Wednesday, 4 March 2015

3 images (Great piece of architecture, Original photo of something beautiful, Best piece of creative work)

Best piece of creative work

This photograph was taken from the inside of an airplane. It shows parts of the Australian territory and the outline of the Australian map. I snapped this photograph when I felt exhilarated from just a glance of this view. I thought it would be a nice image to capture, a nice memory that signifies the time I moved my entire life from my country, Bangladesh, to Australia. It marks a very important and enormous change in my life. I took this in such a way that it can be undoubtedly recognised that it was taken from the inside of an airplane. You can see the window of the plane, the beautiful blue sky and the breathtaking country below. The buildings and roads are visible enough to know that there is a city down there, and thousands of works of wonderful engineers and architects. I long to be a part of such a city using my work in the future.

Original photograph of something beautiful
This motorcycle is about 30 years old. This photograph was taken by my father after he rebuilt it. What was left of the original motorcycle was the engine and the frame. It was in very bad condition with no colour and there were holes and rust all over it because of its age. My father scavenged and found spare parts for it. It was very difficult to do so as these motorcycles are very rare nowadays. When he was a child, he would watch older boys and other men ride these kinds of motorcycles and he would wish to own one one day. Therefore, he bought what was left of this motorcycle and completely rebuilt it. He coloured it, put in new parts all by himself and then went on a ride on it. I think it is absolutely beautiful and even more so because of my father's passion for it. It is a happy bike.

Great piece of architecture
This is a photograph of the Lalbagh Fort, also known as Fort Aurangabad, located in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Mughal Prince, Muhammad Azam, started the work of the fort in 1678. The interesting fact about this beautiful fort is that it still remains incomplete. When Muhammad Azam was summoned by his father, Aurangzeb, for the war, he left his work on the fort and never came back to finish it. However, his son Shaista Khan, continued his work. Legend has it that Shaista Khan stopped his work when his beloved daughter, Bibi Pari, passed away in the complex. He then believed the fort to be unlucky and halted building it. Bibi Pari's tomb is located in the middle of this fort and it remains a major part of the complex.

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