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Another toy is a filter to help produce the Droste effect (picture, within a picture, within a picture, ....).
Only suitable one I could find quickly was this sunflower but the hunt is on to try and find a more Escher like end result.
Mass Effect: Andromeda takes you to the Andromeda galaxy, far beyond the Milky Way. There, you'll lead our fight for a new home in hostile territory - where WE are the aliens.
This is a natural lighting effect that was visible to the naked eye exactly as you see it here. Shot near Daylesford Victoria Australia © Karl von Moller 2009
When a neutral hydrogen cloud is permeated by a magnetic field, the motion of the spinning electron is altered minutely. The 21cm spectral line gets split in two; the difference between the two frequencies is very small, but measurable. This splitting is called the Zeeman effect.
Studio Photoshoot, shot with Canon 30d with 28-135mm Lens. This one I tried a Dave Hill Effect, looks good what do you think?
Playing with a new Lightroom preset from x-equals.com called super punch preset.
The light source for the photo was an SB-600 mounted on a light stand and fired through a 45" umbrella. The flash was triggered from an SU-800 wireless speedlight commander mounted on the D40.
Story telling photograph. I decided to highlight my bird theme, attempting to cast an interesting shadow, highlighting this bird's eye. I have a theme for every house I've lived in. I have a bird in every room in this house. Some are abstract, some tiny, but usually all special or purchased while on a trip.
The professor I met in Aberdeen told me about the strange effect observed when videoing a propellor on an iPhone. Something to do with the refresh rate/mode. The video is here but the stills were quite strange too.
I love the treatment I used for this photograph flic.kr/p/bzXkUo and I was not satisfied with my picture of a phone box. I had a thought that it was a bit dark. Actually, I started to wonder how the picture would look if I used a infrared filter. I open LR and tried the effect. I didn't like the new look. I really loved the warm of sepia. Then, I had an idea. I decided to adjust just the three main slides that create an infrared effect, so here is a new look of the old picture. Old: flic.kr/p/bzSQ6h
Photographs of the artwork for Casper's 3rd exhibition that will run at the Pansodan Gallery on Upper Pansodan Street from December 10, 2011. The new paintings are based on photographs and built up using words stamped repeatedly onto the paper.
Sometimes described as a jello effect, the Rolling shutter effect is causing by the camera sensor scanning the scene line by line and getting caught out by a fast moving object, effect is often worse on lower end cameras, I have found my £50 Camp snap camera used here particularly slow when processing an image.
Web description
The rolling shutter effect is a type of image distortion that occurs when a camera’s sensor captures an image or video frame progressively, rather than all at once. Most commonly found in cameras with CMOS sensors, rolling shutter works by scanning across the scene—usually from top to bottom—capturing each row of pixels at slightly different times. As a result, if the subject or camera moves quickly during this process, fast-moving objects can appear skewed, wobbly, or warped. This effect is especially noticeable with rapid motion or flashing lights.
In contrast, cameras with a global shutter expose the entire sensor simultaneously, avoiding these distortions. While rolling shutter can lead to unwanted artifacts, it is widely used due to its cost-effectiveness and other technical benefits in most consumer cameras