#Rishiri island
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Rishiri-fuji
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Rishiri Island by Katsuaki Shoda Via Flickr: Canon EOS 5D Mark III + EF70-200mm f/2.8L IS II USM
#Wakkanai#Hokkaido#Japan#No People#Nature#Sea#Scenics - Nature#Landscape - Scenery#Satoyama - Scenery#Rishiri-Rebun-Sarobetsu National Park#Island#Pacific Ocean#Sky#Mountain#Mt. Rishiri#Summer#Cloud - Sky#Beauty#Sunny#Sunlight#National Park#Beauty In Nature#Non-Urban Scene#flickr
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Rishiri-san from Rebun Island, Hokkaido, Japan, July 2023.
Darkroom printed at home on Ilford RC paper. Hanimex Micro Flash 35, Ilford HP5+, developed in Rodinal R09.
Still fine tuning my home darkroom setup - I need to figure out these illumination issues (see left of print and sky area).
#rishiri#rebuntō#rebun#hokkaido#japan#hanimex#ilfordhp5#rodinal r09#believeinfilm#filmisnotdead#homedeveloped#home printed#darkroom#durst606
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Munday Questions [4, 16, 18, 20]
What is your zodiac sign?
Sagittarius 🏹
What is your favorite band/music genre?
Now that's a tough question. It tends to be all over the place since my mood shifts every now and again when it comes to music; my Spotify is very confused sometimes 😂 Lately I've been listening to a lot of metal, like Beast in Black, Follow the Cipher and so on.
If you could visit anywhere in the world, where would you go?
Admittedly, I've already been to that place (dream come true~) but I would go there again any day: Japan. I absolutely adore this place as a visitor! The north of Japan, specifically, all the way up to the islands of Rishiri and Rebun. It's such an underrated part of Japan, and it's SO STUNNING! Everything is accessible with public transport too, which is fantastic.
Who is your celebrity crush?
I don't have any? Don't get me wrong, there are a lot of beautiful, attractive celebrities out there, but I don't have this permenant, consistant crush on any of them. I'm just not starstruck that way ^^;
Thank you for the questions!
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DAILY DEVOTIONAL FOR OCTOBER 19, 2023
A Remarkable Journey
By Charles Johnson (North Carolina, USA)
READ PROVERBS 3:1-6
"Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to him, and he will make your paths straight."
PROVERBS 3:5-6 (NIV)
"On a September evening in 1967, I was camping out on the side of an extinct volcano on the island of Rishiri, near the northern Japanese island of Hokkaido. The sky was blue-black and the stars brighter than imaginable. As I admired the beauty of God’s handiwork, I began thinking about my life. Soon I would be 21. Where would I be decades from now? What would I be doing?
Now, 54 years have passed. Several years ago, I realized that my questions that evening on Mount Rishiri, and all those questions I had about life in those early adult years, had been answered.
The verses quoted above were written in the front of a small Bible my girlfriend (now my wife of 55 years) gave me as I entered the US Air Force. While those words meant much to me in my early years, they mean even more to me now in the autumn of life.
Looking toward the future, I have only a few simple questions remaining in comparison to those early years. Yet one thing I know for certain: by trusting my Creator, living the way of Christ, and being surrounded by my Christian family and friends, my remaining questions will be answered by a faithful God." Every question that you could ever imagine can and will be answered by the Lord. He is ready to spend time with you to figure such things out. The questions will find answers and you will be on the path you need to travel.
TODAY'S PRAYER
"Dear Lord, thank you for your guidance as we make our way through life. We trust you to direct our steps on this remarkable journey." Amen.
