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Most pictures in this album were taken with illum.lytro.com/illum Light Field camera. It's a gadget I do not know how to use.
I use it to shoot portraits (where high resolution is often not desired) by refocusing the pictures on the computer, and exporting them as a .jpg (see the next frame). Once can also turn it into a movie (like this one), post a live refocusable photo on lyttro, like pictures.lytro.com/lytro/collections/41/pictures/1088658, or export it in two 3D formats.
This photo turned out to be a total pain to take - I could only find one complete pair of my old Barbie shoes (luckily bought these pairs from the local secondhand toy shop), the dolls kept falling over, the desk lamp I was using for light fell on the floor so the bulb broke, and my knees hurt from trying to get in the right position. Moan over.
I intended to just have the shoes in a row, but thought the legs looked better. I used polaroid effect and added a slight matte border using Picnik.
Reject shot: www.flickr.com/photos/furwillfly/6726941685/in/photostream/
Walking on the wharf in downtown Auckland, these three things - cranes? - caught my eye. I kept walking until clouds lit by the sunset appeared behind them.
This is my entry for the DPS weekly assignment, "Odd numbers".
Agricultural industry background - close-up of a row of heavy tractors.
More images for my "Industry & Technology" album here:
Free for You under CC-BY 4.0
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence !!!
You can support my photographic artistic work by making a selfless donation of any amount to my Paypal: www.paypal.com/ncp/payment/Q88NZ4CBEJLCA
Thank you very much and best regards,
Andrew from ASPhotography.
Wishes do come true. She used the money she earned from selling cherries to buy all the things needed to raise ducklings. And then she bought four baby ducks. She is one happy girl.
When photographing the icebergs in LeConte Bay, Alaska, it is tempting to wonder what errors you have made in setting your camera. Did I mess up and shoot this in "Cloudy" white balance? Did I set the color temperature manually? What did I do wrong here...the colors are all whacko. Oh, perhaps I was using an enhancing filter. Okay, I actually painstakingly traced around all of the blue ice in this photo and radically adjusted the color and saturation and colored a few of them blue just for fun! (Just kidding!).
Wow, what an amazing landscape presents itself at the mouth of LeConte Bay. Early in the morning, with no one else anywhere near you for miles and miles, it is easy to imagine being in the middle of an alien landscape. Okay, okay - in this photo, the "clarity" (mid-tone contrast) and "vibrance" mid-range color has been bumped around 15%, and contrast enhanced overall, and that's about it. No other color adjustments were made.
Once again, I am humbled by the endless beauty of this world. It is reassuring to see a few wild places left relatively untouched!
I was travelling as the guest of a friend and fellow photographer, Jeff Hanson, who commented "the only thing missing in this photo is a kayaker"! (Though he said that for every iceberg photo - he was absolutely right for this one...it is hard to know the scale of these 'bergs without a kayaker or bird or other creature (Humpback whale perhaps!?) :-)
This photograph is not
in the public domain and may not be used in electronic,
print, or any other form, without advance permission from Richard
Mitchell.
A shot possibly not to be repeated? Three Versas in a row at Queen Street, as 320 at the head of the queue loads up on the 2235 42 to St Ann's, 321 in the middle loads the 2235 40B to St Ann's - one of only two 40B's to run on a Saturday - and an unidentified GO2 Blue Versa loads up at the back on the 2240 39 to Carlton Valley.
Quite a busy Saturday, so no photographic masterpiece, but its not horrific and its another day down. I began the day sharing my morning coffee with a former Miss Northern Ireland*
I then had vital tasks to complete such as going to the shops to exchange some underpants and visiting the one remaining camera shop in Carlisle, where for the second visit in a row I experienced awful customer service. There will not be a third. Happily, I now have the right size undies, so that is something to be thankful for.
