View allAll Photos Tagged Infinity.
Part of our visit to Skaftafell National Park involved a trek across a sandur. Walking across the lifeless landscape through light rain and heavily overcast conditions was dull drudgery. So we just put our heads down and continued across the uneven ground, walking through the mist seeing only 50m or so of rubble in front of us.
To give me some focus, I decided to try and make a photo that captured the seemingly interminable hike. When we came across this bridge (the only feature in the otherwise featureless landscape) I took my time to get the angle that best reprented the bleak infinitude of the environment and our walk. Thankfully the clouds on the horizon lifted too, showing the distant mountain -- our destination -- infinity's end, so to speak.
Sandurs are deserts formed of sediments deposited at the end of glaciers by by meltwater. The frequent volcanic eruptions beneath the Vatnajökull icecap result in the Skeiðarársandur sandur pictured here. It's the largest sandur in the world and, as I found, not much fun to traverse.
Skaftafell Park, Iceland, 2009
Canon EOS 5D Mark II with Canon EF 24-105mm f/4L IS
iPhone6 shot Oct. 7th, 2015 - Pier 66
290 foot super yacht - Infinity
Snapseed, Lightroom & Artoon apps applied
Thanks to Bioethicsireuk for the possibility given me to help them with one of my images.
Can you see the many ∞ on the water surface?
Camera Model :Canon EOS 400D digital
Lens : Sigma 18-200
Shutter Speed : 1/125 Sec
F-Number : F/6.3
Exposure Time : 1/125 Sec
ISO Speed : 200
Exposure Program : Manual
Flash Mode : Did not fire
Date picture Taken : 05/11/2008 04:42 PM
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Infinity, a 385-foot yacht, built in Netherlands by Oceanco, was delivered in 2022. Its owner, Eric Smidt, CEO of Harbor Freight Tools, reportedly paid $300 million for the vessel. Infinity can accommodate up to 16 guests in 8 staterooms, with 43 crew members. The interior was designed by Sinot Yacht Architecture & Design, featuring a teak deck, steel hull and aluminum superstructure. It currently sails under the Cayman Islands flag. It replaces a 291-foot yacht sold in 2022.
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