View allAll Photos Tagged Closeup

Closeup on the abandoned hospital bed.

Processed in Lightroom.

Closeup of Zophia's kitty hat.

Sony closeup lens, up close.

Self portrait and closeup of top and necklace

These bubbles had staying power.

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 young Black Bear (Ursus americanus), Northern Minnesota.

 

A closeup of the little circular pond which has a single-jet fountain, and the putties that adorn the steps.

November 2, 2007 Magdeburg Cathedral, Magedeburg, Germany

 

attempt to show some of the detail on this closeup. Notice the edge of his hat, his curled hair. He has square wooden buttons on his shirt - and what appears to be embroidery along the neckline and down the chest. There's the ridging on that collar and the draping at the puffed sleeves. Around him you can see the vine detail of the arch, the cherub above him with detailed feathering on the wings, and must how deeply he was carved into the stone.

 

I wonder how long it took a stone carver to do this- all by hand.....

Closeup of her face.

Close-up of a dead frozen Bee

If you're wondering, I made the eye chip.

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.

    

From the butterfly room at the museum.

Taken with a Canon EOS 7D and Canon EF 100-400 L IS

 

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission.

This is what happens when you shine a flash into a dog's eyes.

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