Proverbs 3:1-6
"1 My son, don’t forget my instruction. Let your heart guard my commands, 2 because they will help you live a long time and provide you with well-being. 3 Don’t let loyalty and faithfulness leave you. Bind them on your neck; write them on the tablet of your heart. 4 Then you will find favor and approval in the eyes of God and humanity. 5 Trust in the LORD with all your heart; don’t rely on your own intelligence. 6 Know him in all your paths, and he will keep your ways straight." Trust in the Lord rather than relying on what you know only. You will be far better off with His guidance. We can easily stray off the correct path. Blessings are from God and I wish you many for today. Joe
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𝗔𝗻𝗼𝘁𝗵𝗲𝗿 𝗚𝗮𝗹𝗮𝘅𝘆 𝗦𝘁𝗮𝗿 Last year we posted https://lnkd.in/gzcNCBru that on 1 July our Synergy Navis (Pune) team took over the full technical management of the chemical tanker “BENTEN GALAXY'', a vessel owned by Murakami Sekiyu Co. Ltd and chartered by MOL Chemical TankersPte Ltd. Now, just over seven months later, we are equally delighted to say that on 7 February this year, her sister vessel, the chemical/oil products tanker “RISHIRI GALAXY”, owned and chartered likewise, joined the Synergy family. Again just as before, the happy event was at the Shin Kurushima Dockyard, Onishi, Japan and we hope and believe that this latest addition to the managed fleet will in Synergy’s hands prove just as noteworthy, significant and steadfast as the very striking high island off northern Hokkaido from which she takes her name. We are very pleased indeed to be entrusted with yet another fine newbuild, as part of a successful, and intended very long-lasting, association with her owners and operators, whose representatives are seen here with Synergy officers and crew in pictures of the vessel and of a ceremony blessed by a statue of the Buddha as presented to owners’ Tsuyoshi Murakami. We thank the Synergy team that guided and supported us in ensuring smooth takeover of the “RISHIRI GALAXY”, and wish Captain Naveen Suhag, Chief Engineer Preet Sudarshan Kapoor and the whole team on board fair winds and following seas.
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(from Rishiri Island)
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baked soy sauce ramen of Rishiri island by kazu saito Via Flickr: The soup with dashi of kelp and baked soy sauce was mild and sweet.
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Rishiri Mountain,Hokkaido,Japan | 14&15.8.2022
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Backcountry snowboarding in the Small Island
#landscape#japan#photograph#canon6d#mountain#backcountry#rishiri#利尻#バックカントリー#snowboarding#スノーボード#island
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#hokkaidotrip #bikepacking #rishiri #rebun #island 利尻富士を眺める絶景ポイント。冬にまた来る! (香深港フェリーターミナル) https://www.instagram.com/p/BnOoh9flt4j/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=aol5jbra9v4l
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Designed this before the Legends: Arceus leaks, just been too busy to upload. I got really close to actual design with this one! I may have even had the same base concept as whoever designed Hisuian Typhlosion. In Shinto (the native religion of Japan) Ho-musubi, also known as Kagu-tsuchi or Hi-no-kami, was the Japanese god of fire. When he was born, he burned his mother and she died. In anger, his father cut him into eight pieces and cast them across all of Japan. Each of those pieces created a new volcano. Since the legend of this god begins with him immediately being killed, it only makes sense to make this a Ghost type. I also divided the body into eight parts, separated by fiery bands, to honor the myth. I gave it eight long flames to represent the eight volcanoes born from his dismembered body. The final touch was putting the kanji for fire on the chest with the two brushstrokes on the side turning into two of the flame wisps. Hisuian Quilava: Fire/Ghost "Quilava's flames never go out. Not even a torrent of frigid water can extinguish the flames. They produce a fragrant smoke that, when smelled, causes one to remember and mourn their lost loved ones. Quilava uses this to its advantage, either fleeing or attacking while its opponent is distracted." Spirishiri [Spirit + Rishiri (volcanic island in Japan)] Fire/Ghost "The long flames emanating from Spirishiri do not cause burns. Instead, people or Pokemon who touch the flame are engulfed in feelings of loss, grief, and sorrow. Spirishiri can use this to distract opponents, or to heal emotional trauma by unlocking repressed memories in someone and forcing them to finally face their emotions. Because of this, many revere Spirishiri as a bringer of peace. Some, however, regard it as a malevolent force. The truth likely lies somewhere in between." Hope you like it!
