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New leaves of the King Fern (Angiopteris evecta). The King Fern is also called the Giant Fern. The fronds of the King Fern, as can be imagined, are massive, over five metres long, arching and semi-weeping. These fronds are the largest in the world. Their enormous size means they have to live in very wet areas to retain turgor to keep their fronds erect. This plant is very restricted in where it can live, which is usually only near waterfalls, along creeks and in gullies in well-developed rainforest. @Hershey Gardens

This is developed in DDG with the T2D tool using the sunset image I posted yesterday as a base. No further edits.

As you can see the structure of the image is almost identical. This is an impasto palette knife version with the emphasis on the light reflections and flaming colors. To me this is a lot more alike to what I saw than the camera image. The sky was ablaze!

 

I have developed a deep respect for animals. I consider them fellow living creatures with certain rights that should not be violated any more than those of humans :-)

Jimmy Stewart

 

HGGT!!

 

camellia, sarah p duke gardens, duke university, durham, north carolina

Developed using darktable 3.6.0

A close-up of sweet corn on a picnic table ready to husk.

 

Developed with Darktable 3.6.0.

Rolleiflex T

Ilford Delta400

Adox FX-39II 1+19/18:30Min.

camera scan

Fuji X-Pro 2

Micro-Nikkor-PC Auto 55mmF3.5

Valoi 360

NegativeLabPro

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Element/190/32/26

 

Summer of 42 is a coming-of-age film based on memoirs. During summer vacation on Nantucket Island in 1942, a youth eagerly awaiting his first sexual encounter finds himself developing an innocent love for a young woman awaiting news on her soldier husband's fate in WWII. In everyone's life, there's a summer of 42.

  

 

when you get old, people won't think you're going gaga :-)

David Ogilvy

  

HMM! HPPT!!

 

Loebner magnolia, 'Leonard Messel', sarah p duke gardens, duke university, durham, north carolina

A yellow zinnia photographed at the Altoona Enabling Garden in Altoona, Iowa. #AltoonaEnablingGarden

 

Developed with Darktable 3.6.0

Developed with Darktable 3.6.0.

Developed with Darktable 3.6.0.

On a recent trip to the Grand Tetons while shooting with Adrian Klein, we rarely saw the sun. One very calm morning I spent some time out at Leigh Lake and some great clouds developed over Mt. Moran. I know there is a bit of distortion that might bug some people, but it doesn't bother me much. If I knew a good way to fix it I might, but whenever I try, I loose quite a bit of quality (using the lens correction/vertical perspective).

Thanks for looking! Chip

  

Due to more strict enforcement of their rules, Flickr has asked me and many others to take down info such as links to personal websites and workshop information. However, it is still allowed to have such information in one's Flickr Profile.

Japanese rock gardens (枯山水) developed closely with Zen Buddhism in the Muromachi Period (室町時代 14th - 16th century) departing from the Chinese influence. Rock gardens were the places for meditation.

 

Originally, gardens were designed to symbolise Ho(u)raisan (蓬莱山), which is a mythical island mountain in the sea inhabited by immortals. It is like a Taoism version of paradise. The mountain was made by a stonework while the sea by a pond. It was a Japanese invention to substitute the expanse of white sand for the water. This kind of metaphoric technic is called Mitate (見立て), which is a key word not only for gardening but also for Japanese arts in general.

 

In the Azuchi Momoyama Period (安土桃山時代 16th century), gardens came to be built in castles, and in the Edo Period (江戸時代 17th to 19th century) in private residences as well. As the travel became easier, Mitate of famous landscapes such Mt. Fuji, Miyajima, Yoshinoyama, Wakanoura etc. became popular. Themes of gardens shifted from religious symbolism to secular symbolism.

 

The rock garden in Gyokudo Art Museum symbolises the flow of the Tamagawa according to the museum website. The rocks in the garden are apparently brought from the real Tamagawa just outside.

film: FP4

develop: Caffenol C-L Salty stand

cam: Rolleicord IV

place: near the sea

"The line_up is a paperwork series I developed in 2010, the “liners” are made out of paper (Din A4) ,

oil paint and graphite, the theme is the hermetical laws of polarity and movement. There is no ending and no beginning in any direction, just an endless movement. You have the possibility to arrange the papers like you want and that makes it an endless playground for my photo-work and the eyes of the viewers."

