View allAll Photos Tagged IMITATE

Overgrown farmland in a suburb of St. Louis hosts deer, coyotes, foxes, hawks, owls, snakes, turtles and other species which have adapted to urban life. (Which has nothing to do with the title I chose, but I couldn't resist the pun!)

 

Rolleiflex 3.5e

Schneider Kreuznach Xenotar 75mm f3.5

Lomography CN400

Ice patterns on decking.

Last day of winter, March 19, 2021

Imitating a Killin Branch goods, No. 55260 works gently through Tod's Mill among the late turning autumn colours.

Life imitating art? Chinese girl in Lijang.

Everyone wants to be alike some popstar or another idol. So this apple does.

This is the vase that Jill & Debbie gave us.

This is the lilac that went in the vase that Jill & Debbie gave us.

This is the photo of the Bottled Willow that hangs on the wall behind the vase that Jill and Debbie gave us.

And this is the photograph of the vase that is in the photographs of the pictures that hang on the wall behind the vase that Jill & Debbie gave us.

 

I see a resemblance here....(smile)

Imitating the style of a fellow Flickrite, whose work I particularly like.

The scarecrow on the left is part of the Mahone Bay Scarecrow Festival and needs some TLC but I thought the two together was funny.

Chital deer stag roams the grass next to the mural that surrounds the local market in Trincomalee.

From the Burj Khalifa (originally named the Burj Dubai), the highest building in the world, the city of Dubai looks more like an architectural model than the real thing. The observation deck on the 124th floor - 442m from the ground - is merely half way up the building (828m).

 

Dubai, UAE, 2010

Times Square, New York, NY | 2014

 

I've received dozens of messages from people asking me how I edit my black and white images. It was mostly trial and error but I've basically just made my own certain style. I'll probably do a tutorial in the future, but I'll let you guys know what programs I use and my methods. To get this sort of look I use 2 programs, one being Lightroom and the other being Silver Efex Pro 2. If you like doing black and white photography then I suggest you get yourself Silver Efex Pro 2, in my opinion it's the best program to edit black and white photography. I usually just use Lightroom afterwards to burn and dodge certain areas and to add some grain..

 

Google+Tumblr500pxDeviantArt

At the General Idea exhibition at the National Gallery of Canada

Tower Hill, City Of London

imitate twitter.com/EchanisEnicha 's character design cosplay XD

The engrailed (Ectropis crepuscularia) is a geometrid moth with a pattern mimicking lichen - which makes it easier to blend in.

 

Unfortunately, looking like that and then land on the side of my yellow house does make you stand out a little more, right?

 

Part 1 here: www.flickr.com/photos/tinyturtle/53051655422/

 

This moth was actually a little too large for me to shoot it straight from the top with the MP-E65 mm lens as it can't focus at less than 1:1 mag. Have a look here: www.flickr.com/photos/tinyturtle/52894995855/ for how I solved that and got a shot of the entire specimen.

They do look alike or is that just me.

 

Whitecross Street, Islington - London

 

Artists Mr Cinz and Voyder

Phrase: “art imitates life”. The observation that a creative work was inspired by true events; based on a true story or something in reality.

 

This year the FFF+ Group have decided to have a weekly challenge called “Snap Happy”. A different theme chosen by a member of the group each week, and the image is to be posted on the Monday of the week.

 

This week the theme, “flower” was chosen by Margaret, (The Pocket Rocket)

 

It struck me as I looked through my archive of photos, how much art does imitate life. Anyone who views my photostream or knows me personally, is aware that I love flowers and that I also love Art Nouveau design and stained glass, so I decided to create this collage for the “Snap Happy” theme this week as it combines three of my great passions.

 

Top left: This beautiful Art Nouveau stained glass door panel featuring a stylised poppy bloom in vermilion and green rippled glass used to be in the upstairs of a rather large two storey Edwardian residence in the Melbourne suburb of Thornbury. I came across this panel amid a pile of building debris when the house was being partially demolished to allow modifications to the property to allow the construction of two rather vulgar and unattractive box-like town houses. I walked past at just the right time of day as the afternoon sun streamed through the glass, illuminating the colour in the glass. I do not know what happened to this panel, as it, like all the other building detritus was gone two days later. I only hope that it has been taken to an architectural salvagers where it may find a new home.

 

Top right: A luscious red poppy with velvety petals that I photographed in the Cloudehill Gardens in Olinda in January 2020 whilst on my summer holidays. Made on an easterly slope at the top of the Dandenongs, Cloudehill is at an altitude of 580 metres. The garden has deep volcanic loam soil and receives around 1.25 metres of rainfall each year. This falls most of the year, though February, March and April are drier. There is little frost, more snow than frost in fact. These factors go to explain why the Dandenongs are one of the outstanding places to garden worldwide.

 

Bottom left: A red Kardinal 85 Hybrid Tea Rose which I photographed in the Victoria State Rose Garden in Werribee in January 2020 whilst on my summer holidays. The Kardinal 85 Hybrid Tea Rose was bred by Reimer Kordes in Germany in 1985 (hence its spelling). As there are a number of other roses named Kardinal which were introduced earlier, this rose carries the unusual date factor in its registered name. The Kardinal 85 has bright red flowers, upright growth with a light fragrance. Unfortunately, its breeding has also given it a profusion of very sharp thorns! With over five thousand roses covering about five hectares, the Victoria State Rose Garden is one of the tourist gems of Victoria.

  

Bottom right: This beautiful Art Nouveau stained glass red rose features in a window in the front bar of the old Keating\'s Hotel in Woodend, country Victoria. It is one of my favourite examples of Art Nouveau stained glass that I have ever had the pleasure of photographing (and I’ve photographed quite a bit of it!) For me it represents so much of the beauty in the stylised design of Art Nouveau artworks, and is not dissimilar to the rose designs of Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh. Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh (5 November 1864 – 7 January 1933) was an English born artist who worked in Scotland, and whose design work became one of the defining features of the "Glasgow Style" during the 1890s. Her husband was Scottish architect, designer, water colourist and artist Charles Rennie Mackintosh.

Petri Orikkor Kuribayashi 50mm f/2

France. Vosges du Nord. Photo prise depuis le chemin entre le château du Wasigenstein (France) et le château du Blumenstein (Allemagne).

Une petite parenthèse au milieu de mes photos du 21 mars pour une photo prise ce dimanche.

C'est ma femme qui s'est rendue compte à juste titre que cet écureuil avait la même posture que Spider-Man sur les murs. Je suis d'accord.

 

It was my wife who rightly realized that this squirrel had the same posture as Spider-Man on the walls. I agree.

From the Big Trip 3D slide archives - 2004

 

I was fascinated when I saw the cloud on the horizon appearing to mimic the shape of the evil whaling harpoon in the foreground! As you can see from the signposts, this was at the One Mile Jetty at Carnarvon in Western Australia.

 

(Slide scanned using Canon RP with 24-240 and Nisi close up lens. Original taken using Fuji Sensia 100 slide film)

Nikon D800

Lens: Nikkor 28-300mm

Aperture: f11

ISO:100

 

Texture by Anna Lenabem.

Canon EOS M6 / Manual lens TTArtisan 50 mm f/1.2

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