#pokemon legends arceus#hisui#hisuian quilava#hisuian typhlosion#cyndaquil#quilava#typhlosion#spirishiri#starter#starters#pokedex#art#art on tumblr#artist on tumblr
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Winter season is just around the corner.
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Febri Talk Interview with Jin (Complete)
Commissioned by the lovely @sodasexual again!
Part 1: overwhelmed by the power of friendship in “The☆Doraemons: Kaitou Dorapan no Chousenjou!”
Musician and creator Jin has been bringing countless topical works to the world, including “Kagerou Project”. In the first part of this serial interview, we had him talk about a work from the series “The☆Doraemons”, which he experienced in his childhood and continued to be influenced by for a long time.
A work that unexpectedly became one of the origins of “Kagerou Project”.
——Jin-san, we would like to ask you about anime shows that have had an influence on you, following in order from your infancy onwards, so would the first one be “The☆Doraemons: Kaitou Dorapan no Chousenjou!” (hereon, “The☆Doraemons”), which came out in the year 1997?
Jin: That’s right. I watched this one in the theaters when I was either 7 or 8 years old. It’s an animation short that was screened together with “Doraemon: Nobita no Neji-maki Toshi Bounen-ki”, and it had one hell of an impact on me. At the time, I was living in an isolated island in Hokkaido called Rishiri Island, so just getting to watch a movie was quite a spectacle in itself (laughs). Actually, not many animes were broadcasted in Rishiri Island to begin with. There were few channels, and other than that, they aired those black-and-white period dramas in cable TV, I guess.
——No, I think that last one is a stretch (laughs). Did you watch “Doraemon” because you liked it from the start?
Jin: I liked it a lot. But the so-called “The☆Doraemons” is a spin-off about six friends of different colors. If I were to talk about the contents of “Kaitou Dorapan” in a summarized way, it’s the story of the Doraemons receiving a letter of challenge from an mysterious enemy called Dorapan, then completely getting caught into his trap and falling into a pinch... And, surprisingly, Doraemon isn’t active at all in this movie (laughs).
——Aah, it’s a work where the Doraemon friends are the main characters, right?
Jin: That’s right. A duo that didn’t have much popularity among the friends, Dora-med III and Dora-rinho, were set as the main characters in this one (laughs). Of course, I didn’t go watch it thinking that Doraemon would participate actively, but he almost doesn’t do anything. Instead, we were shown these two, who are something like sub-characters, in a big scuffle. But when it ended, I began to really like Dora-med III and Dora-rinho.
——Ahaha. So you totally got into it.
Jin: They had something called a “Friendship Telephone Card”, which was introduced as a key item, and this “friendship” thing made the back of my nose sting – that was the kind of feeling I got from it. Dorapan, the one who plays the role of villain in this movie, attempts to take control of robots from all over the world using the power of the Doraemons’ Friendship Telephone Card. However, there’s actually a mastermind behind the scenes, and one heroine is taken hostage, so Dorapan is doing bad deeds because he has no choice. We find this out in the middle of the movie, and at that moment, Dora-rinho goes, “I see; so that’s what was going on” and voluntarily tries to sacrifice himself. By believing in self-sacrificing friendship, everyone was able to reach a happy ending. That kind of storyline was truly wonderful... To tell you the truth, the initial motif of Kagerou Project (hereon “KagePro”) was this movie.
Making KagePro out of wanting to create his own “Doraemons”.
——Eeh, is that so!?
Jin: I created KagePro because I wanted to write about friendship, or rather, I wanted to make my own “Doraemons”. I started KagePro when I was about 20 years old, as I was vaguely beginning to realize that friendship apparently doesn’t exist at that point in life (laughs). Also, same goes to music, of course, but among the books I was reading back then, quite a lot of them had cynical views. Although these stories were my own taste, I also had the impression that there was a generational trend in them, like “people shouldn’t look at this if they’re dumb” and “those who understand this thing are admirable”. Therefore, I did my best to pretend to be like that at first, but I gradually grew tired of it...
