View allAll Photos Tagged COMPLEXITY

Hannover/Downtown,Germany

 

Homepage : www.blende9komma6.de

Apparent simplicity

Intricate workings

Underlying systems

Museo del Novecento (Milano, Italy)

chaos or complex order .. which.

An image of light travelling through glass - single exposure, no Photoshop.

some cables seen at Wissembourg, France

Canon EOS5, EF 17-40, Ektachrome100

Network for holding the sails on the Cutty Sark, Greenwich

Processed with VSCO with kp8 preset

August is the month for gorgeous Hydrangeas. Lace-cap varieties are outstanding for their complex blooms. I love their starry centers.

 

"Life is short. Buy the Hydrangea." ~ Anonymous

This Christmas bauble was hand beaded with sequins and pins by me. I have a Christmas tradition. I bead Christmas baubles for a select group of friends every year. In this case they are for a friend, who like me, elects red as her favourite colour, but also likes gold, white, black and silver accents for her tree.

 

Each bauble is 15 centimetres in diameter and contain hundreds of sequins, varying in number depending upon the complexity of the pattern and the type of sequins I use. Most sequins in this bauble are 5mm in diameter, except the snowflakes which are 12mm in diameter. Depending upon the colour of the sequin, I will use either a gold or a silver pin to attach it to the bauble.

 

These baubles are smaller than some others I do, however because it is a complex pattern which starts from the inside and is worked outwards in ever larger circles, each bauble takes approximately 2 to 2 1/2 hours per side.

 

It is however, a labour of love which I do to pass the time throughout the year.

even though my eyeballs were having soo much fun focusing on all of the gorgeous rides at the auto show i couldn't help but admire the amazing details of the ceiling in the convention center. the intricacies and colors had me looking up quite often :)

The immense complexity of Tokyo unfolds beneath a sky heavy with evening cloud from the vantage of the first deck of the Tokyo Skytree, Japan.

 

Our family had never visited Japan and we opted to stay for a week tacked on to a family visit to Hong Kong, splitting our time between the mountains near Nagano and the incredible human hive that is Tokyo. The Tokyo Skytree is the second highest building in the world and still quite a bit shorter than the Burj Khalifa in Dubai. My youngest son is oddly fascinated with the world's tallest buildings, so we made time to ride the ridiculously fast elevator up to the eyrie above the city. It ascends 350 vertical meters in approximately 50 ear-popping seconds. There is a shorter, faster-moving queue maintained for foreign tourists, which is a very thoughtful gesture. However, the crowds packing the observation deck make one feel as if bees actually have quite a spacious arrangement. On this particular evening, the full moon was rising on the eastern side of the tower and the sun was setting on the western side. I had thought to photograph both phenomena but this proved impossible as the humanity was so dense and viscous that I could not navigate from one side to the other quickly enough to capture both photographs.

 

It was difficult for me to comprehend the reality of this many people in the same place. As of 2014 Tokyo is the largest city in the world with over 38 million people calling the greater megalopolis home. That's over 2,600 people in every square kilometer. The numbers simply transcend meaning to my mind.

Complexity on a smaller scale

Leeds, West Yorkshire, England (UK).

 

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Nature, travel, photography: MY YOUTUBE CHANNEL

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Few days ago I went photowalking down the streets of Mong Kok (western part of Kowloon, Hong Kong) and I really loved the complexity of the details in some corners. In this one they were preparing for a flea market.

3 Square Blocks cut from The Middle Slice Inverted and then Composited

 

DSCN0412GPPc16x7.5mdlr180cSq(lft&mdl&rgt)3ExHDRCompo

 

For maximum effect, click the image, to go into the Lightbox, to view at the largest size; or, perhaps, by clicking the expansion arrows at top right of the page for a Full Screen view.

Don't use or reproduce this image on Websites/Blog or any other media without my explicit permission.

© All Rights Reserved - Jim Goodyear 2019.

 

www.flickriver.com/photos/unclebobjim/popular-interesting/

 

www.fotographicallyyours.com

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After a harrowing trip, never to be repeated, I am back in Lucca (Italy) and a new merry-go-round begins to spin

“Each snowflake, alone,

Impossibly intricate.

Yet snowfalls abound!”

—Ron Masters, Snowflake Haiku, ©️2021

 

What most people don’t realize is that the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics requires what we call complexity, because every little bit that happens results from the most likely process available to increase entropy (disorder) overall.

 

Single exposure, normal processing. Straight down, field of view maybe 2ft, 60cm. Happy Mono Monday!

25 Apr 2022; 10:15 CDT; >B&W

259;32;2

Soulis: Structural Complexity.

In a whimsical pose that belies the complexity of nature's balance, this jackdaw presents a study of poise and grace, perched on a single leg.

Complexity of humanity simply presented

I adore these passionflowers! They are so colorful and their complexity is astounding.

 

+1 in comments.

 

The shimmering colors visible in this NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image show off the remarkable complexity of the Twin Jet Nebula. The new image highlights the nebula’s shells and its knots of expanding gas in striking detail. Two iridescent lobes of material stretch outwards from a central star system. Within these lobes two huge jets of gas are streaming from the star system at speeds in excess of one million kilometers (621,400 miles) per hour.

 

Read more: go.nasa.gov/1hGASfl

 

Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, Acknowledgement: Judy Schmidt

 

NASA image use policy.

 

NASA Goddard Space Flight Center enables NASA’s mission through four scientific endeavors: Earth Science, Heliophysics, Solar System Exploration, and Astrophysics. Goddard plays a leading role in NASA’s accomplishments by contributing compelling scientific knowledge to advance the Agency’s mission.

 

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At the center of our being is a point of nothingness which is untouched by sin and by illusion, a point of pure truth,

a point or spark which is inaccessible to the fantasies of our own mind or the brutalities of our own will.

 

This little point of nothingness and of absolute poverty is like a pure diamond, blazing with the invisible light of heaven.

 

It is in everybody, and if we could see it we would see these billions of points of light coming together in the face and blaze of a sun that would make all the darkness and cruelty of life vanish completely.

-Thomas Merton

Uberfaff tonight and the thirst to paint is well and truly back now the darkness has returned.

CRT, Fibers, light pen and light blade.

Single long exposure light painting.

Nikon F3, Nikkor 50/1.4, Kodak UltraMax 400.

The sheer size and complexity is breathtaking.

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