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Attribution: Smithsonian National Zoo

Transmission tower in Casselberry, Florida - May 30, 2019.

Ever get that feeling?

Fire Station Creative is home to over 30 artists, working in 20 studios. There are painters, printmakers, designers, jewellers, photographers, a textile designer, an upholsterer, an upcycler, an illustrator.

creative commons by marfis75

 

Twitter: @marfis75

 

License: cc-by-sa

you are free to share, adapt - attribution: Credits to "marfis75 on flickr"

"Multiple long exposure shot with camera rotation tool"

 

© All rights reserved

"Multiple long exposure shot with camera rotation tool"

 

© All rights reserved

These were all made using a photo I'd taken of Tokyo, blended with a free stock photo of jungle vegetation that I'd download on a Creative Commons licence.

 

This started as a view from a client's office in Nihombashi, looking towards the Sky Tree.

 

Photoshop's 'Neural Filters' are things I use on a daily basis - the skin smoothing in particular. But I hadn't really ever used any of the more 'creative' ones til recently.

 

Interesting experiment.

 

As AI gets cleverer, it really has improved Photoshop. I'm not one for massive edits or removing a lot of stuff from my photos. But just simple things like 'Content Aware Fill' and 'Sky Replacement' have become really, really smooth and clever.

  

The weather was not so helpful for landscape photography the last days here in the Netherlands. A lot of rainy days and overcast skies. As I didn't want to go far away but I still wanted to be productive I searched for locations nearby. While searching the web I discovered the Dutch professional photographer Lars van der Goor. He inspired me very much. He photographs a lot of forest scenes in beautiful light which he processes in a very moody, artistic way . Here's the link to his website: www.larsvandegoor.. Take the effort to explore his website, his work is really extraordinary.

 

Now I happen to live in a quiet place with quite a big forest just a few minutes away from home. Usually I don't visit the forest in the summer but only in autumn for the stunning autumn colors. But after seeing a few beautiful pictures of a summer forest I decided to give it a go. Because the sunrises and sunsets were clouded I went during the day at the moments that it didn't rain. To photograph under these circumstances (cloudy) the normal shots of the forest were not special enough in my opinion. I remembered some of the experimental and creative ways one can use his equipment to create different photos. Especially moving the camera while pressing the release button and zoombursts. It is very trial and error, lots of clicks for a succescul photo.

 

For this photo I choose to put a big tree at the foreground and after multiple tries I got this result which I find satisfying enough for these dreadful days. It might be a little bit over the top for some people but I quite like it as an occasional addition to my portfolio.

 

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PGB Photographer & Creative - © Philip Romeyn - Phillostar Gone Ballistic 2019

available now through Papaya Creative Abandon

I used spools of thread for the vases

Layers include a .jpg of the Google Earth generated globe which is inverted, stretched and manipulated in 3 other layers, ripples from an M. C. Escher print and a stunning photo by a Professor Andrew Davidhazy from Rochester, NY. described on a few of the 80, 000+ references to him on Google as modest, talented, a great teacher and a ghost expert for photography. I have just licensed my work on line with the Creative Commons. Their icon lets people know that they can use your work for non-commercial reasons if they attribute it to you; they can make derivatives but they have to share-alike. Of course the challenge with Goggle Images is some of the most striking images available are difficult to track down in terms of authorship because there are already so many derivatives. This was the case with this drop of water by this stellar professor who continues to do astounding work. I left a comment on his web blog but I re-entered it three times before I realized he had wisely included an administrator's block for unedited entries. It may take him ages to even check his comments. When he does he will find to his annoyance in his busy life, that I've inadvertently left three. As I do more research on simplifying the Creative Commons for the commoner I will be tracing this at my WordPress blog.

 

An Inuit friend reminded me that for the global perspective for many Inuit of Canada is from a circumpolar point of view. In honour of my Inuit friends and students from time to time I view the earth through their lens. So I have geotagged this to the north east of Baffin Island, perhaps somewhere near Pond Inlet. Hello to the family of Julia and Ernie! Their family photo with their children all wearing traditional clothing was taken when they visited you in Pond Inlet is on the walls of our home on Vancouver Island.

 

This image was reworked and uploaded to Flynn-Burhoe. 2007. "Ripple Effects: Wave Algorithm." Speechless.

 

I believe I uploaded this image to Flickr on October 22, 2006. By January 2009 25 people tagged this image as a favorite and it had been viewed 45,989 times. Because it was one of the earlier images I posted in my Flickr account, and since then I have continued to add more, once it hit the magic number of 200 images, this one and many others are no longer visible on my photostream. However, since it is well-tagged and has been highlighted and used by others through the Creative Commons Licensing, it is still being found through searches!

 

The more recent revised version is still available on my Flickr photostream.

 

I know a pro account would bring these missing images back into the photo stream, but I do not want to take the risk of album deletions, etc. And my cyber experiment has been with open source and free accounts.

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