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Aftereffects of the Christmas bomb cyclone in Grand Haven Michigan

With a world class hangover from a big day and night my Sunday began at the beach taking in an impeccable Sydney’s summer day and easing the headache with some salt water.

 

As with many summer days in Sydney a storm began to roll through just after lunch and with some time on my hands and the aftereffects of the night before fading away I decided to head to La Perouse in Sydney’s south.

 

I chose my location, set my camera down, attached my cable release and got comfy on the grass waiting for this impressive storm front to roll through.

 

Without a drop of rain I literally shot this image with a cable release while lying down. Photography at it’s best.

 

View large and, as always, thanks for looking.

Ruby-throated Hummingbird

 

It was a challenging summer this year. Due to a back injury, I was out of commission for almost one month and am still dealing with the aftereffects. The thing that I missed the most was being able to be a shutterbug. When I was finally able to stand for awhile, it was fun to watch and photograph our little Hummingbird visitors to the backyard. I thank the Lord that I am healing and hope to see you all out there "in the wilds"!

Full video on YouTube:

www.youtube.com/watch?v=iOfHKGrlk1Q

Guitar: Endre Csukás

Music, vocals: Attila Nagy

Duo Aftereffect production 2011

Seems like everyone is out checking out the aftereffects of the high tide/ storm surge combo.

The Strand Beach, Morro Bay, Ca.

This is a personal project created in 3D, using Maya and AfterEffects, and rendered with mental ray.

 

You can view the animated scene here: vimeo.com/132681443

 

For more details, check out the entry on my website: www.andrei-art.com/wordpress/portfolio/mushroom-forest/.

The after effects of a winter storm... winds blew snow to cover everything along the shoreline of Georgian Bay.

iPhone. Photoshop. AfterEffects. Snapseed. iColorama!

After Effects Animated text message

Ruby-throated Hummingbird

 

It was a challenging summer this year. Due to a back injury, I was out of commission for almost one month and am still dealing with the aftereffects. The thing that I missed the most was being able to be a shutterbug. When I was finally able to stand for awhile, it was fun to watch and photograph our little Hummingbird visitors to the backyard. I thank the Lord that I am healing and hope to see you all out there "in the wilds"!

Our loving boy Samuel L. Golden suffering the deep aftereffects of downing 3 loaves of banana bread AND a full loaf of Italian bread (we discovered later). He was a windy lad. More at my daily photoblog PHOTO.NOISE.

.Fullscreen it, please.

 

A FULL-CG animated piece that tries to illustrate architecture art across a photographic point of view where main subjects

are already-built spaces. Sometimes in an abstract way. Sometimes surreal.

 

Credits:

 

CG

 

|Modelling - Texturing - Illumination - Rendering| Alex Roman

 

POST

 

|Postproduction & Editing| Alex Roman

 

MUSIC

 

Sequenced, Orchestrated & Mixed by Alex Roman (Sonar & EWQLSO Gold Pro XP)

 

Sound Design by Alex Roman

 

Based on original scores by:

 

.Michael Laurence Edward Nyman. (The Departure)

.Charles-Camille Saint-Saëns. (Le Carnaval des animaux)

 

Directed by Alex Roman

 

Done with 3dsmax, Vray, AfterEffects and Premiere.

 

EDIT: Original MP4 torrent if you're interested. Thanks to Brennan ;)

 

www.temporarygate.com/TheThird&TheSeventh.mp4.torrent

  

www.thirdseventh.com/

 

third.seventh@gmail.com

 

Watch this video on Vimeo. Video created by Alex Roman.

“Creekbed, Autumn Leaves” — Autumn leaves scattered on the sand of a creekbed, Zion National Park.

 

Photographing desert canyon streambeds like this one in Zion National Park is rewarding in so many ways. They are little laboratories in composition, texture, alight, and color, with nearly infinite variations. Water, whether the aftereffects of its passage or current flow, produces all sorts of fascinating patterns. It rearranges, moves, and sometimes collects whatever is loose — in this case autumn leaves. The light can be magnificent, soft and colorful. In ideal conditions it reflects back and forth between red rock canyon walls before softly and warmly illuminating the canyon depths.

 

Beyond all of that photographic stuff, canyons are just fascinating places to be. The walls cur off the larger world, and your horizons are be measured in feet. It is usually very quiet, with the exception of perhaps a bit of breeze, the sounds of water, and sometimes a bird song. When I visit them I wander slowly, taking it all in.

ZBrush, Maya, ShaveandHaircut, Mental Ray,AfterEffects

 

3D : Lau!

Post : Periquita [ www.flickr.com/photos/sserna/ ]

A couple people asked, so here's the starting photo.

 

I took it in a dark basement. Stuck a flashlight on each wrist with a big rubber band. That's to establish the light source. You could do that in PS but I find the more you can do in front of the camera, the easier and better the results.

 

Set up the camera and got if focused with the big overhead lights on. (the camera seems to do a better focus job when there's plenty of light) Then held the remote between my teeth.

Triggered it, spit it out, and waited for the timer to go off.

No flash, which means a High ISO...hence all the noise.

 

Then a little photoshop to paint out the flashlights, and a quick trip to after effects to make the particles and ribbons. You could do that in photoshop too, but since I use AE ALL the frickin time it takes me literally seconds..photoshop I would have had to think for a minute. (It's actually animated, this is just a still frame of the animation.)

 

If it was a paying gig, i'd wrap the light tendrils around the hands, fingers, and arms and layer the particles...that way it creates more depth and space..which is generally more interesting and makes clients go 'oooh ahhh' which is what you want!

 

Voila! DO try this at home!

The Fall of Foyers (Scottish Gaelic: Eas na Smùide, meaning the smoking falls) is a waterfall on the River Foyers, which feeds Loch Ness, in Highland, Scotland, United Kingdom.

 

The waterfall has "a fine cascade", having a fall of 165 feet. It is located on the lower portion of the River Foyers at grid reference NH497203. The river enters Loch Ness on the East side, North-East of Fort Augustus.

 

This waterfall influenced Robert Addams to write a paper in 1834 about the motion aftereffect.

 

The flow over the falls has been much reduced since 1895 when North British Aluminium Company built an aluminium smelting plant on the shore of Loch Ness which was powered by electricity generated by the river. Artist Mary Rose Hill Burton, who was active in the unsuccessful resistance against the smelting plant, made many drawings and paintings of the falls before the plant was built, to capture the landscape before it was lost.

 

The plant shut in 1967 and in 1975 the site became part of the Foyers Pumped Storage Power Station on the banks of Loch Ness, the 300 MegaWatt pumped-storage hydroelectricity system uses Loch Mhòr as the upper reservoir.

random shot also

 

this is what a designer needs to get everything perfect heheh XP

 

Met up with a local photographer.

Some editing in Adobe After Effects

Found this fellow close to Pitkäkoski rapids. Single exposure, added some particles via After Effects. Lens: Samyang 14mm.

Quack Remedy -

Straying deep in the make believe forest where wild things grow, I found what I was looking for. On the soil that is just right, the earth begets a kettle with the most gorgeous spout. The big mushroom dotted in Braille language was tiered in colors of tawny port wine, macaroni in cheese and bruised peach. Flooded with rapture, my eyes skitter up and down its geoduck body in admiration.

 

“Hi there, are you male or female?” I inquired excitedly.

 

The mushroom flounces and spoke great words of wisdom. “Miss is a personal title for ladies, their corpulent caps wore in style are well-padded on top. Can’t you tell from my plug-shape so long, I’m Mister?”

 

My business is scrutinizing so I tilt my head to examine. The pores below his snazzy hat was enlarged but unclogged, resembling yellow honeycombs. Hidden in plain sight above the inverted surface, my sixth sense detected seven trillion spores. Everyone was chatting spasmodically, longing to be released. Their mellifluous accents sounded like EDM dance music to my ears.

 

I cut to the chase and gave him the gist. “I desire an herb that acts like a magic shroom.”

 

The watchful mushroom jumped to conclusions, “Don’t expect me to give a psychedelic dream, I’m not the psilocybin type.”

 

“I don’t want to stand on flagpoles or ride on a green dinosaur’s back. The palatable kind is not what I want” I replied slyly with assurance.

 

In the woods there is a line that must be toe, but you can’t ask a mushroom which ones he would be willing to lend. While I went near and nearer, the fun guy or fungi if you would prefer to call, remains stationary as a pencil. There was nothing he could do since his network of strands shackled him there. When my nose tip nearly kissed his head, he protested with an involuntary twitch. Pop! Pop! Pop! Seizing the golden opportunity that his spores were descending down the tubes to viral with the wind, I breathed deep like a baby taking in amniotic fluid. Inhaling and exhaling to a high, I felt his seeds mingling with my lungs before settling down the bottom. Hopefully the mycelia germinate at the bottom and bloom well. I reckon the permanent cure to remove nervousness and anxiety from my stomach is to replace fluttering butterflies with unemotional mushrooms. Anyone think I’m wrong? The aftereffect is worth the wait.

 

(10 of 24)

with a yellow spatula in the tree. The aftereffects of the mini snow April snow storm.

 

98/366

 

Italia, Toscana, Pisa, Estate 2010

 

La città di Pisa sorge sulle rive del fiume Arno, ed è una delle città più importanti della Toscana. E’ nota in tutto il mondo, per il suo simbolo: la Torre pendente. Pisa è sia una città sia antica che moderna. Da un lato, è orgogliosa del suo passato, quando era una Repubblica Marinara divenendo una potenza marittima mondiale durante il Medioevo. D'altra parte, è oggi nota per avere una delle università più importanti in Italia. i "Lungarni" sono quelle strade che passano vicino alle rive del fiume. Queste strade, contornate da splendidi edifici e palazzi che si alternano a romantici ponti sono una vista spettacolare soprattutto al tramonto.

 

The city of Pisa rises above the banks of Arno, and it is one of the most important cities in Tuscany and it is extremely well-known in the world, because of its famous symbol: "the Leaning Tower".

Pisa is both an ancient and modern city. On the one hand, it is proud of its past , when it was a Marittime Republic and became a world power during the Middle Ages. On the other hand, now is famous for having one of the most important university in Italy.

The "Lungarni" are those streets which pass near the river banks. These streets, with splendid buildings and palaces that rise upon them together with romantic bridges are a spectacular sight especially at the sunset.

 

I recently got out for a hike in the Columbia River Gorge. It has been almost two years since the Eagle Creek fire and it is both astonishing and fascinating to see the persisting effects of that fire still. One example is the fire-scarred trunks of trees that are highly visible and everywhere. Another is the continued closure of several trails, including one of my favorites: Oneonta Gorge. I was really looking forward to a cold wade up the gorge, but it is not yet meant to be. But another aftereffect are the fields of small flowers that have sprung up in the absence of the ground cover that was burned off during the fire. We hiked up to Upper Horsetail Falls and the trail was lined by thousands and thousands of little pink blossoms. I had never seen that trail look so colorful. It may sound weird to say, but I am thankful I live here so I can watch the progression of nature in the aftermath of the fire. Even if the start of that fire was based on unfortunate events, fire is not a foreign occurrence in nature. Even if you don't have humans traipsing around with fireworks, or unattended campfires, or their faulty power lines, you still have lightning. What then becomes interesting is to not fixate on how unfortunate the event of the fire was but how nature responds afterward, because fortunately we don't see an event like this often. Yes, I am still a bit bummed that some of my favorite spots like Oneonta Gorge are not yet open, but then again, there is still a lot of Gorge left to explore and much of it looks like I have never seen it before.

 

Pentax 67

Kodak Ektar 100

Having just got back from a week in the sun, it's nice to see the aftereffects of all the rain in Shropshire without having had to experience it!

Built from a 15 photos, to create the panoramic. The furnace is made from 6 photos taken from another reference, half a dozen photos used for textures and cut ins. The rest hand painted in photoshop at 9k resolution. This took forty hours work and is designed as a high end digital painting for a film production. This is the lo re version. This has been converted into a 2.5d matte painting in after effects. The cottage has been digitally exploded and everything is designed to be photo realistic.

Another Friday, another blue day at Color my World Daily. Blue days are Mr. Accountant favorites! He truly loves Fridays and he is crazy about the blue color…

 

Elvis (yes, that is his true name… didn’t I mention that before?), loves dressing in blue, eating French blue cheese (which is apparently a delicacy even if it stinks more than my old uncle Pete’s socks!) and drinking Blue Curacao (which, if you don’t know, is a very good alcoholic beverage, with a distinctive very blue color… honestly it looks like shampoo but tastes soooo much better…. but the aftereffects are similar in my case: I feel great after drinking Blue Curacao (in moderation) and I feel great after washing my hair with shampoo).

 

So, our friend Elvis The Accountant is a blue lover… But his wife, Elvira (yes, true name again) hates the blue color… She finds it very boring and very unfashionable. Elvira is truly a neon pink gal with a very bold personality….

 

Elvis loves Elvira but he can’t stand to live in a neon pink world, anymore! Also, Elvira has a very rebellious soul and she frankly sucks at housekeeping… Her neon pink stuff is everywhere… The other day, Elvis The Accountant found Elvira’s neon pink boots in his lunch bag!!!

 

So, after his work at the accounting agency, poor Elvis has to come back to his neon pink life and do some house chores. He is cleaning and putting all the neon pink stuff where it belongs, just so he can see a little bit of blue showing up again in his life….

 

And Elvira in all that? She is probably somewhere buying more pink stuff for her and her husband… You see, Elvis never mentioned that he hates neon pink and that is because his love for Elvira is sooooo much stronger than his hate of neon pink! And besides that, he is color blind so frankly he doesn’t even know how beautiful neon pink can be!

 

The moral of this story: love is more powerful than any color and I clearly need a glass of Blue Curacao!

 

Happy blue Friday to all participants at CMWD !! And Happy Friday to you all !!

 

Thank you so much for all your lovely comments / favs/ general support / happy thoughts / positive vibes!! It is truly appreciated! Have a great day and see you soon!!

This new NASA Hubble Space Telescope image captures the central region of the gigantic elliptical galaxy NGC 474. Located some 100 million light-years from Earth, NGC 474 spans about 250,000 light-years across – that’s 2.5 times larger than our own Milky Way galaxy! Along with its enormous size, NGC 474 has a series of complex layered shells that surround its spherical-shaped core. The cause of these shells is unknown, but astronomers theorize that they may be the aftereffects of the giant galaxy absorbing one or more smaller galaxies. In the same way a pebble creates ripples on a pond when dropped into the water, the absorbed galaxy creates waves that form the shells.

 

About 10% of elliptical galaxies have shell structures, but unlike the majority of elliptical galaxies, which are associated with galaxy clusters, shelled ellipticals usually lie in relatively empty space. It may be that they’ve cannibalized their neighbors.

 

The image was created using data from Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys. Additional gap-filling data was provided by Hubble's Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 and Wide Field Camera 3. The color blue represents visible blue light while the color orange represents near infrared light.

 

Image credit: NASA, ESA, and D. Carter (Liverpool John Moores University); Image processing: G. Kober (NASA Goddard/Catholic University of America)

 

#NASA #MarshallSpaceFlightCenter #MSFC #Marshall #HubbleSpaceTelescope #HST #astrophysics #gsfc #galaxy

 

Read more

 

More about the Hubble Space Telescope

 

NASA Media Usage Guidelines

A warm sleeping puppy, that is. The aftereffects of 2 solid hours of wrasslin'.

 

Note the sleeping hierarchy: Bailey gets her favorite quilt. Vega gets the bed that Bailey despises. Astro (poor baby) gets the floor.

Background for story made in after effects, to differentiate your stories.

Want a custom one just talk to me.

Thunderstorms bring beautiful sunsets!!

I was really missing to take self-portrait, my control remote are not working because my cable doesn't fit with the new camera so have been very difficult to work on this lately, fortunately my mom was here today so she could helped me ^^.

Hopefully in less than a month i will have the new cable!

_____________

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an experimental series entitled Digitally Engineered

 

as is hopefully obvious, this is the second one in series three

Still a winter wonderland: This is how the parking lot looked Monday after the winter storm, Jonas.

Shot with the Nokia Lumia 930 with Zeiss lens and PureView Camera. Edit done with AfterEffects 9.0 on MacPro.

resampling, restructuring and reappropriating myself

Wouldn't you know what was beckoning for a photo op this morning as I surveyed the aftereffects of yesterday's blizzard!

Fortunately, here by the sea we never lost power with the high winds, nor did we get the large amount of predicted snowfall . . .

just lots of rain, wind and heavy icicles!

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