View allAll Photos Tagged LineSymmetry
All rights reserved ©
Macro Mondays: Line Symmetry
7DOS: Eye Candy
I see many faces in this--I am sure you will, too.
MACRO MONDAYS - Line Symmetry.
Resting in the shade on a wooden gate, my insect for today.
From the webpage, www.brisbaneinsects.com I have identified it as the Black Thorax Wasp Moth, Amata trigonophora. In the subfamilly Ctenuchinae.
Tuscany, 2005 - my first digital (compact) camera!
We have come far since then :))
* * * * * * * * * *
Toskana, 2005 ... meine erste digitale Kompaktkamera
This picture is of a star that shows 10 sufaces that can be proven congruent on their sides and the angles. Each of the 10 surfaces can be considered obtuse triangles combined to make this star. This is my picutre of line symmetry.
Taken for group 'Macro Mondays' theme "Line Symmetry" Monday 25th June 2018
Not quite symmetrical but I was pleased with this. It did not stay still for very long.
the quadrilaterals all are classified as rectangles because they have opposite sides that are congruent and each corner makes a right angle.
A limaçon curve created by the reflection of light in a "clipped cone" shaped bowl. Contrast was improved to make the curve more visible.
Picture taken in the high school library. The function does not QUITE fit the image, the arcs should be more squished together.
I see a trapezoid there and i needed a picture of a trapezoid, you could argue that there are parallel lines in the hardwood floor
Dandelion on Willow Island. It's shape is generally spherical, but if we were to assume that the nodes* at the ends of the seeds are points of a solid, this shape is similar to a geodesic dome.
both sides of trhe bridge are exactly the same...therefore, if the were to be divided in half they would be identical. this picture shows line symmetry.