View allAll Photos Tagged Abstracts

... in office buildings in downtown Calgary.

 

C. J.R. Devaney

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A shot of a water bottle reflecting flickr from my pc monitor.

 

An idea probably subconciously inspired by Jane In Colours excellent work on Cross Polarisation (set) (please check it out if you haven't already!) .

I have also experimented with light through plastic water bottles (with water in them) in one of my earlier (Flickr infancy) shot CD Water Drops #2.

 

A cousin shot to abstract #8

 

Part of my bottles (Set)

 

© Jon Downs 2010 All Rights Reserved.

  

Upton church St Margaret... window

"Dreams are illustrations from the book your soul is writing about you."- Marsha Norman

 

ART SHOP

Start with some pumpkins, add a tree and then layer in a mannequin in a sparkly dress. End up here. LOL!

 

Created for Kreative People Treat This 48: www.flickr.com/groups/1752359@N21/discuss/72157648283609642/

 

Source image provided by brillianthues: www.flickr.com/photos/brillianthues/15305402081

Love the delicate color in this. The lines make me think of a computer chip, somehow. 2 seconds, f/14.0, ISO 100.

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved

 

You can see my most interesting photo's on flickr here

It's all natural baby! (No processing) I took this one through my car window while waiting at a red light. Just cropped it to square and got a nice abstract out of it. Okay, I did apply a tiny tiny bit of Orton effect to it. Really tiny.

Kubital Metall not in Explorer.

This image was taken for the "Abstract" challenge in the Active Assignment Weekly group.

 

Unfortunately, the challenge said that there had to be two different elements, so all my other droplet pictures are out. Fortunately, both the droplets (milk) and the grain of the paper are visible, so this counts. These are drops of milk on a piece of glass on top of red paper. It was very difficult to get the droplets onto the glass without smearing them or making them too big.

 

The lighting on this was fun, but challenging. I triggered my off-camera flash (which is behind the droplets on camera left) with the flash on my camera (go Nikon!). You can see the reflection of my camera's flash as a tiny dot in the droplets on the bottom left. The strobe had to be at a relatively low angle so that there wouldn't be any reflection on the glass.

...that many years ago was painted red.

Same fallen tree as before, The Mandshurian Cherry (Prunus maackii). These are bark's colors and details.

Beyond Jupiter....

 

Abstract....

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