


| camera | unknown |
| exposure mode | aperture priority |
| shutterspeed | unknown |
| aperture | f/0.0 |
| sensitivity | unknown |
| focal length | 0.0mm |
| resolution | 1000x751 pixels |
From time to time the cheesy EarthLink building reveals to me its secrets, sometimes in unexpected ways. Here, it has exposed its, what I would call an "exhaustive" sexiness. The years go by, but it hasn't flunked the pencil test yet.
|
My Peachtree Street: Braless
From time to time the cheesy EarthLink building reveals to me its secrets, sometimes in unexpected ways. Here, it has exposed its, what I would call an "exhaustive" sexiness. The years go by, but it hasn't flunked the pencil test yet.
comments (21)
Sexiness... pencil test... I guess I'm feeling a bit lost with the description, but I really like the photo. The geometry and perspective are both great.
VZ: Hahaha. Poor lost Jewlya. I hope you'll find your way back.
Regarding the pencil test, I'm a bit embarrassed explaining this to a woman, as I thought every woman knows this. Here's a quote from the wikipedia: "An informal test for determining if a woman needs to wear a bra. A pencil is placed in the fold beneath the breast and chest. If the pencil does not fall, the woman has "failed the pencil test" and needs to wear a bra". Hope this helps. Z
But why are they different shapes? It would be hard to find a bra to fit.
VZ: Oh Ian. I guess it's been a while since you looked. There is no woman with absolutely identical in size and shape breasts. Don't believe me? Just ask around your female friends.
Olala- who ever had thought that such a trist (B&W suiting) building could expose some amusing details? Funny title and nice perspective- a wise man once said to me considering male behaviour: "Do always think of 'that' but never speak about 'that'!
VZ: Ha. This "wise man" wasn't that wise after all, Philine, if he revealed to you the most guarded secret behind every man's thought process. I consider him a traitor.
You have a vivid imagination! I could imagine these with propellors on them on an aeroplane!! Perhaps it's an age thing
VZ: Hahaha.
Well, a friend of mine once said after looking at this picture: "Only an architect would be able to hear these things from a building!" I think she's right.
Z does erotica!.. I see it to. mal
VZ: Only on occasions, mal.
Hmmm!
Look more like gonads to me! Once again, your perspective leaves me a little breathless! I find people look at me strangely, now that I stumble about the city staring up the walls of tall buildings! [grin]
VZ: Hope you caught your breath back, Ray. Otherwise, I'd feel guilty.
Ha Z!, .... man talk!!!!!!
richard
VZ: Psssssst, Richard.
Too too funny, Viktor! You guys! What can I say.
VZ: Glad I made you smile, Ginnie.
It is fun to see the world through your eyes. Pencil test indeed!
VZ: Hahaha. I knew that someone would know about the pencil!
well thats one way of looking at it VZ
VZ: For a man, that's the only way, Tim
Questions,questions, questions - what are they, why are they different,what causes the patterns, which way is up, is it as ugly as it looks? Certainly a puzzler!
VZ: Hahahaha. Ron, I see you're very inquisitive person. I'm afraid I have no answers to all of your questions. That's one of the pleasures we have, to dig for answers to life's persistent questions.
Mm, now this is an interesting discussion you have started V but I'm just going to enjoy this image.
VZ: Whatever pleases your heart, dear.
Very interesting Vik: I don't know which way I'm looking here!
VZ: Oh, it doesn't matter which way you look at it, Chris. What matters is, what you are looking at.
'Let the ladies to see the stupid mechanical devices in them'.......where is my pencil
VZ: Your smile is good enough for me, Astrid.
And I just want to start walking this walls... and not because of the exhaustive sexiness but due to the angle...
VZ: Whatever the cause is, keep walking, Nauras. I've heard it's good for your health.
How big is that pencil??
Nice composition.
VZ: Hahaha. I wasn't present at the pencil test, Nig.
I'm just going to enjoy the view too
VZ: Please do while it lasts, Ellie. I've heard gravity is ruthless to the better part of humanity.
The pencil test was also used in the south african apartheids-era to determine race. This time you pushed a pencil from the front into the person's hair. If it slid out again the person's white, if not (s)he's black. Never knew to this day how they applied it to bald people. Now you can imagine my first thoughts reading about the pencil test
Gonads, braless. My oh my what great imagination. Like the geometry in this picture.
VZ: Oh my, I've never heard of these tests, Louis. Were the testers all blind? How in the world can't you tell a black person from a white one just looking at them?
Louis' comment was necessary and I thank him to have remembered of the apartheid-era! And reading that we Germans have to remind of the bad, terrible methods of the Nazi's to determine the "non- Arian race". Your pic has two sides- a funny one and a serious one!
VZ: I'm always thrilled, when people have a different take from my own on my photograph, Philine.
It's good way of looking things, up. For the pencil test, I haven't do it for years
And here I was thinking how Escher this feels without no other worries and you had to come with that pencil test...to fall or not to fall became the question, and I assure you my life was already complicated...
(Deep un my heart I always knew that pencils were meant to other things rather than writing)
VZ: Oh my. I had such a good laugh reading this.
Don't tell me you too didn't know about the pencil. Based on what did YOU make this crucial decision when time came? |
|