——Ahaha. You were getting out of breath.
Jin: That’s right. So, when I looked back, I thought, “I do like ‘Kaitou Dorapan’ after all”. Therefore, if I was going to make something by myself, I decided to use it as the theme. In that sense, amongst the things I watched in my childhood, this work was a turning point. After watching it in the theater for the first time, I watched it over and over again as rental video, and because of this, I even now remember the moments when the sound effects come in.
——Generation-wise, you’re precisely from the generation of “The☆Doraemons”.
Jin: Yeah, spot-on. Also, the Doraemons from “The☆Doraemons” are comical and cute, but on the other hand, they show us that they are extremely strong-willed characters. Moreover, the Doraemons are rich in individuality – as in, everyone is irregular and there are some characters that make you go, “Isn’t that a problem?” amongst them. For example, the wolf Dora-nichov can’t speak human language (laughs).
——I see! Thinking that way, I feel like I can see the points in common with KagePro.
Jin: Also, all of them are purely good guys. The fact that they’re all good people and only have one enemy is pretty awesome. I believe that this kind of thing has an influence on the KagePro series as a whole.
Part 2: paralyzed by the hardboiled worldview of “Cowboy Bebop”.
In the second part of this interview series, where we ask Jin about anime works that influenced him, we have “Cowboy Bebop”, a masterpiece still loved by many fans even now. Here, Jin, who works as both a musician and creator, discusses thoroughly about the appeal of it.
Learning the attitude and stance for creating things.
——You talked about how not many animes were aired in your homeland, but did you keep watching anime after that?
Jin: If you mean watching on TV, anime was what I enjoyed most. However, the shows on broadcast were limited, so when it comes to series that left an impression on me, it would be things like “Card Captor Sakura”, which I used to watch with my little sister. “Kinnikuman” was also re-aired and I liked it a lot. As expected, I was weak to “friendship” (laughs). When they were fighting for the throne or whatever, man, I cried, for real. This happened around the time I was in grade school, but when I got into middle school, I stopped watching anime entirely.
——And when you came back to it, it was right on time for...
Jin: For the series that I pointed out as second in line, “Cowboy Bebop”. Because my father had made up his mind to get his hands on a satellite television called SKY Perfect TV! I think he probably wanted to watch Discovery Channel, but back then, he also included Animax in the contract. And, by sheer coincidence, a re-run of “Cowboy Bebop” began right at that timing, around 2004 or 2005, I guess. I was a middle schooler then, and there were lots of CMs that went like, “Broadcast begins on X day of X month!” together with that opening theme by Kanno Youko-san.
——So that’s what caught your interest.
Jin: There was also the fact I’d been disconnected from anime for a while, so I watched the first episode not knowing anything. And the contents weren’t aimed at children at all (laughs). Dude sprayed an eye-drop drug into his eyes, went, “UWAH—!” and died, like.
——Ahaha. It was a shock.
Jin: “Cowboy Bebop” was my first time coming in contact with a hardboiled worldview. I was like, “What’s this? It’s so cool”. Until then, I had this impression that “anime was made for kids”, but for the first time, I felt like I was watching a drama. Plus, the story was interesting, so I was super hooked as I watched it, and while doing so, the episode “Jamming with Edward” (episode 9) had an impact on me.
——Satou Dai-san was the one who wrote the script for it, right? You later came to work together with Satou-san in “LISTENERS”.
Jin: That’s right. It was such an impact that it had me thinking, “You wouldn’t be able to do that in a TV drama”. And so, this ninth episode had me completely addicted to it, and in the end, I watched it up to the finale. Later on, when I began my own creations, I noticed that what I was doing overlapped with “Cowboy Bebop”, and when this happened, I realized I was doing something quite risky (laughs). To top it off, just when I thought, “There must be lots of animes like that out there”, there was surprisingly none.
