View allAll Photos Tagged Closeup
Eats fish and shrimp. Flies over the water and plunges into it to catch its meal.
Gotta love that "hair doo".
I used the 50mm 1.8 lens for this one. Set the aperture to 1.8, but looking at it now I think setting it to 2.8 would have been better to get the whole object in focus.
As beautiful as the rhododendron is, going close reveals details that most of all reminds me of the Sand Worms of Dune (the flawed but interesting David Lynch movie version, that is)
See also Rhododenron Beauty.
closeup of 4-5 days' wind movement, from Helsinki
via sensors and Processing, into form
Wind movement measurement data (wind direction, velocity and temperature) was used to generate a 3d form, which was then cut out of wood.
( Digital wind meets wood :)
The wind line's direction is the compass direction of the wind, the wind's velocity is translated into the sculptural/formal wind line's direction. And, the wind's temperature is translated into the wind's height. The plateau represents 0°c. When the wind line is above, the temperature is somewhere above zero degrees, when the wind is cold, it digs into the wood surface.
The project is made possible via (Processing and) a kind cooperation between the Media Lab and School of Design/Paja (special thanks Hannu, the machine master!) Of the Helsinki Aalto University/Art & Design campus.
The data very generously comes from the Finnish Meteorological Institute's Testbed Helsinki Project.
Vidro, tecido preto por baixo, sala escura. Flash Canon SB 580 EX II com cabo extensor. O tecido usado não é o ideal, pois reflete um pouco de luz.
Nada criativo, já vi isso em outras galerias. E também não vou perguntar quem nasceu primeiro.
This photo was taken on a Canon 500D with a 70-300mm IS USM lens and a Canon 500D Close-up Lens Filter.
Closeup of a beautiful peacock with his feathers fanned.
Many of these photos are available on merchandise such as postcards, magnets, and coffee mugs on our web site, CaliforniaDreamsPhotography.
I was hoping that I wouldn't get stung but I wanted to see if this bee was so busy gathering that I could get away with a touch - I tapped his wing.
The garden is always a maze of webs at this time of year, but I swear the spiders get bigger every year...
Eventually I will use dried moss and green landscaping ballast to make it look like a grassy hilltop, this is the undercoat.