A sticker on a residential garage in Kingsville says “If feminism feels like an attack, it might be a counter attack.”
A sticker on the side of a residential roller door garage.
Random tangent (blog)
Ameel Khan's personal blog. This is a blog about life, technology, photography, typography, the internet, science, feminism, books, film, music, and whatever other random stuff I come across or happen to be interested in today.
A sticker on a residential garage in Kingsville says “If feminism feels like an attack, it might be a counter attack.”
A sticker on the side of a residential roller door garage.
Today in our continuing series: the Cats of Kingsville…
Seriously? Not only are you walking a stinky dog you’ve brought it to my doorstep?
A white cat sitting in front of a door at the top of a residential driveway looks on grumpily off screen where there is a good on the other side of the front gate.
Dog? Yeah I noticed it. Don’t care; I’m in the sun.
An orange cat lies comfortable in a sunny patch of garden just inside a house’s front gate.
Fricking dogs. Can’t even take my morning walk without one of these stinky creatures turning up.
A cat watches and waits next to cars parked on a residential street, waiting for a dog on a lead (that’s off screen) to walk past.
I’ve always loved how, at Footscray Railway Station, designers and architects managed to meld the original red brick structures with modern metal and plastic ones so well. That contrast of straight and solid old with angular and swoopy new works so well.
Entrance at one side of a train station. There are red brick buildings in the background and a large metallic rain shelter over the ticketing turnstiles in the foreground.
Also, can I say once again how much I love Moment smartphone camera lenses? This photo wouldn’t have been possible without their 18mm wide-angle lens.
And you thought hanging fuzzy dice from your rear view mirror was cool.
A white SUV parked on the side of the road with a colourful and long (car-width long) fuzzy caterpillar wrapped around the bull bar that’s attached to the front of the car.
Lovely, cloudy day in Melbourne today.
View of a cityscape from a tall building. The sky is covered in puffy grey and white clouds clouds.
Happy Pride, Melburnians! And happy 25th anniversary of the first pride march in Melbourne.
The backs of two people wearing body-length rainbow pride flags on their backs. The photo is taken in a large sports field with lots of other people in the background.
This year the Victorian bisexual community had the largest marching contingent ever!
A group of people are sitting, crouching, and standing in a large sports field. People are wearing bisexual pride flags colours are holding flags and signs that say things like ‘live and let bi’, ‘bi-fi’, and ‘not a phase’.
The weather was lovely, the crowd was great, and the march was lots of fun :)
A group of about 75 people are cheering as they post for a group photo. The group is wearing bisexual flag colours and are holding up flags and signs.
The biggest cheer of the march — and rightly so, particularly this year — went to this group, though: the Country Fire Authority.
Firefighters from the Country Fire Authority hold up large flags: one for the CFA and one rainbow pride flag.
Sadly, despite the plethora of dogs at today’s march, I only managed to photograph a few of them. So let me end with a photo of the adorable, friendly, and all-round good boy Charlie :)
A small brown poodle on a rainbow coloured lead.
After a day at the Australian Open tennis, Nadia and I went to the the Sidney Myer Bowl to watch the fantastic Ludovico Einaudi on his Seven Days Walking world tour.
This is ten minutes before the performance started.
A large crowd is seated on a hill overlooking an open air stage area, the front of which is visible to the extreme left of the photo.
And here’s the man himself, along with his accompanying performers on violin and cello.
A stage showing a man playing a grand piano while two performers on the other side of the piano are playing a violin and cello.
My favourite bit of the performance, I think, was when the three musicians improvised what they were playing based on the outline of peaks of three mountain ranges in the Alps (where Einaudi was when he came up with the music for Seven Days Walking).
Three performers are stage on playing a grand piano, violin, and cello. They’re looking at a massive screen behind the stage, across which three coloured lines show the outline of mountain ranges. The musicians are each following one line and are adjusting their music based on what these overlapping coloured lines are doing as they’re drawn across the screen.
Even if you’re not into classical music you should check Einaudi out. If nothing else listen to ‘Night’, which is my favourite track from his 2015 ‘Elements’ album.
It’s January, which means it’s time for our annual Australian Open selfie :)
Selfie of a man and a woman, both wearing sunglasses and straw hats.
This year’s Australian Open was fun. We didn’t wander around too much, but we got excellent seats at Court 3 and stayed there for most of the day. (The joys of getting there early and getting lucky with the day’s schedule of play so that most of the matches you want to watch are all being played on one court.)
A woman crouches low in front of the net on a tennis court while her partner - behind her, at the other end of the court - serves the ball.
One of the doubles matches we got to watch on this court included top-ranked Australian player Ash Barty. The queues to get in just before that match were the longest we’ve seen in a while.
Long queues outside Court 3 at the Australian Open in Melbourne.
Fortunately we’d arrived early enough to watch the match from a nice, shady spot :)
World #1 Ash Barty waits to receive a server from her opponent.
Also, we were sitting just below one of the Hawk-Eye cameras that tracks the ball during play. I only learned today that this ball tracking technology is accurate up to 3.6mm!
A camera mounted to a pole around a tennis court.
What happens to the Yarra River when it rains all night after a big dust storm?
River runs brown
Keith Haring's water wall at the National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne looks so good!
Got to hang out with several adorable doggos at Edinburgh Gardens today. Good way to spend a Sunday afternoon :)
Same view, same weather. Just the changing wind blowing smoke from bushfires over Melbourne from 10am to 4pm today.
Australia is on fire.
Six hours makes a big difference!
What a difference a day and wind direction makes to bushfire smoke!
This is the view from Docklands, Melbourne yesterday, 6 January 2020, (below) versus today afternoon (above).
Above: brown, smoky skies. Below: overcast skies.
Shout-out to all the fireys battling bushfires and associated crises across Victoria today. Hopefully the rain these thunderstorms bring makes your lives easier.
If nothing else at least the double rainbows are nice to look at.
Double rainbow in Kingsville, VIC.
Thank you Nadia for this lovely photo of me at the Royal Botanical Gardens in Melbourne. It’s practically a watercolour!
One with nature (as much as you can be while sitting on a bench in a public park, of course).
It's been ages since I've posted a photo so here’s one of my favourite tree. Because who doesn’t love a paperbark tree that looks like broccoli?
Yes, it’s bin day in Kingsville. VIC.
Photobombing Maggie while she chews on her rope toy :)
:D
Nice rainbow-ey end to a Monday in Melbourne.
LEPrecon are on the job.
“Now that’s the right amount of cheese,” said Nadia at brunch this morning.
Enjoying the nachos from The Naked Egg in Yarraville — our favourite weekend brunch spot.
The results speak for themselves, I think :)
#FoodComa
Maggie (probably): Awww yiss. Plenty to munch under the bread tree today.
Narrator: Sadly, Ameel kept Maggie well away. So the poor, starving, never-eaten-a-full-meal-in-my-life dog had to go without mouldy bread that day.
Mouldy bread left under a tree in a local park in Kingsville.
This is personal website of Nadia Niaz and Ameel Zia Khan. Here we document our lives in Melbourne, Australia.
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia