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EXPLORE Worthy, Challenge 102 - Shades of Autumn (2018 Art)

  

Old capture of a birdie on my yard gate. Processed on my tablet in Artista Oil and Pixlr.

 

***October Contest: "When Autumn Falls"

www.flickr.com/groups/handheldart/discuss/72157701615307995/

 

***New!! ~ Challenge # 176 ~ Autumn Artistry ~

www.flickr.com/groups/awardtree/discuss/72157701878150645/

www.youtube.com/watch?v=CD-E-LDc384

 

A capture from the provincial capital,processed using an Android app-which also seems to remove the exif >:-(

 

For:

 

New Challenge! The Hypo Music Festival!

www.flickr.com/groups/1179479@N25/discuss/721576663667027...

  

In recent weeks I have been working on a project called Reflected Petals. This has involved taking a top-down image of a flower and then using mirror distortions to create a symmetric design. If the starting image has plenty of detail and some colour contrast you get some really interesting results.

 

I’ll eventually get around to sharing the outcomes of the project here on Flickr (though I have already published pictures like this over the years).

 

Ironically this particular image is not part of the main project, but something I did last night when I was bored and desperately trying to think of something to do for Sliders Sunday today. I should have really been going to bed…

 

Normally I would use the Distort > Mirror filter in Affinity, but here I used the Chromebook running an Android app called Mirrorlab. This program is great fun to play with (if you like that sort of thing), but you soon drift far away from visual reality…

 

This image is based on a picture of an ox-eye daisy that I published here seven months ago. The quickest way to get a suitable starting image on to the Chromebook last night was to download it from Flickr. I’ll publish a link to the in-camera image as usual in my first comment.

 

I like this result because of all the woven petals - that’s not an effect you would get in Affinity. Like a lot of these distorted images, most of the beauty comes from the original flower, and the repetition and distortion encourage you to look more closely at what nature has already achieved.

 

I hope you enjoy it anyway. Normal, undistorted service will resume tomorrow :)

 

Thank you for taking the time to look. I hope you enjoy the image! Happy Sliders Sunday :)

Created on my cell phone with an Android app called fractview

NORTH EAST

ppc

edit Photoshop Elements 9.0 Android App

defogger aka Anti - Beschlag

denoised aka entrauscht

finally

MX Camera App

landscape filters

Fernblick

The alternative to digging out old shots from the archives is to shoot repetitive uninteresting photos in our boring locality (in a dull season)...

One can be excused for thinking that Xmas is coming?;)

For the farmers of my country,the men,women,children and infants who have been slain,grievously tortured and brutally murdered in the past 20+ years,especially in recent years:

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_bDc7FfItk

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=8mnTeXdjJsI&t=174s

 

Now Open: September Contest “Nostalgia”

www.flickr.com/groups/handheldart/discuss/72157700201772224/

 

From an antique birdcage capture of mine.

Coffee stain paper texture from Pixabay.

For this image i used Pixlr on Android to merge my birdcage capture and the Pixabay text image. For some reason when i try to download png images on my Lenovo tablet,it never arrives as transparent. So i send some of my fave png's from my pc via gmail and intercept on tablet instead of my cell. Then i superimposed the png's and stylised using Pixlr.

Dead tree and fields, Snapseed Black and White and Drama edits.

My second use of a free, fun Android app, Chroma Lab.

Um dos ângulos de quem visita Santa Teresa.

A Lapa e alguns prédios do Centro do Rio.

 

Parque das Ruínas - Santa Teresa - Rio de Janeiro

 

♪ ≡ ♫ = ♪ = ♫ ≡ ♪ = ♫

 

[♪] Música do Dia – Chico Buarque - Homenagem ao Malandro

 

Atrações do Rio de Janeiro: Cristo Redentor, Praia de Copacabana, Pão de Açúcar, Maracanã, Praia de Ipanema, CCBB, MAC, MAST, MUSAL, MNBA, Museu do Trem, Espaço Cultural da Marinha, Forte de Copacabana, Forte do Leme, Museu Histórico Nacional, Catedral Metropolitana,Igreja do Carmo, Igreja da Candelária, Mosteiro de São Bento, Igreja Nossa Senhora da Penna, Igreja Nossa Senhora de Lourdes, Igreja Outeiro da Glória, Igreja de Santo Antônio, Largo da Carioca, Cinelândia, Teatro Municipal, Biblioteca Nacional, Vista Chinesa, Mirante do Pasmado, Mirante Dona Marta, Pedra Bonita, Pedra da Gávea, Brasil, RJ, Brazil, Rio 2016, Brasil 2014, Brazil 2016, Rio 2014, Brasil 2016, Metrô do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 2014, Rio, Amanhecendo no Rio, Quinta da Boa Vista, São Januário, Jardim Botânico, Amanhecer no Rio de Janeiro, Pão de Açúcar, Sugar Loaf, Aterro do Flamengo, Urca, Praia Vermelha, Botafogo, Copacabana, Leme, Arpoador, Ipanema, Leblon, São Conrado, Barra da Tijuca, Recreio, Grumari, Praianha, Santa Tresa, Arcos da Lapa, Arena do Rio, Maracanã, Engenhão, Cidade do Samba, Sambódromo, Carnaval, Árvore de Natal da Lagoa Rodrigo de Freitas, Reveillon,

It's a while since I have published a set of variants based on one source image. So I thought I might plague you with another.

 

This set is based on an image I took of a local beech tree last November. 't'were pretty :)

 

The in-camera original was processed in Capture One using the raw convertor's auto default.

 

The set is a collection of distortions produced by the MirrorLab app. This is an Android app, running here on a Chromebook. The free version is a very competent program and quite unusual in its versatility. The paid upgrade gives you more options and, perhaps more importantly, the ability to save larger images (though the free version is fine for Flickr).

 

I've had a lot of fun with this little app - distortions give a new view on something familiar. But, as ever, the key is finding a starting image that works. I think this one probably does better than most I have tried...

 

I hope you enjoy the set. As ever I'd love to hear your favourites :)

 

As usual, I shall publish a link to the in-camera version in the first comment. The commentary is the same for each so you only need to read it once, if that.

 

Thank you for taking the time to look. I hope you enjoy the image :)

This week’s set is, as usual, based on a single capture processed in different ways. In this case the original image is of a staircase leading to the car park in Sainsbury’s supermarket in Eddington, Cambridge (just so that you can go and photograph it yourself).

 

All the variants are produced using distortions by an Android app called MirrorLabs which I have had a lot of fun playing with in the past. The basic app is free but if you pay a small amount you get the full version which allows you to save large images and has more distortion types for you to play with.

 

The distortions include kaleidoscopes, polar conversions, cutouts, mirrors, repetitions, 3D mapping, pixel sorting, ripples and marbling, and various others which are difficult to describe. You can also distort just regions of an image, and stack multiple distortions. The app will run on phones, tablets and the more modern Chromebooks.

 

I have found that whether you get anything interesting out the end depends largely on the starting image. I’ve been trying different ones to see what happens. One of the best I have found is a picture of a brick wall half-covered with ivy. I thought I would try the app with this image and I was impressed by some of the results. The graphic lines and blocks of texture and light seem to work quite well. The image is in colour but the scene is almost monochrome, which I think helps things to work.

 

I eventually produced a couple of dozen variants that I thought were appealing in one way or another. Here is a selection of about half of them showing different styles and distortions. I hope you will find them interesting enough to quickly flick through them all - it’s probably the largest set that I have published. I may publish the other half of them another time.

 

I’ll also publish the original so you can see where we started and so you can play spot where the bits have gone in the distorted versions. You can download the image and have a play yourself if you like, or try with one of your own pics :)

 

Thank you for taking the time to look. I hope you enjoy the images. Happy Sliders Sunday :)

under the stars

 

© 2012 Bruce Couch & Bodie Group inc | all rights reserved | don't be a dick, do not use or blog, without asking me first. I register my images AND this awesome copyright notice with the US Copyright Office and I can be a real asshole about people or companies stealing my images. That said: I ask you not to download any products (primarily Android apps) created by Swiss Codemonkeys and/or AppBrain. They took my images (taken through flickr's API) and used them in their wall paper app which was distributed to millions of android users. Tell your friends, tell your flickr contacts, and complain to flickr. force them out of business. Thanks.

This is one of my favorite shots from back in 2013. Back then, we didn't have no stinkin' apps that let you plan Milky Way shots easily on satellite maps like you can with PhotoPills. It was all about knowing the heading of the Galactic Center by using a star chart, whether an actual chart or an app like Star Walk, and then looking at satellite view in Google Maps and determining if the angle of the Milky Way would line up at some point in the night with my desired foreground subject.

 

Even better, standing at the actual location I could use my compass and determine when the Milky Way would line up in the night by comparing the heading of my foreground object with the time that the Milky Way would be at that angle using the star chart.

