GoPro
Snow is optional for @andreas_bergmark’s snowmobile 🤯 He captured this seemingly impossible 82ft (25m) jump on #GoProHERO13 Black + earned $500 for submitting the clip to GoPro.com/Awards. @gopronordics #GoPro #GoProNordics #GoProPOV #Sled #Snowmobile #Stockholm
8 days ago
🔥🔥🔥🔥
8 days ago
Redbull gives him wings
8 days ago
Hit the perfect speed mid air
8 days ago
Landing went better then I thought it would
8 days ago
Let’s put in a ramp this year @ghost_0844
8 days ago
@ckf92
8 days ago
🔥🔥🔥
8 days ago
Wings 🪽 on 🔥
8 days ago
88mph 😊👌😜IYKYK
8 days ago
🔥
8 days ago
🔝🔝🔝
8 days ago
🔥😍👏👏👏👏
8 days ago
🔥
8 days ago
is there a number I can call to file a complaint? I got this camera to take and share actin shots of my dogs hunting in the city… but it does not work. It does not allow me to preview, won’t download videos until I get home the next day and customer service refuses to assist me in any capacity
8 days ago
💫💫💫💯☝️
Ansel Adams Photographer, Artist & Activist
*Happy Birthday to Ansel’s ‘Monolith’!* 🏞️ “Born” on this day, April 10, 1927. Andrea Stillman’s biography “Looking at Ansel Adams” includes a wonderful chapter all about this storied photograph: “In 1992 I was in Ansel’s workroom selecting images for a prospective book of his photographs when Virginia appeared and announced that she had found a stash of home movies from the late 1920s and 1930S. With anticipation we rented a movie projector to screen them. Miraculously, one reel included footage of the trek to the Diving Board. It showed Ansel in his favorite plus fours, lugging his forty-pound pack, with a rakish fedora hat and the Keds high-top basketball shoes he favored for hiking. “The climbers struggled up…in deep snow, and when they reached the Diving Board they pulled each other up with a ludicrously thin rope. Virginia fearlessly inched out onto the sharply angled granite spur, and when she reached the tip she stood up and blithely waved. It seems appropriate that Ansel presented the very first print of ‘Monolith’ to Virginia. “Ansel was twenty-five years old when he made ‘Monolith.’ At age eighty he was able to recall the experience of making the negative, every detail as clear as it more than a half century had not elapsed. He photographed Half Dome hundreds of times, and there are many different interpretations that include moons, clouds, snow, flowers, leaves, trees, even deer and people. In 1978, during one of his last annual Yosemite workshops, he and his photographic assistant, John Sexton, contemplated Half Dome together and talked about the taking of ‘Monolith’ in 1927. According to John, Ansel laughingly confided, ‘Maybe I should just have stopped then.’” Text, film footage and Ansel Adams images are copyright ©️The Ansel Adams Publishing Rights Trust. All rights reserved. John Sexton’s photograph courtesy of @johnsextonphoto. All rights reserved.