View allAll Photos Tagged Flow

Lavender seen in my garden

130709_3956_kw

I took this on my lunch break the other day, and played with it this morning.

21x29,7cm, ink on paper, Kevin Lucbert, 2018.

Sa Pa (About this sound listen), or Sapa, is a frontier town and capital of Sa Pa District in the Lao Cai province in northwest Vietnam. It is one of the main market towns in the area, where several ethnic minority groups such as Hmong, Dao (Yao), Giay, Pho Lu, and Tay live.

Retrouver toutes les plus belles cascades de France sur www.CascadesDeFrance.fr, le site qui vous donne accès gratuitement aux plan d'accès, photos et conseils sur les belles chutes d'eau.

The tidal surges on the outcrop of rocks was quite incredible. One minute you could see the sand in between the rocks. The next minute you'd be up to your knees in water.

Great Gully waterfall

Missouri River, Washington, Missouri USA

ある日の仕事道。

Flow Festival 2022, Friday 12.8.2022 - Hayley Le / Shoot Hayley

The traffic up and down Melbourne's Dandenong Road, headng home, whichever way that may be. A blended stack of 6 shots from my Sony A7RII.

A creek in the Smoky Mountains of Tennessee

Building an application in Facebook is a really different experience from normal interaction design as you are constrained by the Facebook developer toolkit. Not that it is a bad thing, just a different way of designing a solution. This concept is now launched as an application for the Danish charity Folkekirkens Nødhjælp (Danish Church Aid) apps.facebook.com/bliv_indsamler/

Olympic National Park, Washington

Rangierbahnhof Oberhausen

How much flow…

 

… is too much?

 

This is a topic that has come up a few times at Coffee and Cameras. It’s fair to say that opinions are divided.

 

I like a bit of flow (or motion blur). For me, it conveys movement and gives an added dimension to an image. But, it can be overdone.

 

Today’s two shots were taken in slightly different ways.

 

Shot 1 was taken with an open aperture (f2.5) and a moderately fast shutter speed (1/40th of a second). The intention here was to blur the background and give a tiny bit of movement in the water between the rocks.

 

Shot 2 was taken at f5, with a shutter speed of 1/10th of a second. The intention here was to create some motion blur, while keeping the rocks etc sharp. This almost works for me. I like the upper two-thirds of the shot. But the foreground is a bit too soft. It doesn’t convey motion, it just looks out of focus.

 

So, what’s the lesson?

 

Firstly, enjoy the process (of course).

 

Secondly, experiment with shutter speeds. Or, if you’re properly equipped – with a tripod – do some focus stacking.

 

P103-3754 Taken at: Buckie Braes, Perth, Scotland.

Pollen grains and tree blossom are arranged in lines by floating debries slowing the the flow of the River Yare. Temporary order to the chaos of nature.

If you like these notes, also have a look at my book on lulu.com which collects most ofl my notes from 2009 and 2010.

 

See the book's website: www.evalotta.net/sketchnotes/

 

Buy the book on lulu.com:

www.lulu.com/product/paperback/sketchnotes-2009-2010/1468...

  

Flow Festival 2013

Wednesday 9th of August 2013

 

(c) Jussi Hellsten / Flow Festival 2013

www.jussihellsten.com

www.facebook.com/jussihellstenphotography

The golden leaves of red beech (Nothofagus fusca) add a sprinkle of gold among the lush green on the stream bed of Scandlers Creek. Rippling flow-lines give an almost palpable texture to the surface of the flowing water. Just gorgeous!

 

At Scandlers Creek, a pretty tributary of the Maitai River near Nelson in New Zealand's South Island.

 

Olympus EM-5.

Vembakeerapalayam Beach, Pondicherry

Premières jacinthes

Plomeur

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