I mentioned a while back that I'd applied for a small grant that was available to help turn my 365 into a book. This is money from a famous Cumbrian non-fiction writer, and the decision was made my him, a prominent local publisher and the head of Cumbria Tourism. Today I go an e-mail that said no, and nothing else. When I applied, Diane and I created these sample spreads and sent them off, they're in the comments below. You'll have to visualise where they would have spread across two pages as I can't be bothered to put them together.
On a positive note, I am about to venture forth for a photographic trip, in the knowledge that if I post it tonight I will be entirely caught up for the first time since February!
*As well as her husband and daughter.
Day 272 - March 9th, 2008. Leila! Leila! Leila! sees Rufus! Rufus! Rufus! two nights in a row!!! He was incredible both times. Of course. Though I preferred the show in Monterey over the show in Napa. We took the pretty and long way home from Monterey today. We stayed in a hotel last night, so forgive me for wearing the same clothes two days in a row (and yes, you better believe I changed before the Napa show!!!).
For the third summer in a row, musk mallow have partially taken over the late summer lawnmeadow.
I'm not complaining.
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Musk mallow has pretty pink flowers that can be seen along roadside verges, hedgerows and field margins in summer. It lives up to its name, producing a delicate, musky smell that increases indoors.
An elegant relative of Common mallow, Musk mallow has delicate pale pink flowers that appear in July and August. It grows on roadside verges and field edges, and in hedgerows, pastures and churchyards. It favours dry places and is a popular cottage garden plant.
The saucer-shaped flowers of Musk mallow and have a musky smell, hence the common name. They have five petals, which are pale pink with fine, dark pink veins. The stems and deeply lobed leaves are hairy
If you live in a dry, sunny corner of the country, try planting Musk mallow alongside Marjoram, Field scabious, Cornflower and Greater knapweed, and enjoy the buzz and hum of insects visiting your miniature wildflower meadow.
www.wildlifetrusts.org/wildlife-explorer/wildflowers/musk...
A row of pylons for what used to be a pier stand amidst the marine layer in the still morning waters of the Hood Canal just off of Menard's Landing in Tahuya, WA.
If you'd like to see this in a higher resolution, please visit my website. Thanks for looking!
Copyright © 2010 Damon D. Edwards, All rights reserved. Use without permission is illegal.
A group of snowy egrets and an American avocet hunting on the mudflats as the tide goes out. I took a few interesting frames of this (see below, and likely in a future post), but my favorite is probably the one above, as everything lined up pretty nicely. Taken at the Albany Mudflats/Eastshore State Park and cropped from a horizontal frame.
Lomo Smena 8M, 35mm, Kodak Ektar print. These were in the window of an antique store in Dunsmuir, California. The weird angle was as close as I could get. It was just so surreal. Nyms
kind of painterly, huh? one of my favorites from my and ben's trip to SB this summer.
polaroid 661 film expired 1999 in landcamera 340
santa barbara, ca
'ROID WEEK 2009
As mentioned I’ve been going on adventures quite often with Spencer. Two days in a row I found myself holding on for dear life as he pelted around corners as we drove up to places unknown. I had been to Porteau Cove once before during the day but not during night. We had planned for long exposures but he forgot his tripod. I set up for some shots with my tripod and once I felt complete I handed it over to him. While he was shooting a couple others came to the end of the pier. Freezing and looking for something to do I started up a conversation with one of them. He mentioned the Northern Lights were coming. Moments later I struck up another conversation with some other photographers that showed up, one of them was Philippe. He was using a ridiculous wide-angle to capture the landscapes and he nabbed some killer shots go the lights. He also explained a magical program that converts fish-eye shots to regular landscapes and a couple days later I got a taste when he posted the most amazing landscape I’ve seen in ages. Check it out! www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10153648620742348
Revisiting the 2017 "Operation: Desert Storm" location for the third year in a row. Upon my nightly arrival in Phoenix this year, the region had experienced a drought in terms of monsoon weather, and the skies were clear when I took this shot.
2018:
www.flickr.com/photos/95007796@N06/28280722458/in/photoli...
2017:
www.flickr.com/photos/95007796@N06/35405048823/in/photoli...