View allAll Photos Tagged Cross
A beautiful, silver leafed Cross centered on a museum quality, textured, canvas frame that has been painted yellow and aged.
The Cross has been topped with my interpretation of Christ's Crown of Thorns, a vintage, ornate, drawer pull.
10x10x1.5
An illuminated cross near I-26. Some fog rolled through during the exposure, collecting the light as it passed.
Cross-view version.
Date: 2012 Jun 27
Location: Belgium, Oostrozebeke.
Camera - setup:
2 x D300 + beamsplitter
F18 ISO 200 1/250
2 Flashes via TTL signals X and Q set at 1/32 + 1/3 power.
Original Frame 80mm camera, stereobase 12mm, toe-in 12mm.
IR laser detection at 980 nm.
Shutter-lag 53 ms.
Setup version 2012:
The cross again. I like the way the rays of the setting sun are centred on the cross :)
I had to run through prickly bushes to get this shot!
Ina ad Vladi asked me to take their pictures in old Jaffa. We travelled all over the city, taken pictures with the sea at the background and others. It was fun, no hurry and no pressure.
This picture was taken on the way down tro the port (we wanted some sunset pics with boats....).
I sure hope all their life will be upstairs from now on.
Jaffa 2010
West Cross (early 10th Century) - is 6.5m high, making it the tallest high cross in Ireland.
Monasterboice was founded in the late 5th century by Saint Buite (or Buithe, who died around 521) a follower of Saint Patrick. It was an important religious centre until the establishment of nearby Mellifont Abbey by the Cistercians in 1142. The settlement was captured by invading Vikings in 968 AD, who were then comprehensively expelled by Donal, the Irish High King of Tara.
Discover Ireland
Jesus against the wall of Saint Aidan's Church on Holy Island. Eventhough I'm a devout atheist I always enjoy taking pictures of religious symbols, they're so photogenic.
"Dios Mio, Dios Mio, Por que me has abandonado"
"My God, My God, Why have you abandoned me?"
The Atacama desert in Northern Chile, one of the driest places on earth. I was here in 1999, and came back in 2010.
This place is magic.
All shot with a Sony Cybershot DSC-W320
This is a shot of author Pat McManus I shot earlier this spring. I StumbledUpon an online Photoshop CS3 tutorial recreating the Cross-Processing effect. Back in the days of film, chemistry was a big deal. Each individual film stock had precise chemistry and processing recipes that had to be followed to generate the desired look. Occasionally, photographers would have happy mistakes where they followed the wrong recipe for particular emulsion. Colors would shift dramatically, grain would enlarge.
This is my attempt at recreating the effect. I had to tweak the tutorial a little bit . I think it looks like a lot like The Matrix. I recreated a film frame too.
Cross-leaved Heath (Erica tetralix). Growing on the edge of a small bog on Whitwell Moor, South Yorkshire. OS grid reference SK254974.
El Cross de la Pedriza 2018 ha sido organizado por la RSEA Peñalara con la colaboración de la Federación Madrileña de Montañismo y el patrocinio de Outdoor Sin Límite y Ternua y ha sido la 4 y última prueba del circuito oficial madrileño de carreras por montaña.
3-D Cross-viewing Instructions.
Cross-viewing is the best way to view 3-D (in my humble opinion). It takes about 5 minutes on average to master this technique, but it is well worth it. After that it became effortless. Better than glasses because you lose none of the color. Here's how to do it...
1.Place the image in Figure 1 in the center of your screen.
2. Sit at your normal distance.
3. Slowly cross your eyes. You will see a double image.
4. Continue to cross until the middle two images overlap.
5. Adjust focus on middle image, keeping the two images overlapped.
6. You should see the image snap into perfect 3-D.