The coolness of affirming that KagePro has both pop and hardcore songs and that this is what it is about!
——Ahaha. Did “Cowboy Bebop” have any influence on you? For example, on the music side...
Jin: Hmm... if you put it that way, maybe not (laughs). Only in the variety aspect of the narrative, as people call it. Each one of the 26 episodes has wholly different colors, so to say. They felt like a gashapon from which you couldn’t tell what was coming out next.
——Like, although there were episodes where they threw in comedy to their hearts contentment, there were also episodes that showed vigorous action.
Jin: When I think about it, there are also episodes that go through a simple approach by way of genres that even I would know. I think the creators must’ve had a lot of fun when making them. So when it comes to what influenced me, it I think it was the variation of songs. I think there probably aren’t that many composers like me, who make songs one by one and have no idea what song to write next.
——As in, you do it while intentionally deciding to change the tone and genre?
Jin: Rather than that, I guess it happens naturally. I was always the type who doesn’t listen to the same genre all the time – it’s like, “Today is rock day; tomorrow is punk day”. I believe it’s possible that “Cowboy Bebop” made me think this kind of feeling was valid. The themes also don’t have to be consistent, and even if you turn upside-down the things that you had been asserting in a previous episode, their value and meaning will still hold. Moreover, I didn’t think that the people who made “Cowboy Bebop” had to plan this stuff up in their heads and study about it so that they could put it to action. It just so happened that when they drew out the things they like and lined them up, it turned out the way it did.
——So they didn’t do it while aiming for that, but rather, it turned out to have a sense of variety to it when it was finished.
Jin: And I think it’s amazing because it validates itself with that. So I guess being able to say all we have to say is what actually matters (laughs). If I were to affirm, “This is what KagePro is about!”, then that’d be pretty much it. Even though there are both pop and hardcore songs in KagePro, nobody can say, “That doesn’t feel like KagePro”. That’s why I think that the coolness of proudly declaring, “That’s what it is!” is something I learned from Bebop. Like, “This is what’s cool”. It feels like, on my own accord, I accepted something that was like a stance to be taken when you create these kinds of things.
Part 3: obsessing over “Tokyo Godfathers”, which had developments where one couldn’t predict what lay ahead.
This is the third part of the interview series where the creator Jin talks about works that influenced him. Here, he discusses about a hidden masterpiece from the director Kon Satoshi, which also had a great influence on “Kagerou Project” and which he encountered during his vocational school years, while living a wasteful life.
——The third work is “Tokyo Godfathers” by Director Kon Satoshi, but when was it that you watched it?
Jin: It was during my vocational school years. After graduating from high school, I attended a vocational music school located in Sapporo, but my upperclassmen from that school taught me many bad ways of having fun (laughs). I used to buy lots of sick equipment. Then, obviously, I’d run out of money, so I worked to death in part-time jobs, and well, lived a wasteful life (laughs), but during that time, a friend from my class lent me a DVD of “Hidamari Sketch”. At first, I told him, “Nah, I’m not too into this kinda stuff”, but when I took it home and watched it, I wailed aloud.
——Ahaha.
Jin: That’s why I asked Asumi Kana-san (who voices Yuno) to play KagePro’s main heroine... Anyhow, “Hidamari Sketch” became the cue for me to start watching anime again. And Director Kon Satoshi was from Sapporo, so it was probably being featured in a video shop. “Tokyo Godfathers” is a 2003 movie, but I saw it in the video in 2008 or 2009.
——What piqued your interest about it?
