View allAll Photos Tagged LineSymmetry
This screwdriver is tinier than you think. It's one of those little ones you use with eyeglasses. It is one of about 3 or 4 tiny screwdrivers that are among tools of my dad's that I still own.
This shot is SOOC except for a square crop and repairing a line I accidentally drew across it in Photoshop.
You can see how tiny the screwdriver is behind-the-scenes:
Lieve kleine knijpertjes maar ze kunnen ook heel gemeen doen.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sweet little pins but they can behave rather mean too.
Speelgoedwasknijpertjes, in plaats van een metalen veer zit er een elastiekje in, maar dat werkt niet, je kunt er zelfs geen poppen-wasje mee aan de lijn hangen.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Toys clothespins, instead of a metal spring, there is a rubber band, but that piece of elastic doesn't do the job, you can't even hang small doll'clothes with it on your washing line.
My entry for this week's Macro Mondays theme, Line Symmetry.
Just a small Dalek, learning it's true purpose!
I find that the silhouette of it is very symmetrical (this is taken from its back)
Close as I can get so far. I still have a few hours.
All of our leaves are gone from the trees.
Line Symmetry.
MacroMonday's theme this week.
Be careful, it's sharp...
This is a whell of a very small model of a cannon as a pencil sharpener.
The target for MM is the wheel...
L'OPERAIA ALL'OPERA.
Le api operaie rappresentano l’interfaccia nei confronti del mondo esterno, raccolgono il nettare, l’acqua, il polline, la propoli, cercano dei nuovi nidi, costruiscono l’ossatura di cera, difendono l’insieme dagli attacchi esterni, mantengono la temperatura ottimale nell’arnia. Possiamo immaginare le api operaie come dei lunghi tentacoli filiformi (le traiettorie che tracciano in volo) che dall’esterno riportano incessantemente materiale verso la bocca (ingresso) dell’arnia.
Le api operaie nascono da un uovo fecondato, come la regina, ma a differenza di questa sono delle femmine incomplete, incapaci di riprodursi.
CANON EOS 6D MarkII con ob. CANON EF 100mm f/2.8L Macro IS USM
Taken for Macro Monday's theme line symmetry. These are two forks balanced against each other (not an easy feat to keep them balanced but I did it~) HMM everyone.
p.s. for anyone wondering about the set up....It's best to have them propped up with the handles butting against something to keep the balance. I used the edge of the sink with a dish cloth on one side and the other was a book and cloth....less chance of slipping when you use the cloths as well.
Macro Mondays 'line symmetry' theme. It was such a windy day that it was very difficult photographing these tiny butterflies, they were being blown about, and their wings half opening and closing constantly. That's my excuse for the blurriness of the wing tips!
One of our smallest and rarest British butterflies, the silver-studded blue male has a wingspan of 26-32mm
7 Days with Flickr - Anything goes Mondays
Macro Mondays theme "Line Symmetry"
Thank you everyone for your visits, faves, and kind comments
As the winds begin to blow,
the cold sets in yet,
there is no snow.
The garden creatures
prepare for winter sleep,
settling in deep.
This type of rain
with the cold in tow
dose not help
my garden grow.
Yet fighting sleep,
is this little creep.
Last to bloom and grow,
it stays for the fall show.
.............................................
Fall Tiger Lily blooms
mirrored, color inverted and saturated.
For Macro Monday's Group
Subject: Line Symmetry
---------------------------------------
These are the small flowers from a blossom on a lace cap hydrangea. These individual flowers blooming from the larger cluster of buds in the center are no larger than an inch across. HMM, everyone ! !
Cover illustration from Alfred, Lord Tennyson's Idylls of the King, published originally in 1859. This antique book is not a first edition. Idylls of the King is often read as an allegory of the societal conflicts in Britain during the mid-Victorian era.
Explored 11-05-12 #465
Line Symmetry
These forks was not easy to do keeping it balance without having a domino effect and the gap consistent.
Macro Monday - "Line Symmetry"
For this week's theme I have chosen to take a picture of a crystal decanter stopper. This stopper, when viewed from the top as it is here, is symmetrical in any direction if you take a line across the centre. It is the lighting and reflections that gives an appearance of asymmetry.
I have been absent from Macro Monday for a few weeks now, and I'm desperately behind with my contacts. There have been some events, both happy and sad, in my life recently that have swallowed up my time and motivation. But I hope to catch up with Macro Monday and my contacts over the next few days!
-----
Digital picture:-
Taken with Nikon D50 and Nikon AF Micro Nikkor 60mm f/2.8
isn't it convenient that all the letters of my name are symmetrical, top to bottom?
if i held a mirror, half way thru each letter it would look the same as this. your math lesson for the day.
macromonday theme: line symmetry
Macro Mondays, Theme - Line Symmetry
Taken with Samsung Galaxy S lll using FxCamera app.
However, the app doesn't let me take full size images :(
Matchbox-type toy Ford Taurus seeming to fit in a much larger parking space. At Bertera Subaru in Hartford, CT.
I tried to get the background as sharp as the Sharpie, but if there's a setting on my camera that can do that, I couldn't find it.
Submitted for Flickr Friday's "Forced Perspective" and Macro Mondays' "Line Symmetry" challenges.
Ever since I was a little girl, tulips have been my favorite flower (followed closely by sunflowers). There is something elegant and fragile about tulips that is appealing to me in their simple beauty. Our local grocery store has been carrying tulips for a couple of months and they are almost out of season now. I had never seen a tulip with this pattern before and thought it would be perfect for the line symmetry macro theme this week. One day, I would love to visit the tulip fields in Holland when they are in full bloom... what a sight that would be!