View allAll Photos Tagged Abstract
It was such a lovely sunny day last Saturday, that I just couldn't stop taking photos. And I must have taken over a hundred of oilseed rape fields. I like the tractor lines in crops, and I like the way this telegraph pole is standing between them - how did the farmer manage that?!
Sony A7RII
Sony 70-300G lens
Week 31 Wildcard: Photographer's Choice
Decided to go Abstract this week. I've been obsessing over getting some birds in flight pictures these past few weeks, with less than satisfactory results- but, I'm not giving up. Day after day, I've gone to this one spot. One morning, I happened to look I down and there was my shot! Not a bird in flight, but I'll take it!
Available as prints and skins for iphones, ipads and macbooks at society6.com/kasperjj/PatternCubes1_Print
This crease pattern gets you most of the way there as far as finishing folds go... all you really have to do is inside reverse fold the shoulders and crimp and spread out the layers of the tail.
Work related - for a reason :) Guess what we're looking at?
Perhaps better viewed a little smaller - press 'L' or click the image
These giant leaves are from the beautiful Traveler’s Palm, Ravenala madagascariensis. It shares many features with palms (Arecaceae) and with bananas (Musaceae, especially its long large banana-like leaves), but it is neither. It is in the family Strelitziaceae, the birds of paradise plants. It is endemic to forests in Madagascar, but it is grown as an impressive large ornamental plant in tropical gardens around the world. This specimen was in gardens in Miami, Florida. The young leaves have recently sprouted and are now unfurling.
ravenala abstract _ (© 2015 megart)
Acrylic 30x24 inches. This is a reworking of abstract M which I will remove now thanks for your comments on that one.
This image is a result of my Husband's influence on my photography, it is a drag effect I tried for the first time on silver birch trees to try and capture a slightly different image of autumn colour. It's an image that grows on you.
Copyright © Stamatis Platounaris. All Rights Reserved.
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Jimmy'z Imagez - All done through the lens, no photoshoping. Done with natural sunlight, a scotch glass and lots of imagination.
Détails de graffitis
Agrandi, un détail de quelques centimètres de superficie devient une abstraction photographique.
Red onion sliced and then soaked in a mixture of Turmeric powder and water. The image taken with Warm White Balance in Macro mode with a desk lamp as the light source. Two separate images of the two faces of the sliced onion overlayed and post-processed in Photoshop CS2.
- Finalist in Food for Thought photo competition conducted by The Light Factory, Charlotte, NC
edited to increase contrast and get rid of tan colours. i just really like the look of the pattern here. it was waves in shallow water on a sunny day.