Jin: It was tremendously well-done and fun, and on top of that, it was sharp – a work like no other up until then, I thought. A dramatic production with parallel storylines focusing on different characters is incorporated within the span of about an hour and half as if it weren’t enough. During that same time, there were also works by Mitani Kouki-san and Isaka Koutarou-san’s “Golden Slumber” was being made into live action, so I believe that the so-called multi-protagonist story kind of approach was being used in all sorts of places. But even among them, “Tokyo Godfathers” was outstandingly interesting. “Where the heck is this story heading to?” You can’t tell at all until the end. Three homeless people pick up a baby on Christmas night and try to take her to her mother, but as the story goes on, it gets to a climax like, “Does she even have a mother in the first place?”. Plus, we find out that the person who they thought to be the mother and handed the baby over to is actually someone who kidnapped her from a hospital. The story just keeps changing over and over.
As the story progresses, the characters’ pasts become visible. It was interesting that the past and present were firmly bound together.
——We can’t predict what comes next at all, huh?
Jin: So, the topic will go back to KagePro now: when I thought of writing a novel, first of all, I decided that I “wanted to do a multi-protagonist story”. To make a story like the one from “The☆Doraemons” into a multi-protagonist story. Back then, I really liked the type of novels that went on in first person – such as works by Isaka-san or Morimi Tomihiko-san, and also Yonezawa Honobu-san.
——I see, I see.
Jin: On the other hand, “Tokyo Godfathers” is structured so that the characters’ pasts can be seen more and more as the story progresses. As if the story progresses with the past mini-arcs as the main focus. Like, “Person A and Person B were actually parent and child!” – it was interesting that the past and the present were bound together so firmly. Moreover, the developments go on at an incredible speed, and there’s a proper catharsis at the end. Also, all the characters that show up in it have rich facial expressions.
——To begin with, the fact that the three main characters are homeless is a twist.
Jin: In the first place, it starts with the main heroine spitting onto people in the streets from a rooftop (laughs). I really like those sharp-edged points of it too. “Tokyo Godfathers” has a content that can be written even if the protagonists were parent and child from an ordinary household. But through making the protagonists homeless, it became extremely vivid.
——It’s as if it turns them into down-to-earth characters and gives you a sensation that they connect with the audience’s “present”.
Jin: If I were to speak of other words by Director Kon Satoshi, I also think that “Paprika” and “Sennen Joyuu” are amazing. But on the other hand, I end up thinking, “They’re so wonderful”. As in, “Awesome, aren’t they? I don’t get them very well, though” (laughs). But “Tokyo Godfathers” is a candid form of entertainment that even an idiot like me can instantly get hooked on. The fact that I indeed want to keep doing entertainment resides strongly inside me.
——Listening to you talk like this, Jin-san, it makes me think that the books you read and movies you watched because you liked them reflect straightforwardly in your own manner of expressing yourself.
Jin: I myself think that I’m usually straightforward (laughs). Rather than “I want it to be seen like this” or “I want people to think of it like that”, I prioritize “I want to do this” and “this is fun”, so to say. By multiplying “The☆Doraemons” to “Tokyo Godfathers”, it turned into “Kagerou Project” (laughs). I feel like that’s my foundation.
#kagerou project#kagepro#mekakucity actors#kagerou daze#jin#shizen no teki p#interview#my translation#cowboy bebop#doraemon#tokyo godfathers#satoshi kon
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sniff sniff
I look at what other people come up with as poems and it’s not always that bad
but then I look at what people come up with as Prompts for Poems - i.e. what they think we should be writing poems about - and Despair Squeezes My Gonads.
The coefficient of banality is somehow written into the universe, like that Avocado thing (sp?)
After looking at what today’s laureates are suggesting should be the themes for ‘poetry contests’, I think the only hope is if ultimate reality were a random recombination of elements - sounds, smells, blows, bangs, sproutings, eviscerations - that we already experience, but connecting by paths humans or devils couldn’t possibly imagine:
like if the spiritual redemption of millions of damned souls (already convicted of a raft of chilling crimes) should be permitted if a particular snowflake touches one specific tree frog, on a patch of moss in a cove on Rishiri Island, at exactly the correct angle - before you finish this line. are you watching?
are you
attending? now you missed it - and the world goes mad
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