View allAll Photos Tagged Contour
This could be a farm filed anywhere in the world, but it happens to be on a secondary highway we were using to travel from Le Mans to Paris. The weather was not exactly the best, but it does have a winter vibe to it. For 118 pictures in 2018, #55, "Contours".
Just one example of the crazily contoured sandstone found at the White Pocket in Arizona's Vermillion Cliffs National Monument.
I took this picture of my son a few years ago. When I stumbled across a scheme for making contours (basically, it's an edge detection of the posterized image superimposed on the original image), I tried it on all kinds of pictures, but this is one of the few (maybe the only one) where I've been happy with the result. Ok, the colors are a little extreme... -- I was reminded of it by the easter flowers that fizzix posted recently.
Contour
Model: 2017 Squier Contemporary Strat HH
Canon M3
Konica Hexanon AR 40mm f/1.8
Fotodiox Adapter
1/50th sec
f/1.8
iso 400
8/100 The light and the shadow
Explored position #7 27-04-2010
En esta imagen he intentado sacar el contorno de mi silueta, el efecto me ha gustado, me recuerda a la peli Sin City.
Strobist info
- Nikon SB600 a la izquierda, pero por detrás de mí a 1/32 de potencia y 85 mm de zoom, apuntando a mi espalda
- Yongnuo Speedlite YN460 a 1/32 de potencia a través de un snoot de 25 cm, coloacado en la misma posición que el otro flash, pero más abajo.
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.
I was naked when I took this picture,so for me its a portrail of self identity, the mirror is a symbol of self reflection in a concious manner and I follow the conour of the mirror as an overall belief in who I am and where Im at in life. In control.
This photo was taken on top of Buachaille Etive Beag in Glencoe, Scotland. In the far distance on the right is the lonely mountain, Schiehallion - which translates into The English as 'the Fairy Hill of the Caledonians'. In 1774, the first experiment to measure the weight of the Earth was conducted on Schiehallion by Charles Mason. He was assisted in the task by the mathematician Charles Hutton, who devised a graphical system to represent large volumes of surveyed heights, known as contour lines. When hill walkers, or anyone looks at a map with contour lines - this is where it all began - on a Fairy Hill in the remote Highlands of Scotland.
Oil and water on glass with food dye. The grid beneath the glass reveals the distortion due to differences in surface tension between oil and water.
After first section of ascent from Kleine Scheidegg we joined a wonderful contouring path...with superb views.
3 of 5, it would appear that had they added some fill the tracks could have been much straighter at this location. I am sure however that there was much more to it than my simple statement. In any event it makes for an interesting perspective as the track really follow the contours of Turnagain Arm.
Pebbles, sand and the rings left by evaporated sea water enhance the concave contours in the coastal rock.
taken very close to the peak of Point Reyes Headland itself
because of the heavy rains and mountain snowfalls in California earlier this year, many more wildflowers were in bloom than usual
55/118 Contours
For six word story.
Taken in Orange County, California. © 2018 All Rights Reserved.
My images are not to be used, copied, edited, or blogged without my explicit permission.
Please!! NO Glittery Awards or Large Graphics...Buddy Icons are OK. Thank You!
Many thanks for every kind comment, fave, your encouraging words, and the inspiration of your fine photography, my Flickr friends! You make my day every day!
Warsaw, Poland
Summer 2018
The sound of rain pattering against the metal hood of a car is at once eerily appealing and intensely grating and somehow calls to mind images of doom. I am not sure where that comes from, but having grown up in Seattle, one could surmise that I am sufficiently scarred by it.
Erik Witsoe | Facebook | Medium | 500px | Twitter | Instagram | Flickr
Fuji X-Pro3. Normally, and I am aware that I am describing a problem, I would edit my images with an emphasis on sharpness and contour. What I am learning is that my 'normality' is what to somebody else is 'illness'. Makes me think.