View allAll Photos Tagged GeometryShapes.
A Macro Mondays submission on the topic "Geometry shapes" . This birds nest fern creates a beautiful spiral with undulations as it unwinds.
Salt (NaCl) naturally forms cubic crystals, so when ground up tends to break up into roughly cube-like shapes.
A pattern of squares on the dome light cover in a car.
Theme: "Geometry Shapes"
Thank you for taking the time to view my photo, and for the faves and comments you make, thank you.
9/15/2021 Detail on a travel cup, brushed stainless steel.
Diameter is 2.625"
Sigma Macro 105.0 mm f/2.8
We had an early season rain last night which left lots of droplets on the spiderwebs forming a pattern of lines, triangles, spheres and other geometric shapes.
Macro Mondays: Geometry Shapes
This is the bottom of a jar of Oil of Olay face cream, photographed on a yellow cloth. The diameter of the jar is 2.25 inches, for a total space shown of 2.75 inches.
100mm, reflector, polarizer, natural light
Macro Mondays theme: Geometry Shapes
Thanks to everyone who took the time to view, comment, and fave my photo. It’s really appreciated. 😊
Geometry shapes are all around
my maths professor said
of angles there are seven types
zero, acute, right, obtuse,
and then there are instead
straight, reflex, complete
they show up everywhere
defined at the point where two rays meet
curves, straight lines, adjacent lines, squared lines
points, circles squares, rectangles
you'll even see them in the street
They're everywhere………….
________________________________________
And what is my picture? It's a small portion of two cake cooling racks, set at angles and stood against a piece of white paper, then shone with red, green, blue bright lights to create shadows and accentuate the different angles. It almost looks like a piece of tartan, don't you think? It certainly shows to me how geometry is everywhere.
Classic art deco design from 1933 - the front of a Kodak SIX-20 Model C folding camera.
It has the distinctive, and to me, very stylish art deco geometric shapes and patterns in chrome. (The large round face is 2 inches across).
Created for Macro Monday this is just one corner of a 3"x4" printed circuit board ... a hard drive controller I removed from a dead hard drive, Many PC boards have all the various components arranged in rectangular fashion on the substrate. This one caught my attention because the components in this corner were arranged at a 45 degree angle to the edges and balance of the board. It kind of reminded me of looking down on a city as one arrives in a plane .
For this I set up the camera and lens to capture a low angled view across the card. None of the "buildings" in this city is over 1/8th inch high.
Happy Macro Monday Flickr Friends and thanks in advance for your views, Faves and Comments that keep me inspired.
For the macro camera nerds the 100mm macro lens was mounted to 2 extension tubes totaling 31mm. The camera's "Focus Bracketing" program was used to capture 40 images which were "stacked" and processed in Adobe Photoshop.