View allAll Photos Tagged INTERPRETATION

My interpretation of the Iron Throne of Westeros from the "A Song of Ice and Fire" novels by George R. R. Martin and the HBO Original Series "Game of Thrones".

 

"The Iron Throne was constructed by Aegon I Targaryen, the first king of the Seven Kingdoms. Aegon the Conqueror had the throne made from the swords surrendered by his enemies. It is supposed to have taken a thousand blades to make, heated in the breath of Balerion the Black Dread. The hammering took fifty-nine days."

- A Game of Thrones

 

More Pictures: www.imperiumdersteine.de/index.php?/gallery/album/5203-le...

Esaias Thorén (1901-1981) was a Swedish painter.

this is my interpretation of a war memorial I saw in outback Queensland it moved me , a roll of barbed wire and a cutout of a fallen soldier in the center, poppies placed around and entwined, on a mound of white gravel . I took it and imagined how I could remove distracting background and create an feeling of a foggy battlefield .

 

Even in the mountains west of Tokyo, you cant escape the heat and humidity. It is summer after all.

 

Slicing through the Koma River valley below a Japanese graveyard is a limited express service bound for Chichibu, served by the stylish Seibu 001 Series. Designed by Kazuyo Sejima, and built by Hitachi in 2019, the 001's, also nicknamed "Laview", are used exclusively on limited express services between Ikebukuro and Chichibu in Saitama Pref. They boast some of the largest windows of any train in the world, nearly reaching from floor to ceiling. It really is a modern interpretation of style and function coexisting.

 

Seibu-Chichibu Line.

Seibu 001 Series.

Agano, Saitama Pref., Japan.

Varvara Stepanova (1894 – 1958) was a Russian artist. With her husband Alexander Rodchenko, she was associated with the Constructivist branch of the Russian avant-garde, which rejected aesthetic values in favour of revolutionary ones. Her activities extended into propaganda, poetry, stage scenery and textile designs.

It's not a particularly beautiful spot, this bridge-over at the crossing of Symonds Street and Wellesley. And it's rather a shock as you come out of pretty Albert Park just behind the university at the right. But this Art Installation by Francis Uprichard (1976-) is her fine attempt at not so much beautification as to take one's mind off ugliness.

It's called 'Loafers', and the name is perhaps tongue-in-cheek with regard to university students... As I stood here looking, though, none stopped to loaf but they seemed -heavily laden with notebooks of paper and electronics - intent on their tasks. The snake at the right... Is it a symbol of knowledge leading to perdition; think Paradise Lost... an end to loafing around in Eden and having now to toil for sustenance?

Ah! Interpretations and Over-interpretations!

 

interpretations @ Quantum mechanics

essendo un posto non adattissimo, ho preferito personalizzare questo scatto unico come se fosse un disegno. Notare l' esagerazione della via lattea.

My interpretation of the weekly topic. Happy Macro Monday

Interpretation by me of the Panda designed by Oriol Esteve

Paper : Sandwich 23x23 cm tinyurl.com/y9od9anr

Diagram : "Stop Thinking, Start Folding" www.origami-shop.com/oriol

A B&W portfolio as i did for the Causses de Quercy 2 months ago. B&W brings a new vision as it creates a context where interpretation is key. The square format is also the most natural for us and allow also a precise composition. JP

“Water is life's mater and matrix, mother and medium. There is no life without water.” ~~ Albert Szent-Gyorgyi

 

I'm loving this set! I don't know, after all I am an Aquarius ... the Water Barer =0}

Please View On Black

 

I must get these put up in a gallery on my web pages. It's still a work in progress.

www.lensdancer.com/Lensdancer-index.html

Visitors get personal interpretation at Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site. After walking up the bluff (and passing some interpretive signs like this one), visitors hear from a ranger near the ramada at background left - as these visitors are doing.

Presenting my LEGO BrickHeadz interpretation of Dancing Groot from Guardians Of The Galaxy (2014)

 

-Kit: www.bricklink.com/store/home.page?p=Adzbadboy&itemID=...

-Instructions: www.bricklink.com/store/home.page?p=Adzbadboy&itemID=...

 

Highlights

-Liked by Guardians Of The Galaxy (2014) director James Gunn! (www.instagram.com/p/BQDi1H6gZBv/?taken-by=adeel_zubair)

-Blogged on Brothers-Brick.com (www.brothers-brick.com/2017/02/05/im-groot-translation-di...)

-Blogged on BrickShow.com

brickshow.com/2017/03/7-lego-brickheadz-mocs-that-will-wi...

 

Camera

-Apple iPhone SE

________________________________________________

 

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© Dan McCabe

 

This is a photo of the side of a fallen tree stripped of its bark. It reminded me of a face or a mask, and my processing emphasizes that interpretation. A surreal mask, but a mask nonetheless.

 

The lines/curves that you see are "growth rings" surrounding branches as they grew and developed. As they were exposed to the elements, the softer parts degraded more rapidly than the harder parts, leaving these ridges.

 

The tree is located in the Grove of the Patriarchs, a stand of old growth forest, in the Mount Rainier National Park. Many of the trees in this grove are over 1000 years old and 8-12 ft (3-4 m) in diameter. However, you can also see trees that have fallen naturally, such as this one.

 

While I have included this photo in my "Driftwood" album, it technically isn't driftwood, since it wasn't found on the shore of a large body of water. However, it captures that spirit.

freed from tree's hold

only to land on metal's grip

await for winds of change

~m~

  

When I took this photo about a year ago, I had no idea of its significance other than a leaf from a tree had fallen and had been stuck between the steels of a fence.

 

I did not think this photo would come to life one day in my dream. It was not about the fence itself but rather the lack of it.

 

I dreamed the other day that all the fences in my backyard were dug out and removed leaving nothing but deep trenches along the property line. I think there is a very powerful message behind this image to what my dream represents.

 

My book of dreams tells me that the fence represents some kind of barrier or obstacle. Since it is at my backyard, most likely it is at home. Its removal means a division or obstacle is removed. Now it is open for many interpretations? What is your interpretation?

 

My digital interpretation of the Volkite spaceship originally built by Nick Trotta (flic.kr/s/aHskS4bok9).

 

Free building instructions and parts inventory are available on Rebrickable.com: reb.li/m/108328

Zenza Bronica S2A

Nikkor P 75mm f2.8

Kodak Portra 160

 

Tracer une ligne (différentes interpretations)

Tresore Prada in a another perfect interpretation of Madonna.

 

Photo taken at the NY City sim:

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Creation%20Paradise/62/43/...

 

A rare but favorite version of this song:

www.youtube.com/watch?v=uwSMfvxjBf8

This bolder is literally centimetres away from the heart of the Strid. (For those of you that don’t know the Strid, it’s a short length of water only a few meters wide that the rather sizeable river Wharfe is forced to go through).

 

For me this image speaks for itself, so I’m going to let you come up with your own interpretations...

 

An innovative interpretation of X-ray data from a cluster of galaxies could help scientists fulfill a quest they have been on for decades: determining the nature of dark matter.

 

The finding involves a new explanation for a set of results made with NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory, ESA’s XMM-Newton and Hitomi, a Japanese-led X-ray telescope. If confirmed with future observations, this may represent a major step forward in understanding the nature of the mysterious, invisible substance that makes up about 85% of matter in the universe.

 

Image credit: X-ray: NASA/CXO/Fabian et al.; Radio: Gendron-Marsolais et al.; NRAO/AUI/NSF Optical: NASA, SDSS

 

Read more

 

NASA Media Usage Guidelines

This is one of those images, I think, that is subject to the viewer's interpretation. I'd really love to know what anyone has to say or thinks about it. (:

Bâtiment de bois et de verre créé en 2010 par l'architecte A. Tejedor dont les murs extérieurs reproduisent des fragments de la "Lex Flavia Malacitana" constituant une bonne introduction au monde romain et à ce théâtre en particulier.

 

Wood and glass building designed in 2010 by architect A. Tejedor whose exterior walls reproduce fragments of the "Lex Flavia Malacitana" constitutes a good introduction to Roman world and in this particular theater.

