View allAll Photos Tagged Difference
The forest shieldbug is often mistaken for it’s similar relative the ‘spiked’ shieldbug, the key difference in identifying between the two is in the shoulders. The forest shield bug has square rounded corners while the ‘Spiky’ shieldbug has sharp pointed corners. The forest shieldbug is a herbivore who feed primarily on sap and are often found in within or around forests.
This photo is a single shot taken with the Laowa 100mm 2:1 macro on a Sony A7R II (Full Frame sensor). Photo setting were 1/250, f8, ISO200 with a flash & custom diffuser at around 1:1 magnification. The image was processed in lightroom, photoshop and Topaz Denoise.
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"We Are Different and The Same"
Astro Cruise 20
Big size prints or HD on demand www.benheine.com
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Are they really different?
How man are different? On, two or three?
What is the reason of the difference?
The thickness? The color? The material?
Are they really different? They all are ropes ....
IC 1396 wide field from the backyard (Las Vegas Bortle 9). This is 45 hours and 15 minutes of exposure, my new record!
This was fun, the framing was really tight but just right with the Meade 70mm APO.
My OIII data looked terrible so I really wish I grabbed that from the desert, but I don't have the will to work on this again so maybe in a couple of years.
Better quality image + to see the difference between 26 and 45 hours of total integration time: www.galactic-hunter.com/post/ic-1396-the-elephant-s-trunk...
I thought it would be fun to recreate a photo that I took of Minty right after we got her about a year ago. The only trouble was she is a lot bigger and my knees are not as flexible so I had to have my husband take the photo.
The original of when she was just a pup is in the first comment. I was able to reach down and take that one by myself but I just couldn’t manage it a year later. Every time I bent over to put the phone on the ground she would reach up and kiss me. She is a lot bigger too and I kept cutting her head off with every shot I took.
So a big thank you to my husband for helping me out!
Conditions weren't great today so I switched my plan for a short drive along nearby farmland. Much to my surprise, I was able to nail my first sighting of a pack of Redwings. There were 20 or so alongside a group of Song Thrushes, Fieldfare and Starlings, all digging for worms.
With the striped faces and brightly coloured flanks, the difference compared to the other similar members of the Thrush family is striking.
original idea is not mine, and I even don't know who's the author. I changed it a bit to make this picture.
What a difference a day makes. This is what "Isles of the mist" location on Loch Garry, shown in the last four scenes, looked like the following day, with no direct sun, no mist, though still reflecting.. As flat as a pancake.
(Actually, here on digital, after a tweak to contrast in "curves", it looks a LOT better than the original slide ever did!)
However, the photo isn't the only thing that's feeling "flat". In fact I'm feeling rather sick at the moment, like, "This would be a good time to give up photography altogether"!
What happened? Well, this evening, I "Upgraded" my catalog backup in Lr Classic 9. (It's been telling me to do it for a while.) There's a big warning with it , "This operation Cannot be undone!" Also, it tells you to ensure you have made a recent backup.. Well I back up 3-4 times a week so, no problem there. Right? WRONG!
I never actually opened those backup folders to see what was in them, I just assumed when I clicked on "Back up now" it was backing up everything.. Now I find that from the time I went "Adobe subscription Lr", nothing since that date has backed up. Updating the backup has deleted those 18 months of work! That must be close to 2,000 hours worth!
I know everything more recent really has gone, because it now accepts imports from anything later, which it wouldn't do if they were still in the catalogue.
(I'm keeping things in perspective though, especially at this time with C-19, when FAR more serious losses are happening for many people.)
Thank goodness the original pictures/files are safe, but all my grading and processing from that date, appears to have completely gone.
DSC04029_Lr9
A close comparison shot of a black-headed gull (rear) and a Mediterranean gull in winter plumage. The bill of the latter is heavier and it's hood remnants extend closer to the back of the head. However, the most obvious difference is the wings, with obvious black tips for the black-headed gull.
Photographed in the Ria Formosa Natural Park HQ.
St Maarten and St Martin - Caribbean - Dutch and French
What is the difference between St Maarten and St Martin?
During the 17th Century there was intermittent rivalry between the Dutch and French for control of the island and its salt mines. In 1648 the two countries signed the Treaty of Concordia which divided the island in two and urged its people to live in a cooperative manner.
Saint Martin (French: Saint-Martin; Dutch: Sint Maarten) is an island in the northeast Caribbean Sea, approximately 300 km (190 mi) east of Puerto Rico. The 87-square-kilometre (34 sq mi) island is divided roughly 60:40 between the French Republic (53 km2, 20 sq mi)[1] and the Kingdom of the Netherlands (34 km2, 13 sq mi),[2] but the two parts are roughly equal in population. The division dates to 1648. The southern Dutch part comprises Sint Maarten and is one of four constituent countries that form the Kingdom of the Netherlands. The northern French part comprises the Collectivity of Saint Martin and is an overseas collectivity of the French Republic. As part of France, the French part of the island is also part of the European Union.
