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“Warriors of light are not perfect.
Their beauty lies in accepting this fact and still desiring to grow and to learn.”
~Paulo Coelho, Warrior of the Light
light painting on Nevsky'prospect in St. Petersburg
...the lights of the building are already interesting, but with the lights of the traffic, it gets even colorful.
Here is my first catch of light reflection on one object: this globus bar staying at the balcony door and reflection was coming from jalosie...
"Think for a bit about the nature of light. Light is something very special. Now, think about the nature of dark. Sometimes we are tricked into believing that light and darkness are equal, but they just are not. And there’s such a lesson there.
Light is energy and truth and beauty and illumination and brilliance. Love.
Darkness is simply a lack of light. It is nothing else.
There are things in life that try to trick us the same way, somehow making us believe that they are bigger and scarier than they are. Fears are this way. Lies are this way. Fears and lies LOVE to grow in the dark.
Light always wins. A tiny light can put out the biggest dark, but dark never has the power to put out light. Truth always wins. Love always wins.
So when there is a choice to be made, bring it into the light. Stay in the light and step out of the dark when you find you have been pulled that direction. Choose truth, choose love. Always always always go where the peace is. Always choose the light.'
~The Universe
Let the sun shine in....♥
Leica IIIf, Canon 50mm 1.4, APX 100, developed by MeinFilmLab, scanned with Sony A7III/Pergear 60mm 2.8 Macro
Created for the Theme Negative Space.
Here tried to show the negative space in between the orange shadow of the flames.
HMM !!!!!
Long exposure of the cathedral of Berlin by night. The cars and buses have left beautiful light trails.
Stepping into the BST Hours can be a challenge when creating Light Painted images. With the sky still fairly light until about 10pm in the UK at the end of May, timing is more crucial and exposure times are shorter. Which means I have to plan my shot well and run around a lot more. Thanks to Phil's patience.
DSC08547
I’ve noticed before that if you find some specular highlights and point a camera at them then wiggle you get some interesting script-like marks on the exposure. I first found them with sunlight on droplets.
It turned out the sea was even better, partly because of the profusion of highlights but also because they were a lot further away and so easier to keep a lot of them in focus.
This one was part of a series taken on the South coast here recently. It occurred to me later that being South-facing was helpful too as it places the light in the right place for this sort of thing. I seem rarely to get to the coast so much fun was had with the camera…
There are two troupes of dancers here - the sea and the surf. The camera was wobbled with jiggle and a little bit of twist.
Thanks for taking the time to look. I hope you enjoy the image. Happy 100x :)
ITA- la bellezza di vagare nel bosco in mezzo alla nebbia da soli non ha paragoni, trovare piccoli angoli magici come questo non ha prezzo. Senza nebbia questa scena sarebbe stata confusionaria, così invece mi piace moltissimo.
ENG- the beauty of wandering alone in the woods in the fog is unmatched, finding small magical corners like this is priceless. Without fog this scene would have been confusing, but I love it instead.
Light stick, just shake to activate a chemical reaction ... bright and fun! Bâton lumineux, il suffit de l'agiter pour activer une réaction chimique...lumineuse et amusante, HMM!
The feng shui crystal in front of the window produced wonderful rainbow colour spots in the whole room when the sunlight came through. Fascinating!
The Carina Nebula and Running Chicken Nebula from my Adelaide metro (Bortle 6) backyard. This is a combination of 13 stacked shots with a Optolong L-Pro filter and 1 shot with an Astronomik 12nm Ha filter as a luminance layer. Lots of issues, no lens collar meant I was getting trailing from differential flexure despite autoguiding. The light pollution meant even with the filter the blue channel was maxing out way too early. Horrible gradients over the frame (this is a crop). After huge amounts of adjustment the star colours are somewhat red. I will try the L-Pro again with a longer focal length (see if that stops the gradients) and will see if it helps when used without light pollution. Otherwise I am doing something very wrong here!
Thomas Wilfred and the Art of Light restores Thomas Wilfred (1889–1968) to his rightful place in the history of modern art. This pioneering light artist invented a new art form that was among the first successful fusions of modern art and technology. Recognized as radically innovative, he was included in the influential 1952 exhibition 15 Americans at the Museum of Modern Art alongside Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko, and Clyfford Still. His work continued to resonate with later generations of light and media artists, among them James Turrell, who acknowledge Wilfred’s influence on their own thinking about light and art.
The medieval Milia Bridge is located between the villages Platres and Pera Pedi in Troodos Mountains, Cyprus. The bridge was the only way that connected the two villages in medieval times and passes through the forest, going over the Kryos River. The location is very peaceful and I don’t regret the nearly 2 km hike in the rain. The only sounds I could hear while photographing this beautiful bridge were the chirping of the birds and the water flowing from the river.
The photo was captured three weeks ago. I was waiting for a few minutes until the rain stopped and there was a light opening. For those interested in the technical details, this is a single shot captured with Nikon D850 and Nikon 24-70 mm f/2.8. Framed at 35mm, exposure for 1/3s, f/11 and ISO 100. I used the 150 mm circular polarizing filter by Lee filters to reduce some of the highlights in the wet surrounding and enhance the vividness of colors.
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