View allAll Photos Tagged Multiplicity

Inspired by Rebekka Guðleifsdóttir I tried this out. It is my first attempt and I rather like the effect. Tonny(7) added that the one on the left really liked the pizza and the other one did not....

Here is the 2nd mosaic made from photos by contacts and fellow Flickrites... Nature's ability to decorate with many of same, or by repeating patterns. Hope you'll enjoy this also!

 

~ ~ ~

 

1. The Significance Of Red. {Explore} (Red leaf)

2. Patient Pelicans (Pelicans)

3. tibouchina (Leaf collection)

4. * (Thorns)

5. Concert for Jonathan (Seagulls)

6. jellies (Jellyfish)

7. Spider web pearls (Spider web)

8. The Process of Growth & Change (Flower & foliage)

9. Dramatic Occlusion (Leaf macro)

10. Wild tulip (Tulips)

11. Ice Maze (Broken ice)

12. Yellow in my heart (Anthers)

13. IMG_0329 (Sea anemone)

14. Untitled (Zebra)

15. Crop of mold image (Mold macro)

16. Spirals (Fern with droplets)

this is my friend trae trying out a multiplicity pic in my backyard, turned out really nice. don't miss the trae leaning against the fence in the far background taking a break from all the work.

We started with portraits, and then there was the discovery of double exposures. Got the newest Polaroid Now camera and figured out how to trick it into taking endless exposures, and now the train is off the tracks careening off into the world because I will stack shots until the shots don't work anymore. This is probably my most successful triple exposure so far. The only thing that would make it easier is if I had an slr polaroid camera to take these with, because framing anything with the offset viewfinder on the Now camera can be hit or miss. Or maybe I just need to get used to it.

 

Let the experiments continue!

-------------

 

www.instagram.com/bandogphoto

A different perspective with Multiplicity #2.

 

Sembawang Wharves, Yishun, Singapore. Another great place found by my flickr friend Rajesh (rags1969). We somehow managed to get into that place without being checked at the security gates (two of them)! Anyway, there's probably no way to steal those cars (but perhaps getting some spare parts???). This is the place where all those brand new cars are stored before being sent to the car dealers.

 

Technical note: This is not a tonemapped HDR. Digital blending of 4 exposures using layer masks in Photoshop. Followed by several local adjustments (curves, levels, contrast, desaturation). Please check my Digital Blending Set.

 

Please check my interestingness page

I am always fascinated by the reflection red wine casts. BTW this is the most beautiful color of the wall in my kitchen. (TMI??)

That time of year, time to drag the boxes of Holiday cheer out and put it to good use. Kenosha has a Lighting Up Kenosha event on the Friday after Thanksgiving, one streetcar and Santa! Also on Dec 5th Santa Mrs. Claus and Carolers will be riding two of Kenosha's streetcars with a tree lighting to follow.

LightinUpKenosha Nov 27th

Tree Lighting Dec 5th

and a hidden selfie! Amsterdam, