View allAll Photos Tagged DETAILED
Detailed close-up of this nectar-eater from the southern part of the continent. Taken on Phillip Island, last year.
PENTAX K-1 • FF Pixel Shift Mode • 100 ISO • Irix Blackstone 15mm F2.4
Gips Veier
Steesel • Luxembourg
Detailed ceiling of Maniden Hall, located in Daisho-in Temple area on Miyajima Island. I remember already being tired on a hot spring day, but little did I know that there was still Mount Misen to climb on that day.
Detailed interior with lighting from LifeLites, Rob is the best, he always comes through to make my builds just POP!!!
These are all the detailed commons and Rare items of the pack that will be available from September 1st in a new round of The Arcade
maps.secondlife.com/second.../The%20Arcade/70/131/32
The information of the pack is the following:
1. Sofa: 1 Sofa animated via menu with cats and 3 poses (rez)
2. Puddle : 3 static funny poses falling in a puddle (rez)
3. Trolley: 1 static pose with Trolley and 2 animations wearable with ao with a trolley (wear)
4. Rainy day: 3 static poses with dog and umbrella (wear)
5. Basket: 3 basketball animations wearable with ao and decorative Basketball hoop (wear)
6. Dog: 3 static poses with dog (wear)
7. Cats: 3 static poses with a cat each (wear)
8. Pool Jump : 3 static poses with a pool (rez) There are included the 3 poses to use with friends
9. Cats : 3 animated poses with a couple of cats each, wearable with AO (wear)
10. Camera: 3 static poses with camera (wear)
11. The Desert RARE : The rare item is made up of several items. A scene that is a completely decorated road. A car that includes 4 static poses. Some suitcases with 3 static poses hitchhiking. A fence with 4 static poses waiting. A mud puddle with 3 static running poses and a running animation. A total of 15 poses and a scene to create incredible summer stories!
part of 'The Third Millennial Cross'
DSC_0260
For maximum effect, click the image, to go into the Lightbox, to view at the largest size; or, perhaps, by clicking the expansion arrows at top right of the page for a Full Screen view.
Don't use or reproduce this image on Websites/Blog or any other media without my explicit permission.
© All Rights Reserved - Jim Goodyear 2018.
Paddyfield Warbler (Acrocephalus agricola) captured at Borit, Gojal, Gilgit-Baltistan, Pakistan with Canon EOS 7D Mark II.
For detailed information about Birds of Gilgit-Baltistan visit www.birdsofgilgit.com
Had to share this one with you all because I just loved the shape of the eyes. Its so cool how the macro lense opens up a whole new world of shapes and details.
Hope you like it as much as I do.
something i don't do often. put the camera on a tripod and shoot a long shutter speed shot for full depth of field.
A pair of satellites criss-cross Aquila in this 92 second exposure at f/3.2 using the Pentax K-5 and 16mm f/2 Samyang lens.
It’s hard to beat dark, clear nights and a sharp lens for capturing the non-starry details of the Milky Way’s dust lanes and dark nebulae. The night that I photographed this scene, in late July of this year, was one of those times, and the Sigma 35 mm lens that I had mounted on my camera was the perfect tool to make the most of it.
Of course, the brightness of the massive conglomeration of stars that makes up the Milky Way’s galactic core shows up well in such a photo, but that’s not what my eyes were first drawn to when I saw this image come together. Those dark features hide estimated millions of stars (billions?), which makes me wonder how bright the sky would look should the dust and gas somehow drift off into the wider universe.
The planets Jupiter and Saturn are glowing to the upper-left of the Milky Way, and I caught the Southern Cross and several other familiar features in the lower half of the image. The lights on the horizon are those of coastal towns that are over 30 km distant from the rocky beach and headland at Gerroa, Australia, the location where I captured this scene.
This style of image is a called a vertical panorama (or “vertical pano”) that I created by shooting twenty single frames, in two columns that each contain ten photos. These individual images were then blended–“stitched”–to make the final image. I captured each of the twenty single shots using my Canon EOS 6D Mk II camera, a Sigma 35mm f/1.4 Art lens @ f/2.8, using an exposure time of 13 seconds @ ISO 6400.
With apologies for the long-deceased knight whose tomb recess i was cramped into to get this shot. The intricately carved head was part of the cusped detail framing his effigy and the view from within was of the light drenched Quire of Exeter's Cathedral. Rather pleased with this perspective for all the contortions required in getting it.
Also had to do some cloning to omit an irritation fluorescent lighting strip hidden just inside the tomb recess, presumably from some ill-conceived scheme to illuminate the sculpture. Worked out well though.
