View allAll Photos Tagged Flow
Aurender FLOW portable USB DAC. Beautiful lines, well made, and... maybe good sounding.
I've not yet tested it.
Update: I've now been listening to it for about 5 hours with a variety of earphones and headphones and have a few words to say about it here.
A7r mounted to Rollei X-Act 2
Schneider 100/5,6 Macro APO Digitar
Strobist:
Three Profoto Pro-B heads, one camera left, one camera right (1 o'clock), both in strips.
Final bare, through construction sieve.
Trigger: Flashwaves III
I haven't done this in more than 10 years, but I think is still got it... it's not perfect I know, but I still love the way it makes me feel when I dance around with my ballet shoes, it is part of my past but no one will take that away... enjoy!
BTW gracias Fixy por el nombre
Explored! Aug 24th Highest Rank # 149
I like that quote I have seen flying around the internet that reads, "The waves of the sea take me back to me". The ocean does that for me. It gives me peace. It heals. It always makes me feel better.
Please view on Black if you have time. I appreciate you taking a look at my work!
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I hate to ruin the mystery, but if this one has you scratching your head it is a photo of canola seed flowing out of the back of a truck. (taken @ 1/13 sec. and minor post processing done in Canon DPP)
This is #7 in my Got Bored? Series. Flirting with the lights and shadows, these two leaves of a small lychee tree outside my living room paired nicely for a photo. To view all the images in this series in high res as well as read the thoughts behind this particular one, click HERE
another shot from yesterday. will definitely use this location again for shoots.
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5d
50mm f/1.4
strobist: yn560 1/32 power camera left into 32" white umbrella; triggered via cactus v4.
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The former tanker ‘Nana’ was sunk to block enemy ships in Scapa Flow in Orkney, Scotland in March 1939 and later towed to its current location at Inganess Bay.
Photographer: RCAHMS
Image reference: DP058591
See more images of 'Nana':
canmore.rcahms.gov.uk/en/site/102376/
© RCAHMS
Future water flows can move fast,
Now that present day man,
Lifts away barriers of the past.
Poem: Jan Elemans
2013
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River Waal has won. To prevent
flooding the dikes are removed
and old winter beddings are
restored.
The small village Lent will bear
the consequences of this all.
Lent
The Netherlands
Holga 120N - Optical Lens 1:8 f=60mm - Kodak TMax 400 @ ASA-400
Kodak HC-110 Dil. B 5:30 @ 20C
Scanner: Epson V700
Editor: Adobe Photoshop CC
This is another wonderful view from the Papigo villages in Northern Greece.
I had visited the place you see in the picture in my first day over Papigo, but the snowfall was so thick that I could even see in front of me. I decided to revisit the place on a different day, so the visit was scheduled for the last day of my stay over there.
I got up really early in the morning, with the hope to maybe catch a nice sunrise as well (never happened though, since the sky was overcast). Since my hopes for a sunrise vanished quickly, I decided to move on and head towards Ovires the location between Megalo Papigo (Big Papigo) and Mikro Papigo (little Papigo).
It was a lovely walk, I really enjoyed since no-one was awake that morning and I had the whole landscape for myself, no people walking around getting in the frame or cars disturbing anything, so my walk lasted a while stopping and moving till I reached the place.
I decided to move a bit inside the river, to get a better view of the flow coming from the distance, it was not that easy since there was plenty of water around and with the combination of snow and ice things where not that pleasant. I was lucky enough to have brought with me my hiking boots which made sure my feet would remain warm…and dry!
Of course as always and according to the Murphy law, something has to go wrong at the time you are doing something fun, so even though no catastrophe met me, I still had to deal with snowfall once I started shooting, luckily I had my Optech rain sleeve with me which I used to cover my camera and continued shooting even if snow was falling.
For prints: please visit me on Untappedsource.com
Canon 5D
Canon 17-40L f/4
B+W CPL MRC
Aperture: f/16
Shutter: 3.2sec
Focal Length: 35mm
WB: Set through Whibal card
Location: Ovires, Papigo, Epirus, North Greece
Date / Time: 15/2/2010 8:14am
This secluded, hilly expanse of oak woodlands, grasslands, and chaparral is a combination of over 70,000 acres of BLM managed lands and 4,700 acres of State and County lands. The Natural Area is traversed by Cache Creek, with its year-round water flow. Elevation ranges from 3200 feet atop Brushy Sky High, down to 600 feet in the eastern end of Cache Creek along State Route 16. Showcasing the area is about 35 miles of the main fork of Cache Creek and 2.5 miles of the north fork. Also present are several tributary creeks that contain permanent water.
The Cache Creek Natural Area is a primitive area, closed to motorized vehicles. There are no developed campgrounds or facilities. Non-hunting (target) shooting is not allowed. Instead, the area is managed to improve habitat for wildlife and rare plants, to protect cultural resource values, and to offer primitive recreation opportunities, including wildlife viewing, river running, hiking, equestrian use, hunting and fishing. On October 17, 2006, President George W. Bush signed the Northern California Coastal Wild Heritage Act, designating approximately 27,245 acres within the Cache Creek Natural Area as the Cache Creek Wilderness Area.
Learn more: www.blm.gov/ca/st/en/fo/ukiah/cachecreek.html
Photo: Bob Wick, BLM