 

That has since been largely replaced with planning apps like PhotoPills, an iOS or Android app that lets you plan landscape photography shots, and the Night Augmented Reality mode lets me view the angle of the Milky Way at any time and date overlaid on the live view of my iPhone's camera.

 

Back in 2013, I did the planning the old fashioned way and knew that the Milky Way wouldn't line up at this point until pretty late in the night, but it wasn't clear exactly when, since I couldn't see exactly where I would be standing on the satellite map. So I showed up early in the night and used my compass to figure out roughly when the Milky Way would be in position. I had plenty of time to setup my foreground and get everything figured out.

 

Turns out it was a good thing I had so much time to figure everything out, because getting a brightly exposed foreground shot was challenging. I was used to doing foreground shots of a few minutes or so to capture enough light in the dark, but looking into a gorge with no ambient light it was DARK! A 5 minute exposure wasn't going to cut it. I tried light painting the gorge with a flashlight but it looked horrible, far too much glare on the wet rocks and weird shadows cast by the flashlight. It just didn't look good, and to this day I rarely use light painting for the same reasons. So in the end I used a 20 minute exposure for the foreground, which worked out great!

 

The problem, though, was that my lens would fog up after a few minutes. This happens when the dew point reaches the ambient temperature, and means water droplets are much more likely to form on surfaces, and it turns out that the large front elements of wide angle lenses like the Nikon 14-24mm f/2.8 are the perfect surfaces. This was before I had my electric lens heaters, so in a pinch I used some Little Hotties hand warmers in a wool sock. I wrapped the sock around the lens and it worked! The lens was kept warm enough to prevent dew from forming on the front element. These days I have an electric heater from Protage that plugs into any USB battery pack.

 

Nikon D800E with NIKKOR 14-24mm f/2.8 lens @ 14mm and f/2.8. This was before I knew about star stacking, so the sky is from a 25 second shot at ISO 3200. Today I use star stacking, a method for capturing pinpoint stars and processing the images to get very low noise. The foreground is from a 20 minute shot at ISO 1600. Both shots were taken on the same night in the same spot, without moving the tripod. They were prepped in Lightroom and blended in Photoshop to create an image that is well exposed, sharp, and with low noise from the foreground to the stars.

 

Visit my website to learn more about my photos and video tutorials: www.adamwoodworth.com

Once in BW architecture territory, just another one (but not as old as the previous ;)

I need to remember to sprinkle some architecture and urban detail into this stream from time to time... It's been a while :)

schöne türkis Töne über dem Funkturm sind nicht wiederzugeben

Photo exhibition Mendoza 2017

 

Horta's method for travel photography

 

The Horta's method uses photographic equipments that is highly portable, connectable and lightweight. In addition to the equipment, the method is based on the premises of contemporary digital photography and post processing.

 

Cropped cameras, carbon fiber tripods, jpeg pictures, relative perspective and post processing on the tablet or smartphones make this method simple and convenient for taking amazing shots in your trips.

 

I have a Challenge from now. I'll take fotos using equivalent modes (FF aperture DX lens) in my cropped Cam keeping recommended DOFs and sharpness of great photographers.

 

Hardware

Nikon D5600 (EXPEED4)

Nikkor 35mm f/1.8 G

Nikkor 18-140mm f/3.5-5.6G

Tokina 11-16 2.8 DX II

 

Software

Snapseed (Android App)

Gimp 2.9 + Nik Collection (PC)

 

If you are kind enough to comment on my images, I will always reciprocate and check-out your photostream.

 

If you like, please favorite it!

My eye through a modded Canon 35-80mm lens on a Canon 6d. editted on afterfocus Android app

All content posted in the Blogtrepreneur Flickr Photostream is available for use under the Creative Commons Attribution License.

 

Please provide attribution via a link to howtostartablogonline.net/android

 

You get convenient access to this free original image in exchange for a simple attribution.

 

Click to view all Blogtrepreneur Flickr Albums

Photo exhibition Mendoza 2017

 

Horta's method for travel photography

 

The Horta's method uses photographic equipments highly portable, connectable and lightweight. In addition to the equipments, the method is based on the premises of contemporary digital photography and post processing.

 

Cropped cameras, carbon fiber tripods, jpeg pictures, relative perspective and post processing on the tablet or smartphones make this method simple and convenient for taking amazing shots in your trips.

