View allAll Photos Tagged Inverted

3 glasses, glass front makes effect of reversing colors have clear water, blue water on the left, the right orange water.

In this picture using an external flash.

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

3 vasos, vaso frontal hace efecto de invertir colores tiene agua transparente, de la izquierda agua azul, el de la derecha agua naranja.

En esta foto utilice un flash externo.

I liked the look of this shot when I inverted it and thought it looked somewhat impressionistic. I hope you are all doing well and Happy Spring my Flickr friends!

Street photo is about timing. Sometimes it's an urban moment, some other times it's something in the scenery that catches your eye. The moment can be gone really quick, and for the scenery to make sense to capture it, you might have to be patient for the right moment to come. Maybe someone interesting to walk in your frame, or something to happen. I found this mural very bizzare yet it did strike me as allegoric. Maybe the artist wanted to show how big cities feel like prisons, where the highrises limit our view of the sky.. who knows? what I know is that this mural can be found at Horton Plaza Park in San Diego, California.

 

Moby - Natural Blues

www.youtube.com/watch?v=SC6-TiN19uE

Inspiriert durch die Intros diverser deutscher Krimiserien, die in der bayrischen Landshauptstadt produziert wurden.

 

Inspired by the intros of various German crime series produced in the Bavarian capital.

 

Website: www.heiko-roebke-photography.de

Death Stranding

 

♫♫♫ Low Roar - Bones ♫♫♫

 

★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★

.. :: Join my groups :: ..

☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆

Beauty in Video Games

Beauty Digital Body

Beauty Nightlife

Beauty Sunset

Magic in the Mist

★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★

 

A White-breasted Nuthatch below our feeder. The fence in the back is annoying, but this is otherwise about as good a shot as I've gotten of this character. Glendale, Missouri

Tree canopy or jungle tree roots around winding path trails

[explore]

 

...to catch all the tears

I have been experimenting with taking day shots and using Photoshop's "invert" feature to convert the shot to a negative image. Day then becomes night. This is essentially the same shot as "Adams Street" (Malta, Illinois) in my feed below. A gimmick in my opinion for sure but still interesting to play around with.

A metaphor for our times, perhaps, when the world seems upside down. I just received an email from Bruce Percy, who wrote of inverting his photos (a lot better than this ;-) And hoping to sell his work. (www.brucepercy.com link off Flickr.) He calls it reinterpreting the image. I call it fooling around on an overcast morning.

 

This is a new crocus bloom from yesterday morning, taken using a translucent umbrella and tripod. I used an invert tool in Photoshop and then added a slight yellow hue. Just an experiment. No need to comment. I'm just a basic user of Photoshop. No knowledge about all of those little tools and layers. Looks a bit similar to a negative.

This wren was in a plum tree enjoying a snack.

A classic subject with a twist

One often sees a pelican with its pouch hanging, filled with fish, or water, or a combination. But this one was yawning so largely that it reversed the pouch inwards. First time I'd seen this!

Перевёрнутый мир. Монохромный.

James - Getting Away With it (All Messed Up)

youtu.be/CETTzv3fTG0

I like what happened to this one the reflection of the sunrise and chimney is inverted from the rear one,

I think that is cool.

 

Sorry to have been gone for so long, life's been a little crazy :) ~ I hope you've all been well! I'm looking forward to being around a little bit more in the days ahead. Cheers to your weekend!!

used Invert in iPiccy for this slide

 

Happy Father's Day to all the Dads out there

After enforcing their crew truck with new tires, the DREI 400 crew went up to Hillsdale to grab this empty grain train for Tuscola. ADM loaded the train overnight and the 400 job showed up this morning to send it back east.

 

On one of the line’s very few curves, the CSXT 4540 is seen snaking around and is about to dip into the Embarass River valley at Camargo. The misty, dreary day made for some very moody lighting conditions.

This curious clock located on the pediment of the Congress Palace on Murillo Square is inverted compared to the usual clocks.

