Know When You Get Blogging Advice ." It was also published in an undated (mid-Apr 2011) blog titled "Can someone suggest me rare, unheard and good indian movies?"
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You might think that these subway photos are entirely "accidental" and unplanned — and to some extent you would be correct, as I never known, in advance, exactly what I’ll find or what kind of photos I’ll end up with. But it’s not entirely random, as you’ll come to understand when I describe some of the details associated with this collection of 10 "keepers" that I selected out of 102 photos taken on Mar 30, 2010.
First of all, the idea of taking some subway photos usually only occurs to me on rainy days. If it’s bright and sunny outside, who would want to spend his time down underground, where it’s dark and noisy and claustrophobic? Also, people who venture outside on rainy days normally have bright, colorful umbrellas (as well as the boring, black ones), and the women often wear equally bright, colorful Welly boots. Once they get down into a subway station, safely away from the rain, they go through various rituals of stamping their feet to shake off the water, folding their umbrellas to put them away, and generally unbuckling/unsnapping/unzipping their restrictive rain gear.
As it turns out, there had been heavy rain all morning on Tues, Mar 30th — and since that made it impractical to sit outside and take my usual "peeps in the ‘hood" photos, I thought it would be a good time to return to the subways once again. Unfortunately, the rain slacked off in the middle of the day, so the umbrella/boot outfits turned out to be much less interesting than I would have expected.
Aside from that, I had no idea — and never do have any idea — of what to expect. Having taken subway photos on roughly half a dozen occasions, I do know that I’m likely to see a different crowd of subway-riders in the middle of the week than on the weekend; and there will be different people in the middle of the day than during rush-hour, or during the period right after public schools release all their kids. But aside from that, it’s an unpredictable potpourri of workers (some blue-collar, some white-collar), students, tourists, young children, parents and grandparents, homeless people, cops, and utterly mysterious strangers. On this particular occasion, I decided to sit on the uptown side of the 96th Street station, because I figured (rightly or wrong, who knows?) that there would probably be more people heading downtown towards Times Square than uptown toward Morningside Heights and Harlem.
Some people are photographically interesting simply because of the way they look, or the way they dress; others are interesting because of what they are doing — e.g., running, walking briskly, tossing their hair around, or interacting with a friend or family member, or (as is so often the case in my subway-photography experiences) reading, listening to music, or just daydreaming about their own private world. Thus, one photo may be enough; but with the slow shutter speeds that I typically have to use in the dimly lit subway station, I’ll normally take two or three just to be safe. And if the subject(s) is/are "doing" something, then I’ll often take half a dozen photos, in the hope that one or two of them will turn out to be interesting. And that helps explain why I typically only keep about 10% of the photos I take; the rest are blurred, out-of-focus, redundant, or merely ordinary…
There’s another consequence of this approach: inevitably, I know much more about the "context" of the subject(s) I photograph than does anyone who views the resulting photograph that I publish/upload to Flickr — because I’ve spent at least a few seconds watching what they’re doing, and I’ve taken several other photos in which they sometimes look (or act) quite differently. I don’t think about it very much, but I realize that I subconsciously just assume that viewers have the same context in mind that I do … but over and over again, it becomes evident that it just ain’t so. An example: I once photographed a woman sitting at an outside cafe on Broadway, a few blocks from where these subway photos were taken; and a few months later, I was startled to see the photo published in a Turkish blog about how to select tour guides in Istanbul.
Ultimately, I have to admit that even I don’t know what the "real" context is, i.e., what the subject of my photos are actually thinking or doing — except in the very rare circumstances when I introduce myself to the subject and speak to him/her. But most of the time, I just try to imagine what’s going on in their lives; and I use that imagination to come up with the title/caption that I put on most of the photos. In most cases, the title/captions represent a feeble, but deliberate, attempt at humor; but in any case, it’s important that I admit that in most cases, I have no idea whether those caption/titles are accurate or realistic.