 

I have a Challenge from now. I'll take fotos using equivalent modes (FF aperture DX lens) in my cropped Cam keeping recommended DOFs and sharpness of great photographers.

 

Hardware

Nikon D5600 (EXPEED4)

Nikkor 35mm f/1.8 G

Nikkor 18-140mm f/3.5-5.6G

Tokina 11-16 2.8 DX II

 

Software

Snapseed (Android App)

 

If you like, please, favorite it and leave your comment!

More of the same - another 'art-sy' poster experiment with domestic still life, from the lockdown prison...

 

hamerguitars.com/

www.chorder.com/electric-guitars/hamer/studio-custom-3804

Woke up to this view from my hotel at last week's conference but by the afternoon the flock of white lambs in the sky morphed into a giant grizzly bear :(

Very tall. And some buttetcups. That's about all.

A mini-collection of Matchbox toys - or a collection of Mini-s;)

The #lamp in our front room. Edited in VSCO Android app and shot with Samsung Note 4.

 

License on PicFair - www.picfair.com/pics/21503222-lamp-light

Urban means elegance and good style.

 

Later it was combined with architecture and living in a city.

Taken with a Sony A68 and Sony/ Minolta AF 50mm f1.4 lens at f2.2 (it's the 2nd gen Minolta AF lens badged Sony). The shallow DOF you can see clearly at f2.2, never mind f1.4.

Flickr filter applied when uploaded to the Android app.

Photo taken with Camera360.

Edited with MIX by Camera360, then with Flickr Android App

I lived to take a sunrise shot! Thought I'd never get up this early (I'm a late night person) and I was very lucky to witness a very rare occurrence of that ball of light (known as the sun) in the usually grey English skies. Dirty window and train vibration didn't help great focus but there's always kitsch processing to cover this up, as the rare phenomenon was worth preserving...

I wanted to tell you this for a long time, actually.

  

Some thing, that some SL users don't know about, mostly new ones, I assume, is that there are many 3rd-party SecondLife viewers.

And "Black Dragon" is one of the best viewers that works for photography, in my opinion. Also, because it has its own built-in poser, which works with the entire bento skeleton, and therefore with classic taurs. (Classic as in 4 legs, and 2 arms.)

 

niranv-sl.blogspot.com/

  

For editing purposes, you might assume that I use Photoshop or any other similar program on PC.

But no!

I don't use Photoshop. I don't even use the PC, actually.

I'm actually using an Android app on my phone called "Polish".

Yes, you read right. I use my phone to edit and upload my pics. Hence, the lower resolution.

 

play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=photo.editor.photoe...

Illustration for iPhone / iPad / Android apps.

The theme of this voice picture book is "Orion and Scorpio" of Greek mythology.

 

www.100web.org/works_orion001.htm

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Photo captured with my HTC Evo 4G LTE smartphone and uploaded to Flickr via the Flickr Android app.

 

instagram.com/danpiraino

People reflected on sunglasses in Amsterdam. Taken with my HTC Desire using the Camera360 Android app.

 

The AmsterSam Summer Break continues...please do not leave your seat, do not open your safety belt...we will be back shorty to resume our operations...do not hang up, your call is important...do not open your safety belt...there is no need to panic, everything will be just fine&dandy...please remove all coins, keys and other loose items from your pockets...do not open your safety belt...keep breathing, keep calm, we are almost there...do not open your safety belt...this is for your own safety...we will serve beverages in a few minutes...do no open your safety belt...

  

Amsterdam photos

 

Wicked reflections

 

www.amstersam.com

 

'Like' me on Facebook :)

Test shot

with my smartphone

 

View On Black

 

flash disabled

the flower shows other colors - like the grand original flower

for me - the daffodil was was all yellow.

-

Settings:

1/17

ƒ/2.2

ISO 400

4.8 mm - 31 mm

Edited in the VSCO Android app.

 

Did philosophers all dress this casually? And did they look like body builders? Is that why philosophy made more sense in the ancient times?

 

“Masculine republics give way to feminine democracies, and feminine democracies give way to tyranny.”

 

Aristotle (384-322 BCE)

20 pictures stitched in a simple android app, all of the pictures were taken using sony nex 3 and Rokinon 85 f1.4

Panchirush – Android apps – Freehttps://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.ninja_egg.panchirush&hl=en

Action game app dodge girl kick.It dodges the kick kick-chan by operating the ninja egg.Well dodge and “Panchira” underwear can be seen!We compete for high...

 

jp-apps-dl.net/2016/01/02/panchirush-android-apps-free/

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