Yanomano

  

Hi, Me again...

 

In April 2021, I received my first 35mm as a gift from a fellow photography enthusiast. I seriously had no idea what I was doing but I immeditely knew I enjoyed it. The sound alone was enough to give me shivers!! Since then, I have shot a few rolls of film, find myself in possession of 5 new cameras, managed to process 2 rolls at home, 'scan', and now I'm ready to put them out there.

 

I don't ever profess to be a perfect photographer. If fact, I'm usually incredibly insecure. Digital photography always had me seeking perfection. It is silly because life isn't perfect, but regardless, I feared things like proper exposure and unconventional subjects. (Yes....insert eye roll here!)

 

The thing about film though, it has given me freedom it be imperfect, appreciate 'flaws' and embrace everyday life in an authentic and unpolished way. Film has given me permission to love the imperfect and see it for all its beauty. Also, the fact that my hands are on it from start to finish....well that... that alone gives me immense satisfaction.

 

So.....I'm saying be ready for the perfectly imperfect. And just to prove it...I resisted the urge to edit out my chicken pox scars. :-) I'm going to be brave and start sharing what I've been working on and what I love.

 

Here goes....

  

**

  

Nikon FM10 | Ilford HP5 400

 

Digitized with Sony A7riii | Skier Sunray Copy Box 3 | 135 Skier Sunray Film Holder

 

Home developed in Cinestill Monobath | 3 min, 80 F

 

Negative Lab Pro v2.2.0 | Color Model: B+W | Pre-Sat: 3 | Tone Profile: LAB - Standard | WB: Auto-Neutral | LUT: Frontier

raw file developed with LR6, final conversion with PS6

Irix Dragonfly 150mm f/2.8 macro, developed in Affinity

Great Egrets develop fancy plumes when they are in breeding plumage and seem to be quite famous for that but their lores also change color from yellow to a lime green and the top mandible turning very dark. With the lores being so colorful during courtship the eyes seem to look even paler than normal.

 

Fish are a dietary staple, but great egrets use similar techniques to eat amphibians, reptiles, mice, and other small animals. These birds nest in trees, near water and gather in groups called colonies, which may include other heron or egret species.

 

I found this one in the early stages of changing to the breeding colors and plumage along Joe Overstreet Road as it was catching a Catfish for breakfast.

Nikon FM10 | Ilford HP5 400

 

Digitized with Sony A7riii | Skier Sunray Copy Box 3

 

Home developed in Cinestill Monobath | 3:30, 80 F

 

Negative Lab Pro v2.2.0 | Color Model: B+W | Pre-Sat: 3 | Tone Profile: LAB - Standard | WB: Auto-Neutral | LUT: Frontier

Praktisix II

Flektogon 50mm F4.0

 

Kodak Tmax 100

HC110 Develop 6mins

 

© All Rights Reserved

Sinar F 4x5 camera

Schneider 150mm F5.6

Adapter to middle format using Film Kodak Tmax 100 (very bad quality)

Develop - Rodinal (1+50) 15:30min (20C)

16.25min (17.5C)

Fix 1:4 10 mins !!!!

 

© All Rights Reserved

Die Rappbodetalsperre im Landkreis Harz in Sachsen-Anhalt nahe Oberharz am Brocken verbindet nicht nur ein Wasserkraftwerk, einen Stausee und eine Talsperre miteinander. Bei der Staumauer, die 106 Meter hoch ist, gilt sie als das höchste Exemplar ihrer Art in Deutschland. Auch der Stausee, der sich aus der Anlage bildet, ist der größte Stausee, den der Harz zu bieten hat.