DSC9667

 

When I think of sand dunes and photography, I think black and white. The natural white environment coupled with shadow areas is just made for B/W interpretation. Here are my attempts to capture the beauty of White Sands National Park in this medium. Most are shot in hard light, but some are early or late in the day, some even approach high key. White Sands looks great in any wardrobe.

 

In late October, I made a trip to New Mexico to shoot the dunes at White Sands National Park. I hooked up with my close friend and photographer, Sandra Herber. www.flickr.com/photos/sandraherber/ We were at White Sands four days, made eight excursions into the dunes, hiked over 20 miles and shot close to 2,000 photos between us.

 

We are posting our images at the same time and it will be interesting to see how we handled being in the same locations together. For safety reasons and for the fun of it, we hiked the dunes together, sometimes pointing our lenses in the same direction, other times wandering apart. I am sure we got some similar shots, but it will be interesting to see those that are different as we each have our own way of looking at things, as well as having different focal length coverage. Then there is the processing aspect.

 

To say White Sands is magical is an understatement. As photographers, we talk about the light, emphasize the light, are critical about the light. The dunes at White Sands react in amazing ways to the change in light, offering different looks, revealing various personalities. It is this diversity of the dunes that I wanted to capture then, and present here now.

Another lith re-interpretation of an older negative. I love how this one turned out, very colorful and nice tones overall!

 

The paper used here was ancient Revue BS 13 RC stock that was completely fogged. I couldn't even make a test strip as it would simply turn 100% black in normal developer. I ended up eyeballing/guesstimating the exposure time instead.

 

The print has a slight texture of microscopic black dots all over it. You can hardly see it on this upload.

 

I like this print much better than the direct negative scan I uploaded to Flickr a while ago.

 

Moersch Easy Lith 1+20

 

Nikon F3 + AF Nikkor 50mm f1.8 + Kodak Tri-X Pan 400

 

HOYA Yellow Filter (if I remember correctly)

 

Expiry date: 1990s (?)

Exposure index: 320

 

Scanned on a Heidelberg/Linotype-Hell Saphir Ultra II using Vuescan.

Interpretation .... photographic expressionism.

Excerpt from “A Short Walking Tour of the Yates Street Heritage District”:

 

10 College Street was built in 1900 on lands once owned by Ridley College. The design shows many characteristics of the Shingle style, an American interpretation of the Queen Anne Revival style. Common features of this style include the numerous projecting window sections, wood shingle exterior, and simplified ornamental trim.

A most aggravating bird to photograph...with her head bobbing to and fro and zigzagging through the vegetation. Took no notice of me as I volleyed off 100+ shots, just to get a clear, detailed image.

...but I did it:).....and able to see the subtle color markings on her back to show you.

I've not seen them in Minnesota nor does my bird book mention them...but they seem to be in every other part of the world!

  

Thanks for stopping by, I'm slowly getting back on flickr....missed you all:)...Pat.....xo...

 

*****

Trip was wonderful, got all cultured out with classical music concerts and a super contemporary interpretation of Hamlet. Andrew Carlson gave a most energetic performance in titled role and for me, an added appreciation for Shakespeare....

Took some photos which I will show eventually, nothing I feel an urgency to do right now.

Meine Interpretation der schönsten Brücke Berlins (My own interpretation ot the most beautiful bridge from Berlin)

This is for you, Alessandro. It's a still image that I've added sound to. It's my attempt at a visual interpretation of a pair of hands playing the piano with the music emanating from all around. I added one of your recitals to it which I listen to often. I hope you enjoy it, and I hope others who might see/hear it might enjoy it too. I know they will enjoy your playing.

 

Merry Christmas!

 

(Alessandro Drago playing Debussy : Preludes, Book 1. Le Vent dans la Plaine) from his album : "Alessandro Drago plays Liszt and Debussy")

  

New interpretation of the old Classic Lego Set 1380 "Werewolf Ambush" from 2002 as part of a Halloween Collab with hellboy.bricks -Wat- and nighttimebuilder.

 

Hope you like it and check out their builds as well !!

My interpretation of Vincent van Gogh's sunflowers

more: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunflowers_(Van_Gogh_series)

 

When I have a summerdream, I always have this glimmering, shimmering of sunflowers in front of me, the glow of Vincent's sunflowers ....