What a difference a bit of good weather makes ..... everyone begins to chill a bit just by being outside and a bit of warmth !!!
''After a while you learn the subtle difference
Between holding a hand and chaining a soul,
And you learn that love doesn’t mean leaning
And company doesn’t mean security.
And you begin to learn that kisses aren’t contracts
And presents aren’t promises,
And you begin to accept your defeats
With your head up and your eyes open
With the grace of a woman, not the grief of a child,
And you learn to build all your roads on today
Because tomorrow’s ground is too uncertain for plans
And futures have a way of falling down in mid-flight.
After a while you learn…
That even sunshine burns if you get too much.
So you plant your garden and decorate your own soul,
Instead of waiting for someone to bring you flowers.
And you learn that you really can endure…
That you really are strong
And you really do have worth…
And you learn and learn…
With every good-bye you learn.”
― Jorge Luis Borges
I look weirdly like my mother in this picture. When she was young. The only difference is hair colour and eye colour.
Joining 923 was its sibling 921, also very much in NCT livery but fully de-branded inside and out. Given that I’m not overly keen on the Redfern livery as applied to Omnidekkas, with the yellow stripes sitting awkwardly across the front, the longer it remains in NCT silver and teal the better!
Many of Nottingham’s N-series Omnidekkas have been bought by the same operators that took in the older 4-series type circa 8 years back, with Redfern plus Lincoln’s own PC Coaches being just two of those. Seemingly there’s not much hierarchy between the older N94UDs and newer N270/230UDs with them both being used interchangeably on the same work, despite the age difference. It’s weird when some operators (like Redfern) have 61 plates used only on schools work, while other operators (like Sanders) still have 53 plates going in front-line service. Then again, the N94UDs are said to be better.
YT61 FFH
University of Lincoln
6.6.24
Shuwaikh port - Kuwait
The photograph shows a bit of the indifference in the municipality's supervision on coastal locations in Kuwait. As you can see, the beach is full of rubbish and dirt which has destroyed the natural look of the sand. Making the place somehow unusable. Anyway, it is also related to the people's awareness of this subject. I think multimedia means in the country must pay attention to this problem and raise people's awareness.
Technical Data:
It is not a HDR photograph, the bottom part is exposed by hitting a lot of flashes - which made me blind =D - by me and my friend. The white balance was taken down to 2700 to give this pinkish mood to the photo. Long exposure was used in order to prevent noise from high ISO and to give a special effect to the water.
Taken with Nikon D200
Metrobus WS124 (SK19FBE) on Route 227 passing MEC58 (BF65HUZ) on the hill by Bromley Magistrates Court.
This highlights the differences between the two "full size" buses that Metrobus have for the two Shortlands routes.
There are only 3-colors, 10-digits, and 7-notes in my life now but not too long ago those numbers were each in trillions.
Funny how one person can make all that difference.
There was a time, there was always a time. A time when she was nothing more than a figure in the crosshairs of some scope, years had passed with this being the case. Something had changed, a point of no return... he wasn't just a thick headed marine anymore following orders, he was here by his own free will.
“Wit lies in recognizing the resemblance among things which differ and the difference between things which are alike.”
Madame de Stael
DSCN3954-004
Now and again I do shoot normal pictures at normal times of the day, without ambushing passersby or waving flashlights around. This is one of them.
It's an early morning view of the Logarska Dolina valley. The buildings to the far left are the Lenar Tourist Farm, which I've recommended before and will do again. The main bed in the apartment we stayed in looks straight out onto these mountains, and - though it was six in the morning - having seen them in this light I couldn't go back to sleep.
This frame is a daylight version of this night view shot last summer. Only, whilst the summer shot had flowers in the meadows, the trees are only just coming into leaf here.
I've pushed pixels around a little - lifting the foreground shadow, and pulling down the sky. Even so, I wonder if this is really a shot for late afternoon - the postcards I see of the place are all shot then, with the light coming in from the right, bringing some more contrast and warmth over the lower slopes and valley floor. Nonetheless, even if the valley floor lacks a little punch in this light, I do like the bright, morning glow on the crags of rock.
I listened recently to an interview with Kenneth Parker, talking about the difference in light between morning and evening time. He describes the lack of dust and haze, and the fresh feel of early morning light compared to sunset. I'm not sure I shot it perfectly, but being out in the crisp morning watching the light play across this scene crystalised his words. Lesson learned - I need to head out early more often!
Hope everyone is having a great week; catching up now.