 

Während die Anlage und Umgebung selbst bereits einen Besuch wert sind, hat sich mit dem Freizeitpark Harzdrenalin in den letzten Jahren ein beliebter Ausflugsort entwickelt, der Besucher zu ganz besonderen Aktivitäten rund um die Talsperre einlädt.

harzspots.com/erkunden/ausflugsziele/spot/rappbodetalsperre/

The Rappbode Dam in the Harz district in Saxony-Anhalt near Oberharz am Brocken not only connects a hydroelectric power station, a reservoir and a dam. With its 106-meter-high dam wall, it is considered the highest example of its kind in Germany. The reservoir that forms from the facility is also the largest reservoir that the Harz has to offer.

 

While the facility and the surrounding area are worth a visit in themselves, the Harzdrenalin leisure park has developed into a popular excursion destination in recent years, inviting visitors to take part in very special activities around the dam.

Developed with Darktable 3.6.0.

4x5 dagor gold lim 150mm Kodak tmax100 1:4 developed tmax-D

[Kunst]: Duncan Glasses

[Kunst] Mainstore: Teleport

[Ana Poses]: Bronte Poses

[Bolson]: Levi Tattoo

[Cordewa]: Male Rex Pants

[No Fake]: Arrow Proof Necklace

 

Above available at TMD Teleport

 

[Blaink]: Darkroom backdrop

available at

[Blaink] Mainstore: Teleport

Today's forms of money have developed from primitive money, e.g. B. mussels or rice, which were accepted as a means of exchange in business life. Money initially belonged to the cultic and legal sphere and referred to "that with which one can repay or pay penance and sacrifices". Only after the 14th century did it assume its current meaning as a "coined currency". From the middle of the 19th century, the gold standard existed in many countries, promising the exchange of legal tender (coins, banknotes) for a fixed amount of gold. By the 1930s almost all major states had abandoned the gold standard. Instead of such a standard, monetary policy measures were taken by the central banks to ensure price stability.

 

Partial excerpt from: (de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geld#Etymologie)

 

Geld, auch benannt als:

Cash (englisch für „Bargeld“)

Kies (jiddisch kis, „Geldbeutel“)

Mäuse (jiddisch meus, „Geld“)

Moneten (lateinisch moneta, „Münze“; vgl. engl. money)

Moos (jiddisch und rotwelsch moos, mous (Plural), „Geld“)

Penunze (berlinisch Penunse, von polnisch pieniądze, aus dem Westgermanischen, verwandt mit althochdeutsch pfenning)

Zaster (rotwelsch saster, „Eisen“)

Kohle

Asche

Pulver (gemeint ist Zündpulver; vgl. sein Geld verpulvern, veraltet: verzünden)

Kröten, Mücken

 

Entwickelt haben sich die heutigen Geldformen aus Primitivgeld, z. B. Muscheln oder Reis, die im Geschäftsleben als Tauschmittel akzeptiert wurden. Geld gehörte anfangs zur kultischen und rechtlichen Sphäre und bezeichnete „das, womit man Buße und Opfer erstatten bzw. entrichten kann“. Erst nach dem 14. Jahrhundert nahm es seine aktuelle Bedeutung als „geprägtes Zahlungsmittel“ an. Ab Mitte des 19. Jahrhunderts existierte in vielen Ländern der Goldstandard, bei dem der Umtausch von gesetzlichen Zahlungsmitteln (Münzen, Banknoten) in eine feststehende Menge Gold versprochen wurde. Um 1930 haben fast alle größeren Staaten den Goldstandard aufgegeben. An die Stelle eines solchen Standards traten geldpolitische Maßnahmen der Notenbanken, die eine Preisniveaustabilität sicherstellen sollten.

 

Teilweise Auszug aus: de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geld#Etymologie

 

All my photographs are © Copyrighted and All Rights Reserved. None of these photos may be reproduced and/or used in any form of publication, print or the Internet without my written permission.

 

Voigtlander 35mm 1.7 Ultron Aspherical VM, Developed in Affinity Photo

Developed using darktable 3.0.0

Madrid in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, United States. It is part of the Santa Fe, New Mexico Metropolitan Statistical Area. The population was 149 at the 2000 census and 204 in 2010. Today, Madrid has become an artists' community with galleries lining New Mexico State Road 14 (the Turquoise Trail). It retains remnants of its history with the Mineshaft Tavern and the Coal Mine Museum.

