View allAll Photos Tagged Backlight
Garzetta nella Laguna di Orbetello - Maremma Toscana
All rights reserved - copyright © Giancarlo Gabbrielli
Backlit at Chester Cathedral such a lovely place of quiet and an incredible atmosphere especially when the sun was shining. Just looked up this plant I think its Garrya elliptica good wall shrub apparently. It looked stunning especially from below with the sun behind it.
As this month's challenge is about backlighting, I thought I would show one way I used backlighting for effect at the Murwillumbah Country Roots festival last year. Lighting at concerts is always difficult, but I noticed how the yellow light gave a nice golden glow around the head of the singer. I did take quite a few photos to get this one, as the lights were changing position as well as the singer. Notice how the golden glow of the light "shines through" the hair and illuminates the outline of the body.
The warm backlight of the sun on a late fall day.
My Insta: www.instagram.com/mathias_leon_
© Mathias Leon Fischer
Although the seashore is most commonly associated with the word beach, beaches are found by lakes and alongside large rivers, as well as by the sea or oceans.
Beach may refer to:
small systems where rock material moves onshore, offshore, or alongshore by the forces of waves and currents; or
geological units of considerable size.
The former are described in detail below; the larger geological units are discussed elsewhere under bars.
There are several conspicuous parts to a beach which relate to the processes that form and shape it. The part mostly above water (depending upon tide), and more or less actively influenced by the waves at some point in the tide, is termed the beach berm. The berm is the deposit of material comprising the active shoreline. The berm has a crest (top) and a face — the latter being the slope leading down towards the water from the crest. At the very bottom of the face, there may be a trough, and further seaward one or more long shore bars: slightly raised, underwater embankments formed where the waves first start to break.
The sand deposit may extend well inland from the berm crest, where there may be evidence of one or more older crests (the storm beach) resulting from very large storm waves and beyond the influence of the normal waves. At some point the influence of the waves (even storm waves) on the material comprising the beach stops, and if the particles are small enough (sand size or smaller), winds shape the feature. Where wind is the force distributing the grains inland, the deposit behind the beach becomes a dune.
These geomorphic features compose what is called the beach profile. The beach profile changes seasonally due to the change in wave energy experienced during summer and winter months. The beach profile is higher during the summer due to the gentle wave action during this season. The lower energy waves deposit sediment on the beach berm and dune, adding to the beach profile. Conversely, the beach profile is lower in the winter due to the increased wave energy associated with storms. Higher energy waves erode sediment from the beach berm and dune, and deposit it off shore, forming longshore bars. The removal of sediment from the beach berm and dune decreases the beach profile.
The line between beach and dune is difficult to define in the field. Over any significant period of time, sand is always being exchanged between them. The drift line (the high point of material deposited by waves) is one potential demarcation. This would be the point at which significant wind movement of sand could occur, since the normal waves do not wet the sand beyond this area. However, the drift line is likely to move inland under assault by storm waves.
another for the #livingthedreamgarden collection.
posted from the HP PC and also posted to Instagram using the HP to get more resolution
from C:\Users\Bill Crowle\Pictures\2022\09 Sep 25 Garden
#3044 - 2016 Day 122: I often find myself with audiences and coaching groups talking about the ideal light for floral photography. Usually it is an even cloudy-bright; but when the sun shines, it is not possible to beat natural backlighting like this.
Olympus mju 9010 - f/3.9 - 1/560sec - 7mm - ISO 64
- Dandelion with aureole in backlight
- paardenbloem met stralenkrans in tegenlicht
Backlight brings out the delicate veins in the Bougainvillea petals. Canon 135, f/2 lens on Canon 77D via Fotodiox Pro extension tube.
Day 200 and I seem to be in a bit of a rut. Today is the closest I've come to not posting anything and I had to resort to editing a reject image from a few months ago. Hopefully I'll re-find my mojo soon.
Model: Katerina
Photo: Thomas Ohlsson Photography
www.thomasohlsson.com | 500px | Facebook | Flickr | Instagram
Our stalwart young japanese maple made it through the snowstorm unbowed, unlike so many other trees, including its siblings.
バラ園に行ってきました。
時間と共に、光が変わり、同じ花も違う表情を見せてくれました。
I went to the rose garden.
With time, light changed, and the same flower showed a different expression, too.
Flickrの使い方に無知です。
新たな項目を見つけては、ふむふむと納得する私です。少し自分のやり方を変えてみようと思います。
I apologize for the fact that I give hardly no comments on your pictures , it seems a "hit-and-go" action of my hand. Business success often brings extra work ;-))
I will make it up to you, I promise !!!
Camera: SONY DSLR-A200
Exposure: 0.003 sec (1/320)
Aperture: f/20.0
Focal Length: 160 mm
ISO Speed: 100