 

Vincent was a great painter, whom I admire very much. More about his short tragic life: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vincent_van_Gogh

 

Photographed with Daguerreotype Achromat

Aquarelle 6,3

Brass Lens

The front bee is focused ;-)

Only minimal image processing.

******************************************************

Press L and then F11 for a large view -

you must absolute fully enjoy this picture!

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Bond Falls (MI)

 

A somewhat artistic interpretation of a huge, beautiful waterfall in the UP. A very long exposure creates the smooth look and circular patterns in the water.

 

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Thanks for looking!

 

Captured: October 2016

Camera: Nikon D610

Lens: Nikon 16-35mm f/4

Settings: ISO200, 16mm, f/8, 30 sec

The famous enface photography of Nick Cave by Anton Corbijn (at Rotterdam's museum)

I took these two photographs of it from the extremely right and left angle.

I was fascinated by the original photography and was trying to find out why... then... those angles opened up the magical layers of it.

Damp and misty mornings make very good seittings for woodlands.

i try to replicate 'what the eye can see' because with a single exposure cannot do this, however good your camera is.

The human eye captures so much detail, highlights and contrast at the same time.

I use PS for what it was meant to be used for, and that is 'to replicate what the eye can see.

My interpretation of the blue ZET "Uspinjaca" funicular railway from my hometown in Zagreb, Croatia. Apparently the shortest funicular rail in the world. It connects the urban city centre with the historical upper-town. It is now a protected monument, still in operation. (more on wikipedia).

 

This is my first larger scale LEGO model. The tracks and upper station are supported on Technic beams. A single M motor connected to a train speed regulator runs both spools through a worm gear. An automatic switch installed under the tracks switches direction.

The cars have a hidden boat weight to decrease jittering and lower the center of gravity.

Only LEGO parts were used, including the string / cable.

this golden gate bridge moment was inspired from a recent dream

This is an artistic interpretation edit. The original shot was taken at midday in Statthes harbour on a chilly grey day. This year I have taught myself luminosity masking in PS and decided to let my imagination run wild as I love this composition.

Dungeness is a headland on the coast of Kent, England, formed largely of a shingle beach in the form of a cuspate foreland. It shelters a large area of low-lying land, Romney Marsh. Dungeness is also the name of the power station and a few other nearby buildings near the beach, and of an important ecological site at the same location.

 

Dungeness is one of the largest expanses of shingle in the world. It is of international conservation importance for its geomorphology, plant and invertebrate communities and birdlife. This is recognised and protected mostly through its conservation designations as a National Nature Reserve (NNR), a Special Protection Area (SPA), a Special Area of Conservation (SAC) and part of the Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) of Dungeness, Romney Marsh and Rye Bay.

 

There is a remarkable variety of wildlife living at Dungeness, with over 600 different types of plant: a third of all those found in Britain. It is one of the best places in Britain to find insects such as moths, bees and beetles, and spiders; many of these are very rare, some found nowhere else in Britain.

 

The short-haired bumblebee, Bombus subterraneus, was last found in the UK in 1988, but has survived in New Zealand after being shipped there more than 100 years ago. It is to be reintroduced at Dungeness. It is planned that the first bees will be introduced in the spring of 2010.

 

The flooded gravel pits on Denge Beach, both brackish and fresh water, provide an important refuge for many migratory and coastal bird species. The RSPB has a bird sanctuary there and every year thousands of bird watchers descend on the peninsula to catch a glimpse of a rare bird from the bird observatory.

 

One of the most remarkable features of the site is an area known as 'the patch' or, by anglers, as 'the boil'. The waste hot water and sewage from the Dungeness nuclear power stations are pumped into the sea through two outfall pipes, enriching the biological productivity of the sea bed and attracting seabirds from miles around.

 

Beach fishing is popular at Dungeness, with the area being a nationally recognised cod fishing venue in the winter.

 

The name Dungeness derives from Old Norse nes: "headland", with the first part probably connected with the nearby Denge Marsh. Popular etymology ascribes a French origin to the toponym, giving an interpretation as "dangerous nose".

 

interpretation welcome

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