View allAll Photos Tagged Hand
Picture of my girlfriend holding a flower from the Chicago Botanic Gardens..
Taken with a Nikon D90 with a Tamron 70-200mm..
Inspired by some simular shots on flickr I really wanted to get one of Macie's hands and Connors feet. Little on the blurry side and its a crop from the full frame version but I like it! the BW version is definately my fav
This meets the project goals in a couple of ways. It creates an interesting composition with the face and hands inside of the hands. I did this by taking a picture of her hands covering half of her face. Then what I did was take a straight picture of her hand. Then in Photoshop came the hardest part. When editing I turned the layer to screen then turned the picture I black and white. Then I used the lasso tool thing to cut out the hand to put it on the white. Back ground but the feather tool wasn't working. So what I had to do was add the white background as another layer then erase behind the hand to get the our white background. Then my greatest strength would have to be the use of the hands within the hands how it creates shape and form. Then my weakest would have to be when I was editing how it made the fingers look kind of bumpy.
this film has been posted at least twice before. i'm sticking to non-HoF images (I hope).
not the snake pit, metropolis, or farewell my lovely.
chimps hand close up
For Reviews, Views & Opinions on camera equipment follow me on youtube, goto GRVO TV using the link below. www.youtube.com/user/69acrowot?feature=mhee
Precious tiny baby hands of one of the newborn twins I was so excited to photograph last year just after their birth...
Make sure that your warp is under tension throughout this entire process. Pull on the heddle string tail to adjust the length of your second heddle as shown.. Make sure that it is the same length as your first one. Then anchor it with your index finger on the heddle stick, put the extra twist in the heddle string and place that on stick and tighten. Now you can let go and you have made two heddles.
Draw your hand - this was so soft and subtle on paper - it didn't scan well no matter whtat I adjusted.
This is part of the Everyday in May challenge - drawing something every day in May. A group of us thought it would be fun to do a Everyday Matters (EDM) challenge each day using EDM 1-31. The list is here
The Group that is going to give this a go (so far... let me Liz know if you want to join in and be added to the list)
me flickr
Wendy (QuirkyArtist) flickr or blog
Jennifer Blog flickr
TravellingSueP blog
Deborah blog
Margaret blog
Anna blog
Marthann blog
Yasemin blog
Carol blog
Matthew flickr
Johanna blog
Sandra blog
Tyanne flickr
PrettyArtyBuildings blog
Maureen flickr
AJoyfulmoc flickr
LuxdLux flickr
Claire blog
One of the last things my niece Nancy did was draw this picture on my nephew's hand. She died April 8, 2005 of a rare virus which caused a heart attack. She was 18.
60mm Micro f/3.3 Shutter speed - 125
Single strobe at 1/64 power bounced off of the ceiling to lift the shadows.
If you were carrying around a small aluminum foil ball in your pocket, what would you imagine it to be? I give my thoughts on my blog at: www.spudart.org/blogs/randomthoughts_comments/3918_0_3_0_C/
Titus, our elderly yellow lab, is afraid of cameras. So, I set mine on a tripod, across the room, peeking from behind a chair, with a 200 mm lens, hoping the apparatus wouldn't be too imposing. I directed the lens toward his kennel and just stood by.
In his kennel is where Titus feels most secure. He puts himself to bed there each night. But, though he was in his favorite place, he started to tremor with fear. He knew the camera was present and staring at him!
My sixteen-year-old appeared and held the paw of his eleven-year friend; Titus slowly calmed.
There's power in holding a hand.