View allAll Photos Tagged FLAME
Macro monday theme for 27 th July is flame , this flame is from a tea light in between fresh sweet pea flowers from the garden .
thank you for viewing .
HMM
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I was trying to create an image with my Oxy-acetylene torch but ran out of oxygen 😩.
Making a yellow flame.
But the flame made a nice plume blasting off a 1/4-20” bolt and nut. It looks like a smiling face on top. Like a cats face?
#smileonsaturdays
#flame
Over the long pandemic I developed an ability to capture close ups of blooms around my yard. The camera mounted on a tripod and the blooms protected from breezes allows sharper focus on the flame acanthus, Anisacanthus quadrifidus, and not worry much about the depth of field. My camera sensor with its macro lens is only about 25 centimeters from this flower so my depth of field I know will be small. I put the far-left anther in sharp focus in hopes that the others will be acceptable focus. The petals from the acanthus flower are mostly in focus. I dehazed the photo to accentuate the contrast. I toned down the brightness of the anthers on the left flower. The contrast between the red-orange and the mottled out of focus greens of the background pushes the flowers forward. The sunlight lightens the throat just enough to where the filaments can be seen emerging from it.
Female Flame Robin (Petroica phoenicea), central Victoria, Australia. This bird was part of a group of adult Flame Robin pairs which were foraging along the forest floor together in the late evening. I spent quite a bit of time watching them and managed to position myself ahead of the group; I was crouched down low and was rewarded when this one made a close approach. Shortly after, the light faded for the evening.
Image taken May 2023.
This is my representation of the Phoenix, the mythical bird that is consumed and renewed by the flames.
There was some added planning involved in this one. I first chose my pose then I did an abstract painting which would follow the curves of the pose and represent the blaze. Then merged the photo of the painting and my silo.
Okay, the smallest 'figure' (second from the left) is totally Photoshopped. But other than that, the rest of the photograph is actual SOOC flames inside my cottage fireplace. See additional flame photos adjacent to the link below:
www.flickr.com/photos/144969003@N02/29093538758/in/photos...
Looking Close On Friday-Reflections
Flickr Friday-Flames
I really love these flameless candles. I've set them up against the mirror on the mantle and did a little Topaz edit. What do you think?
Fresh water running slowly on the beach towards the sea, making these "burning" markings on its way.
"Come Fairies, take me out of this dull world,
for I would ride with you upon the wind
and dance upon the mountains like a flame!"
-William Butler Yeats
This dragon is made from a single square sheet of painted paper.
I have used filters to alter the colors in photoshop.
The design is from the talented origami-artist Shuki Kato www.flickr.com/photos/origami-artist-galen/
A diagram can be found here www.flickr.com/photos/origami-artist-galen/6271038159/
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Good evening everyone,
It's been a busy week for me juggling 2 jobs but I'm hanging in there and things are going pretty good.
Sometimes work can take over your life but you just have to do it for the time being.
Don't think too much and appreciate that you can do it.
This year I try not to think as much as I used to.
Tonight I'm experimenting with fire ...months ago I was drawn to the water element ...this month January I feel drawn to the fire element.
Maybe because it is so cold in London right now.
In order to shine you must be your own light.
Today and tomorrow
let yourself shine always:)
Warm Light and Love
XXX
Single 75-second exposure
9.25-inch SCT with Hyperstar
Modified Canon T5i
Celestron AVX Equatorial Mount
ISO 800
Processed in PixInsight and Lightroom
Fairly common in oak and pine-evergreen forests in foothills and highlands; a few descend in winter to lowlands of west Mexico. Forages mainly at middle to upper levels where often quiet and overlooked easily. Note the bold white wingbars, big white tertial and tail spots, and dark streaks on back. Male flame-orange in west Mexico and deeper orange-red in east Mexico and Central America.
This one was photographed in Costa Rica guided by Neotropic Photo Tours.
Island of Madagascar
Off The East Coast of Africa
Berenty Reserve
Click On Image To Enlarge.
A flame tree in full bloom is a real beauty. This one was at it's best during our visit to Berenty.
Another image of a flame tree can be seen in the first comment section.
Wikipedia-
A native of Madagascar that is thought to be one of the top 5 most beautiful flowering trees in the world.
Originally from Madagascar, this large, spreading tree is now commonly found throughout tropical Australia. It can grow as tall as 18–20 m and has smooth, grey bark and feathery, fern-like foliage which droop during the dry season. It flowers profusely, carrying showy red-orange blooms that appear around the same time as the new leaves. It produces long, leathery pods that split to reveal a number of seeds.
Flame trees, which don’t tolerate temperatures below 40 degrees F. (4 C.), grow in Mexico, South and Central America, Asia and other tropical and subtropical climates around the world. Although flame tree often grows wild in deciduous forests, it is an endangered species in some areas, such as Madagascar. In India, Pakistan and Nepal, the tree is known as “Gulmohar.”
THE COVER PHOTO FOR THE GROUP 'THE GALAXY' FOR 2/2/2018.
Taken at Waukivory, NSW, Australia on the weekend. As the flames were constantly moving and changing I applied some motion blur to this shot to see how the effect worked.
As always, thanks for any comments, views or favorites, they are much appreciated!
Copyright © Paul Hollins. All my images are protected under international authors copyright laws and may not be downloaded, reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without my explicit written permission.
The third version of flame was probably my favorite, for my rebuild I took inspiration from the set rather than the show.
Well curiosity got the better of me and I decided to see what the flame from the gas torch looked like without any other lighting.
The answer I guess, is pretty dull :)
Only one way to frame it really, without the nozzle of the torch it has no context.
I suppose it looks more like a logo like this, maybe there is a gas company in need of one :)
Oh well, some you win, some you dont :) It was still fun to do and thats the general aim here.