This finely detailed image shows the heart of NGC 1097, a barred spiral galaxy that lies about 48 million light-years from Earth in the constellation Fornax. This picture reveals the intricacy of the web of stars and dust at NGC 1097’s center, with the long tendrils of dust seen in a dark red hue. We can see this intricate structure thanks to two instruments on the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope: the Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) and the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS).
The idea that two different cameras can take a single image is not very intuitive. However, it makes far more sense after delving into how beautiful astronomical images like this are composed. Our eyes can detect light waves at optical wavelengths between roughly 380 and 750 nanometers, using three types of receptors, each of which is sensitive to just a slice of that range. Our brain interprets these specific wavelengths as colors. By contrast, a telescope camera like the WFC3 or ACS is sensitive to a single, broad range of wavelengths to maximize the amount of light collected. Raw images from telescopes are always in grayscale, only showing the amount of the light captured across all those wavelengths.
Color images from telescopes are created with the help of filters. By sliding a filter over the aperture of an instrument like the WFC3 or ACS, only light from a very specific wavelength range passes through. One such filter used in this image is for green light around 555 nanometers. This yields a grayscale image showing only the amount of light with that wavelength, allowing astronomers to add color when processing the image. This multicolor image of NGC 1097 is composed of images using seven different filters in total.
Text credit: European Space Agency (ESA)
Image credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, D. Sand, K. Sheth
For more information: www.nasa.gov/image-feature/goddard/2002/hubble-sees-the-e...
BRAZILIAN RABBIT Sylvilagus brasilensis. This Brazilian Rabbit was one of several seen foraging in the grass of the paramo at an altitude of about 4,000 meters (13,123 feet) near the Laguna de la Mica at Volcán Antisana east of Quito in northern Ecuador at 1:41 PM on January 28, 2017.
Sylvilagus brasilensis has several common names, including Brazilian Rabbit and Forest Rabbit. It is widely distributed, occurring from southern Mexico south through Central America to Perú, Bolivia, southern Brazil, Paraguay and northern Argentina. It belongs to the family Leporidae in the order Lagomorpha.
This site, at an altitude of about 4,000 meters [13,123 feet], is close to the magnificent, immense snow and ice covered Antisana volcanic cone.
Un Conejo de Páramo Sylvilagus brasilensis se vío junto con otros conejos comiendo pasto en el páramo cerca de la Laguna de la Mica a una altura de aproximadamente 4, 000 metros por el Volcán Antisana al este de Quito en el norte de Ecuador a la 1 y 41 de la tarde del 28 de enero de 2017.
Sylvilagus brasilensis tiene muchos nombres comunes, incluso Tapeti, Conejo Silvestre, Conejo Brasileño, Conejo de Páramo, y Conejo de Bosque.
For OPTIMAL DETAILED VIEWING of this Brazilian Rabbit, VIEW AT THE GIANT SIZE (2451 x 1500) using the direct Flickr link: www.flickr.com/photos/neotropical_birds_mayan_ruins/33704...
Detailed view of the early medieval spire of Aachen Cathedral.
this days: 40 years UNESCO World Heritage.
Alora Stompers
Detailed platform stomps with legwarmers, straps, and layered garter socks.
Available in 8 single variations. Fatpack includes exclusive textures and full HUD for top sock, middle sock, legwarmer, metals, and shoe/straps.
Rigged for Legacy/Legacy Maze, Reborn/Reborn Maze, Lara X/Lara X Maze
Event opens today
Demo available
Hope you enjoy
<3
TP: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Liberty%20City/81/134/32
Mainstore: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Baja%20Sands/199/127/25
Orthetrum cancellatum (Große Blaupfeil)
A little closer to show the various individual structure of the wing!
21 natural light images stacked in Zerene Stacker,
1/5 sec. ƒ/5.6 ISO 100 at 2x macromagnification
Canon EOS 5D Mark II,
Canon MP-E 65mm f/2.8 1-5x Macro Lens
Wings over Illawarra 2019, The first air show for the Sony RX10MkIV with heat haze a bit of an issue during the morning I have to say I'm pretty impressed with the performance from this all in one.
PENTAX K-1 • Crop Mode • Pixel Shift • 100 ISO • Pentax DA 10-17mm F3.5-4.5 fisheye
Pixel Shift
Bouillon • Ardennes • Belgium
Captured this detailed milky way core directly above my campsite in Sumbawa island, NTB, Indonesia
To sleep without a tent on a ground and enjoy this all night long...true privilege
Can't wait for a milky way season to begin again
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Detailed photo of Mount Lewis. Mount Lewis is a 12,350-foot-elevation mountain summit located along the crest of the Sierra Nevada mountain range, in Mono County of northern California, United States. It is situated in the Ansel Adams Wilderness, on land managed by Inyo National Forest. Wikipedia