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TTArtisan M 28mm F5.6
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焦点工房SHOTEN L.M-C.R (Mマウント - RFマウント変換)
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Canon EOS R.
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iPhone 13 Pro
BLOG JPN : iLOG
With just about something for everybody, it is easy for a person to think of a reason to drop in to spend a little money: coffee made one cup at a time fresh, hot and cold drinks and ready-to-eat foods, office supplies, personal hygiene products, and even a small range of reading material. At one point in most cities of Japan the distribution of convenience stores of one brand or another meant that a person was never more than 1000m from a store. This view from the train as it approaches JR Oita station shows several cars in the after-lunch parking lot of the convenience store.
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In this frame is a slice of middle November 2024 in Imari City. There are brooding mountains present today as they were in the past and will be in lifetimes to come. There is the steady stream of business at the convenience store adjacent to the city library. And there are many private, gas-powered vehicles eventually to be replaced with battery-powered ones, instead.
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The original French puts the paradox of change and non-change as, "plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose." In this photo the rise of convenience stores as all purpose and seemingly ubiquitous stores has led to demolishing the surrounding space to make parking space for customers. This one is a stone's throw from the city library. But the roadside shrine is untouched from before the demolition project. Similarly of the many other roadside shrines throughout the city of Imari and its outskirts, too. From one decade or generation to another there are various changes, but the spot occupied by the stone figure and its shelter stands firm against the tides of change.
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