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This is a continuation of a series of subway photos that I began in the spring of 2009, and which you can find here. Thus far in 2010, my photographic efforts have included the IRT subway stations at 96th Street, 42nd Street (Times Square), and Christopher Street/Sheridan Square (in Greenwich Village).
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Over the years, I’ve seen various photos of the NYC subway "scene," usually in black-and-white format. But during a spring 2009 class on street photography at the NYC International Center of Photography (ICP), I saw lots and lots of terrific subway shots taken by my fellow classmates … so I was inspired to start taking some myself.
One of the reasons I rarely, if ever, took subway photos before 2009 is that virtually every such photo I ever saw was in black-and-white. I know that some people are fanatics about B/W photography as a medium; and I respect their choice. And I took quite a lot of B/W photographs in the 1970s, especially when I had my own little makeshift darkroom for printing my own photos.
But for the past 30 years, I’ve focused mostly on color photography. As for photos of subways, I don’t feel any need to make the scene look darker and grimier than it already is, by restricting it to B/W. Indeed, one of the things I find quite intriguing is that there is a lot of color in this environment, and it’s not too hard to give some warmth and liveliness to the scene…
To avoid disruption, and to avoid drawing attention to myself, I’m not using flash shots; but because of the relatively low level of lighting, I’m generally using an ISO setting of 3200 or 6400, depending on which camera I’m using. As a result, some of the shots are a little grainy – but it’s a compromise that I’m willing to make.
I may eventually use a small "pocket" digital camera, but the initial photos have been taken with my somewhat large, bulky Nikon D300 and D700 DSLRs. If I’m photographing people on the other side of the tracks in a subway station, there’s no problem holding up the camera, composing the shot, and taking it in full view of everyone. But if I’m taking photos inside a subway car, I normally set the camera lens to a wide angle (18mm or 24mm) setting, point it in the general direction of the subject(s), and shoot without framing or composing.
If I can find some situations where people hold still for a few seconds, I think I might try some HDR scenes, just to see what it looks like. But so far, no such occasions have presented themselves. We’ll see how it goes…
tips:Thank you for your attention,news book blog: or Newborn Baby Clothes.
!!about parenting Tips tips :Both parents should put the baby down for naps, feed her and change her. The more family resources she has, the more secure she will feel.
Question–: What if you saw ‘pshyco mom’ Michelle Duggar in a store and she was like ‘let me give your mom parenting tips’?
The answer in the following: (Hint: The reader is not the correct identification.)
Answer by Hamster Girl
If we were in produce I would toss a melon at her head.
Answer by єmily
I would laugh.
Answer by MacyKay♥
I would flip because my mom would totally be the one to take that advice, and then i’d be waiting for my clothes to come to me in a plastic bag placed next to our new family RV.
Answer by R.I.P. Hillary (¡Viva la Draco!)
I’d be like **** off, Rubber Vag.
Answer by Una Hora is MROD for a day
I’d shove one of her children down her throat.
Answer by LasVegas Chick
I would be insulted, and so would my mom, it would be a throw down , right there in the dairy section!!haha
Answer by Kira
I’d give her kids a secret copy of a Marilyn Manson concert on DVD.
That whole famdamily is so creepy.
Answer by Summer 2010 Baby(:
…….I would laugh my ass off.
My mom hates her so she wouldn’t talk to her haha.
Answer by Ellen
At least her kids can actually spell “psycho”.
That woman has done nothing to you; why do you harbor negativity towards her?
I have great respect for her entire family, ESPECIALLY the way she has raised her kids.
Do you really prefer the bratty teens on MTV over her respectful, smart, and well behaved children?
Answer by Somebody
First of all, I think you mean Psycho, not pshyco. Second, why do you think she is a psycho who thinks she knows better than others and is pushy about it? She doesn’t seem to be that way….
I wouldn’t care… my mom doesn’t have any minor children anymore… so it doesn’t matter.
Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!
Photo featured prominently here:
americanprogress.org/issues/2010/10/trouble_in_the_suburbs.html
Thanks for the info, Anita. What a fascinating bird.
yes, fascinating
Very cool information – thanks for sharing it and the photo!