View allAll Photos Tagged Interaction
I am not comfortable with street photography and decided to use my camera on live view at waist level - a first for me. I would not be comfortable asking to take a photo so they tend to be grab shots. I also tried out the filters on my camera - fisheye and HDR but as we can only submit one image I chose this one.
Zoo Erie. Mini-essay on human-animal interaction. Which is kind of a misnomer - shouldn't it be called animal-animal interaction?
The Difference Between Albacore Tuna and Chunk Light Tuna
We're Here! : Kill the Photographer
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Camera : SONY α6500 ILCE-6500 “ E-mount ” “ SonyAlpha ”
Lens : SIGMA 30mm F1.4 DC DN | Contemporary C016 “ E-mount ”
Went to Kew Gardens the weekend ... they had a little "petting zoo" for the kids :) ... was delightful watching the kids getting all involved with all the baby animals :)
(the lambs were really dirty tough :( ... )
I still love and appreciate wildlife portraits. In fact, that constitutes the bulk of my work. I do find myself seeking species interactions though. I love the opportunity to observe animal behavior, whether it is between members of the same species or different species altogether. In this photo, a cattle tyrant "pays the ferryman" for a marsh crossing.
"The simplicity of the interaction is one of the most critical things."
-Colin Angle
(Colin Angle is co-founder, chief executive officer and chairman of the board of iRobot Corporation - not very poetic I know)
A little play on a rainy day! Hope you all are having a good one!
A remarkable telescopic composition in yellow and blue, this scene features a trio of interacting galaxies almost 90 million light-years away, toward the constellation Virgo. On the right, two, spiky, foreground Milky Way stars echo the trio galaxy hues, a reminder that stars in our own galaxy are like those in the distant island universes. With sweeping spiral arms and obscuring dust lanes, NGC 5566 is enormous, about 150,000 light-years across. Just above it lies small, blue NGC 5569. Near center, the third galaxy, NGC 5560, is multicolored and apparently stretched and distorted by its interaction with NGC 5566. The galaxy trio is also included in Halton Arp's 1966 Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies as Arp 286. Of course, such cosmic interactions are now appreciated as a common part of the evolution of galaxies. via NASA ift.tt/29h9JKP
I need to offer a few guesses to describe what was happening in the lake. These large fish appear to be carp. There were many of them near the surface, interacting with each other in a way that created a lot of turbulence in the water.
I made a triptych because it's difficult to make sense of the action in still photos. My guess is that the carp were enjoying some mating activity!
For interaction, I wanted to bring home the idea that a Subaru is a car for adventures. With the pup in the back, the lighting, and the overall scene, my hope is that the viewer wants to go outside and experience those adventures. I had to do a lot in post. I cleaned up the reflections on the left side of the car, made the lighting a bit more dramatic, added the clouds, and retouched the windows. Ty kept licking them (lol). I think the use of the 24mm was effective in making the angle more dramatic. I think it emphasizes the parts of the subject I wanted to emphasize. Overall, I'm happy with this picture. It is definitely more edited that my normal style goes, but as I was researching for this project, automotive photography seems to have more contrast, so I tried to emulate that style within these pictures.
Source: hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/releases/2008/16/image/an/
Retouching: Lightroom
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AM 0500-620 consists of a highly symmetric spiral galaxy seen nearly face-on and partially backlit by a background galaxy. The foreground spiral galaxy has a number of dust lanes between its arms. The background galaxy was earlier classified as an elliptical galaxy, but Hubble has now revealed a galaxy with dusty spiral arms and bright knots of stars. AM0500-620 is 350 million light-years away from Earth in the constellation of Dorado, the Swordfish.
This image is part of a large collection of 59 images of merging galaxies taken by the Hubble Space Telescope and released on the occasion of its 18th anniversary on 24th April 2008.
Two of the boys in the interaction are my grandchildren, August 2004 in MD USA swimming party, at the end of summer. This was a discussion, after it they got together, two of my grandchildren and the young girl with a bird very well.
This photo remains one of my favorites
as I succeeded so well to catch not only the interaction between the kids, but each others very different expression.