View allAll Photos Tagged Keyhole
This was quite a tricky photo to take of St Peters Basillica in the Vatican. Although you perhaps can't tell, it was taken through the keyhole of a door!
For this weeks Macro Mondays challenge Keyhole I wasn't finding anything I liked, but my wife's dresser has false keyholes on the drawers so I went with that..
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Keyhole in the door of an artist's workshop
for Macro Mondays: Keyhole
Copyright Luz Rovira-All rights reserved
This is 3 exposures blended together using my advanced Photoshop tonality control and multiple exposure blending techniques. I produced a video detailing these techniques, it's available here: www.zschnepf.com
Update: Two weeks after this was photographed, this iconic arch collapsed.
I've had this shot in my head since I was a teenager. I used to camp near here on the Oregon Coast. I was recently inspired to revisit this place, but this time with a camera. This was taken last night in the freezing cold with a nice storm swell. Besides some minor hypothermia it was epic.
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A padlock from the garden shed, hence the detritus.
Focus stacked. Four images.
View large for detail.
Light temporarily streaming into Keyhole Falls (a.k.a., 'The Waterfall Room') in the Subway of Zion National Park. This picture is the perfect example of why you should wait around if you've put in particular effort to reach a certain spot. I had just finished taking some earlier shots of the Subway and Keyhole Falls when I went back to the falls one last time - as I was about to leave a large group of climbers was rappelling down behind me, and they asked if I could take their picture. It took about 15 minutes for all of them to climb down, and the passage was too narrow behind me to squeeze by and exit. Just as they finished coming down, the sun reached the perfect angle in the canyon and came streaming onto the falls. The light does a great job of bringing out the color in the sand-filled alcove, and giving good contrast to the sandstone walls. After this, it was a 3.5 mile hike back along the Left Fork of North Creek to reach the parking lot (and a very hot set of switchbacks to exit the canyon at the end).
For several winters the past few years, California has seen its share of rough winters causing significant changes along the coast. After nearly a year of not coming to this beach I was surprised to see the stark differences. A dozen new boulders were now littered across the beach, a small new waterfall was born, and the small creek running through the beach became this large sinuous stream.
Rather than getting up close to the wave action I decided to hang back and try something new, making use of this strong-flowing creek as my lead-in towards the keyhole arch. Although Aaron and I were a bit far south for the best light, the clouds managed to mostly cooperate and still bathed the sky in pinks. The sky may not have been the scorching epic burn we were hoping, but the unique scene more than made up for it.
Gotcha!! Thrilling start today down at Durdle Door. To actually be able to pinpoint the sun rising through the door is only possible for a short window of time, close to the winter solstice.
I had already written the keyhole shot off before I even got down to the beach pre-sunrise due to a large bank of cloud on the horizon. But as I had never shot DD before from the beach I decided to go with it as it was and took a load of shots including some long exposure. Then suddenly at the right time the cloud broke up and I realised it was my lucky day so it was headless chicken time, all over the beach trying to get the best angle.
Normally shooting into the sun is my worst nightmare. I struggle to take artistic looking sunbursts and I am not a fan of lens flare and blown out highlights. This isn't technically perfect but I am pretty pleased with it.
Sorry for the long write up but it was pretty special. I will post some of the pre sunrise shots as and when.
The air was filled with mosquitos yesterday evening by lake Roxen, got this shot before buggin out...
The last of our ugly brass key holes in the house. Accompanying brass door handles (even uglier) have been removed earlier (and are featured in a picture I took a couple of months ago).
I took this photo early in January when I tend to stroll along the rocks watching a winter sea. I love the sea’s in winter and I’m sure the wave’s would be more impressive if we didn’t have such a shallow coastline as they break so far out.
Keyhole falls is definitely the amazing ending at the end of the hike. It was so beautiful to see this fall at the end of the hike. We went from bottom up on the Subway hike.
Celestron 9.25 + Celestron f/6.3 Reducer + ZWO ASI533MC + Optolong L-eXtreme
EQ6-R Pro
36x180" lights
No calibration frames
Nebulosity4 for Mac
PixInsight
Photoshop CC
Cairns, Australia
Bortle 6
Keyhole in an interior cellblock door. The Old Idaho Penitentiary State Historic Site was a functional prison from 1872 to 1973 in the western United States. The first building, also known as the Territorial Prison, was constructed in the Territory of Idaho in 1870.
Macro Mondays: keyhole. Quite a challenge to find a keyhole that was a bit interesting. This is in an antique thread cabinet, and you can barely make out some of the old paint labeling. It was not possible to shine light through.
Photo taken at Sunny`s Photo Studio
Pose Keyhole
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Sunny%20Photo%20Studio/129...