Lead mines in the area around Madrid captured the interest of Roque Madrid in the 17th century. It is unclear whether the current name of the community comes from that of earlier residents or the capital of Spain. The dominant English pronunciation of the name differs from that of the Spanish capital, with emphasis on the first syllable: MAD-rid. Coal mining began in the area around 1835.

Anthracite coal breaker and power house buildings, Madrid, circa 1935. Anthracite coal was preferred for passenger trains, as it burned cleaner.

The coal deposits were called the Cerrillos Coal Bank following the arrival in early 1880 of the New Mexico & Southern Pacific Railroad (as the AT&SF in New Mexico was organized), named after the nearby mining and railroad town of Cerrillos Station. After a dozen years at the Coal Bank of wildcat, unpermitted, and unorganized mining the AT&SF acquired the property on December 10, 1891, and through purposefully-created subsidiaries solidified its control. The Cerrillos Coal & Iron Co. developed the layout for the town, mines, and facilities, and the Cerrillos Coal Railroad Co. built the 6.25 mi standard gauge spur from the AT&SF main line at Waldo Junction.

In late August 1892, the spur finally terminated at the relatively new mining camp of Keeseeville (an illegal trespass settlement, however one whose 20-acre plat had been approved by Santa Fe County). At the site of Keeseeville, which the Cerrillos Coal Railroad co-opted, the town of Madrid was built. More accurately the Cerrillos Coal Railroad transported-in, section by section, prefabricated wooden miner's cabins from as far away as Topeka, Kansas; there were insufficient carpenters and suppliers in the region to provide the instant infrastructure that was needed for the town.

Madrid celebrated its "founding" in 1895. Since the town was for the next 80 years wholly owned by a series of corporations, the town itself was never incorporated. In the late 1940s, the demand for coal withered: Natural gas gradually replaced coal as the preferred home-heating fuel, and the AT&SF was replacing its coal-fired steam locomotives with diesel-electrics. By 1954 the Albuquerque and Cerrillos Coal Company ceased to operate and most of the residents moved away. The railroad spur was removed shortly thereafter.

film: HP5

develop: Caffenol C-L, Salty coffee stand

cam: Rolleicord IV

A serene photo of the wetlands at the Seedskadee National Wildlife Refuge. This is a very quiet and peaceful oasis, smack in the middle of the harsh prairie in western Sweetwater County, Wyoming. Had we got here early in the morning, we might have seen more wildlife than the two ducks that I scared away when I stopped the car.

.

Developed with Darktable 4.8.0.

 

Racing Homers are a result of careful selective breeding from various types of homing pigeons. They’re trained to return to their home lofts over long distances, sometimes hundreds of miles, and the fastest bird wins.

 

Speed & Stamina: These birds can fly 50-60 mph and travel up to 600-700 miles in a day.

 

Homing Instinct: They have an innate ability to navigate back to their loft using the Earth’s magnetic field, sun positioning, and possibly even scent.

 

Intelligence: They can learn routes, respond to training, and develop strong bonds with their home and trainer.

  

Developed with Darktable 3.6.0

Developing storm Grantville showing low tide and mud flats

Panorama from the ghost town of Robsart, Saskatchewan. Shot with my Mamiya 7ii and 35mm panoramic adapter kit.

 

Robsart, Saskatchewan, Canada

 

Mamiya 7ii

NoColorStudio No.25

Dev; Adox D-76

 

Developed and scanned at home

rollei35 - tessar - foma400 +1 - r09 16"@20degrC - reflecta10t

  

First time I've trying Ferrania Orto 50. Shot in Saskatchewan with my Mamiya 7ii.

 

Somewhere in Saskatchewan, Canada

 

Mamiya 7ii

Ferrania Orto 50

Dev; Adox Rodinal

 

Developed and scanned at home

Deeper impulse

Flow through

No agenda

LEICA M3 - HP5+ 2017 - VALPO.

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