View allAll Photos Tagged MacOS.
Invasive species of wildflower in Iceland. But even so, it is still very beautiful :)
Happy Monochrome Monday!
locatiion : Kyoto Ohara Hosen-in temple , Bankan-en Garden
( meaning difficult to leave,and also known as 'picture frame garden)
京都大原 宝泉院 額縁庭園’盤桓園’( 立ち去り難いという意)
Hosen - in Temple is located next to of the Shorin - in Temple, where the priest Honen Sho-nin had the famous religeous debate with Kenshin, chief magistrate of Ohara Temple. The library, rebuilt in 1502, is famous for its "chitenjo" (bloody ceiling) in the passageway, taken from Fushimi Castle. The famous garden contains a pine tree, more than 700 years old, in the shape of Mt. Oumifuji.
This beautiful framed garden invites the visitor into a world of comfort. Also, be sure to enjoy some powdered green tea while listening to the sound of the Suikinkutsu (Japanese water hollow harp garden feature). - Kyoto Prefecture
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
There is no window between the garden and this tatami room of the main hall. So visitors can see the beautiful scenery as if it is one picture in the frame..and can feel a pleasant breeze too.
I really love the beautiful scenery and solemn atmosphere this temple offers.
(note : This temple has an explicit no-tripod policy, so tripods, including monopods, are usually prohibited here.)
-maco-nonch★R
ƒ/5.0 16.0 mm 1/100sec ISO100
location : Randen line’s Arashiyama Station ,Kyoto city ,Kyoto Prefecture
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thank you everyone that's taken time to view,comments
and fav... :) Very much appreciated ..*** ✰
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Last week I came back from a fishing trip in Ireland. We had good days with beer, wine and we tried some Irish whiskey. I bought myself a few small bottles (5 cl) Irish whiskey as a souvenir to remember these great days.
While cooking breakfast I noticed the jagged membrane of my egg. I also shot a portion of an amethyst geode but felt that this was perfectly jagged.
location : Zuisin-in temple ,Kyoto city,Kyoto prefecture,Japan
小野小町のお寺 京都 随心院
-A temple remembered in connection with Ono no Komachi-
Komachi was a waka poet whose many famous pieces are still read today.
She was considerd as one of the three most beautiful woman in the world and the only woman among the Rokkasen,the Six best Waka poets of the Heian period.
Even though over a thousand years have passed,her works still captivate us.But in fact,her life was shrouded in mystery.
This temple was founded by high priest Ningai,a disciple of Kobo from the eighth generation.After earning Emperor Ichijo’s approval ,he received this land and built the Zuishin-in in 991.
- Zuishin-in temple
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ono_no_Komachi
f/8.0 24.0 mm 1/30sec ISO400 manual exposure
Vuelvo al macro con energias renovadas. He recuperado por un precio irrisorio un duplicador macro Foca hr7 que me convierte el 50mm 1.8 en un 100mm 2.8 con macro 1:1
Esto es una primera prueba para ver si funciona y ni mucho menos es 1:1. Creo que incluso es de mejor calidad que el que tenia vivitar. Por 25 lereles :-)
Creo que el próximo articulo del fotoblog lo documentaré. Darme una semana y subiré un analisis del parato. Lo encontrareis aquí: xd-nova-imatge-disseny.blogspot.com/
- Willow leaf beetle
2 Handheld exposures stacked together with a reversed 28mm lens in my garden in Holland.
"You fuck them up, your mum and dad. You may not mean to, but you do. You blame them for how glum and bad you feel, and rhyme to make it true." One daylight LED lamp and two LED spotlights in a dark room. Processed in Fujiflm's raw converter and macOS High Sierra photo editor. Quotation is from Kevin Hanson's Danse Macabre, 2017.
location : Tofuku-ji Komyo-in temple ,Kyoto city,Kyoto prefecture,Japan
Hashin-tei garden 波心庭 created by Mirei SHIGEMORI重森三玲
京都 東福寺塔頭 光明院
This temple was founded by Kinzan Myosho in 1391 and the garden was designed by modern landscape architect Mirei Shigemori in 1939 and called "the garden of Hashin"
The significant feature of the garden is its strong stone foundation and modern style allotment of land by moss ,especially the placement of stones attracts attention and has some meanings
We can see the triad stone arrangement at the rear of the garden ,in which the central stone symbolizes Buddhist Mount Meru,
It is so- called "Sanzon-seki "三尊石 in Japanese and in this case selectively placed on artificial moss hill and regarded as a kind of the light source from which the lights are radiating.
And the other stones represent the radiated lights itself from the Sanzon-seki stones.
So in other words ,the garden depicts the lights source and lights beams by using 75 stones, that is based on the Buddhist thought and connected with the name of the temple "Komyo" 光明[Kou or Ko 光 means the lights ,Myo 明 means bright.
Thank you for your interest and seeing my photo.
Canon EOS M5/ EF-M18-150mm f/3.5-6.3 IS STM/
ƒ/6.3 24.0 mm 1/30sec ISO200 handheld / all manual / no editing
Oui, je sais, c'est horrible!La nature est parfois cruelle!Mais après une petite recherche, c'est fort intéressant cette histoire;)EN gros, j'ai trouvé hier cette pauvre mouche.Une mouche morte en train de se cristalliser.Visiblement parasitée par un champignon portant le joli nom de Entomophthora muscae.Ce champignon parasite les mouches, "force" la mouche à aller se percher sur un point en hauteur, à écarter les ailes puis il la tue en lachant les spores, spores qui grâce à ce stratagème ont une chance de dispersion maximale. Affreux non?La nature est incroyable et parfois cruelle.
En voulant tourner ensuite la fleur, le corps est parti...Ne laissant plus que la tête.
Le champignon tueur est utilisé comme insecticide naturel.