View allAll Photos Tagged DutchAngle
A wet Wood Pigeon looks for food.
'Dutch Angle' for 'Smile on Saturday'
Thank you for your views, faves and comments.
Happy SoS
Macro Mondays - Peel
Image measures less than 3" on the long side.
Happy Macro Monday!
Compositionally Challenged Week 40 - Dutch Angle
Forever Stamps can be used to mail a one-ounce letter regardless of when the stamps are purchased or used and no matter how prices may change in the future.
It's pouring rain and I wasn't loving the lighting. Then I got a brilliant idea to shine a couple of lights on the white ceiling to bounce some brightness onto the stamps. Voila! I don't know why I've never thought of doing that before. : )
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Street photography from Glasgow, Scotland.
A previously unpublished shot from February 2018.
Wishing you all a super weekend of photography - stay safe!
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Street Photography from Glasgow, Scotland.
Some eye contact captured in July 2019. Enjoy!
we have to have patience although it seems like an uphill battle. For Smile on Saturday. This week's theme: 'Dutch Angle".
Macro Mondays ~ Dutch Angle
Thank you to everyone who pauses long enough to look at my photo. Any comments or Faves are very much appreciated
Mallika City, Kanchanaburi Province, Thailand
Nikon D5100, Tamron 18-270, ISO 100, f/13.0, 18mm, 1/200s
For this weeks Macro Mondays pick "Redux 2020" I chose Unusual Patterns, as you can see the insect has a pattern on its back and the screen it's on has a pattern. I also included the Dutch Angle.
If you fav this photo please leave a comment as to why you like it, thanks in advance.
Taken on a walk along the coast path between Portishead and Clevedon this week. You can just make out the bridges across the Severn Estuary along the horizon.
The Smile on Saturday theme is Dutch Angle and the diagonal crop shows the clouds to great advantage!
HSoS 😊
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Street photography from Edinburgh, Scotland.
An incredibly rare 'hip shot' from me here as I almost exclusively shoot through the viewfinder. This previously unpublished shot from August 2018 is taken upon leaving 'The Royal Mile' area of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, a bottleneck suitable for a mass 'flyering' opportunity!
Paid to hand out hundreds of paper flyers for shows around the festival, and sometimes the artists themselves hand them out, it is often striking to see how many flyers just end up in and around the waste bins. Enjoy!
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Street photography from Glasgow, Scotland.
Previously unpublished shot from October 2017. Enjoy!
See demo in first comment.
Inspired by Macro Mondays. A Dutch angle: spirit level, bubble level, or simply a level, is an instrument designed to indicate whether a surface is horizontal (level) or vertical (plumb).
Wikipedia
Spirit levels indicate if a surface is level
Purchased long ago for photography.
Rubber bands wrapped around a small jelly jar, placed at an angle and shot before a black felt background. Under 2 inches including negative space.
The winter hasn't been particularly cold so far where I live in Northern Illinois. But we've had a lot of dreary, sunless days with very little snow to brighten things up, and most of the vegetation, of course, is wearing a shade of brown. So I thought I'd mix things up today with some sunshine, summer color and a glimpse of warm weather yard work, and with a touch of Dutch angle too for a bit of added pizzaz.
I see them everywhere and I think about the group. HBM to all.
Busy enjoying summer and very warm weather . Will be back later today or tomorrow to comment.
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Street photography from Glasgow, Scotland.
Colour re-edit of one of my favourite candid shots from January 2019. Enjoy!
June 20, 2020
Smile on Saturday Theme: #DutchAngle
"A new day comes with the rays of new hope and lights of new wisdom."
Debasish Mridha
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Street photography from Glasgow, Scotland.
Captured in May 2019, I had every intention of playing with the angles for the composition and editing of this shot. I had no idea that the car would really play such a role in distorting perception of the gradient of this steep slope in the city. Enjoy!