It is to be read from right to left, and its needles turn counterclockwise. The current president of Bolivia, Evo Morales, had it installed to challenge practices from the North.

____________________________

L'horloge inversée

 

Cette horloge curieuse située sur le fronton du palais du congrès sur la Place Murillo est à l'envers par rapport aux horloges habituelles.

Elle se lit de droite à gauche, et ses aiguilles tournent dans le sens inverse des aiguilles d'une montre. Le président actuel de la Bolivie, Evo Morales, l'a fait installer pour contester les pratiques venues du Nord.

 

_____________________________

La Paz - Bolivie / La Paz - Bolivia

 

This is an inverted up shot of the tulip staircase in the Queens House, Greenwich.

Ice Storm of 2013, Ontario

I inverted a regular photo to get this effect and quite liked the cool vs. warm tones!

Camera obscura (plural camera obscura or camerae obscurae from Latin, meaning "dark room": camera "(vaulted) chamber or room," and obscura "darkened, dark"), also referred to as pinhole image, is the natural optical phenomenon that occurs when an image of a scene at the other side of a screen (or for instance a wall) is projected through a small hole in that screen, as a reversed and inverted image (left to right and upside down) on a surface opposite to the opening. The surroundings of the projected image have to be relatively dark for the image to be clear, so many historical camera obscura experiments were performed in dark rooms.

The term "camera obscura" also refers to constructions or devices that make use of the principle within a box, tent or room. Camerae obscurae with a lens in the opening have been used since the second half of the 16th century and became popular as an aid for drawing and painting. The camera obscura box was developed further into the photographic camera in the first half of the 19th century when camera obscura boxes were used to expose light-sensitive materials to the projected image.

The camera obscura was used as a means to study eclipses, without the risk of damaging the eyes by looking into the sun directly. As a drawing aid, the camera obscura allowed tracing the projected image to produce a highly accurate representation, especially appreciated as an easy way to achieve a proper graphical perspective.

A camera obscura device without a lens but with a very small hole is sometimes referred to as a "pinhole camera", although this more often refers to simple (home-made) lens-less cameras in which photographic film or photographic paper is used.

 

The earliest known written record of the camera obscura is to be found in Chinese writings called Mozi and dated to the 4th century BCE, traditionally ascribed to and named for Mozi (circa 470 BCE-circa 391 BCE), a Han Chinese philosopher and the founder of Mohist School of Logic. In these writings it is explained how the inverted image in a "collecting-point" or "treasure house" is inverted by an intersecting point (a pinhole) that collected the (rays of) light.

The Greek philosopher Aristotle (384-322 BCE), or possibly a follower of his ideas, touched upon the subject in the work Problems - Book XV, asking:

"Why is it that when the sun passes through quadri-laterals, as for instance in wickerwork, it does not produce a figure rectangular in shape but circular?”

and further on:

“Why is it that an eclipse of the sun, if one looks at it through a sieve or through leaves, such as a plane-tree or other broadleaved tree, or if one joins the fingers of one hand over the fingers of the other, the rays are crescent-shaped where they reach the earth? Is it for the same reason as that when light shines through a rectangular peep-hole, it appears circular in the form of a cone?"

Many philosophers and scientists of the Western world would ponder this question before it became accepted that the circular and crescent-shapes described in this "problem" were actually pinhole image projections of the sun. Although a projected image will have the shape of the aperture when the light source, aperture and projection plane are close together, the projected image will have the shape of the light source when they are further apart.

A bit abstract, but this is an inverted reflection of trees on the opposite side of the lake.

tomfenskephotography

A tribute to structural engineering. Tensile forces held in check by minimal materials, much to admire.

 

Galvanised steel bar transformed to functions of a physical equation that graphs an octet of perfect catenary arcs across the valley. Beauty from purpose, with enough strength for the task, and no more.

1 3 4 5 6 7 ••• 79 80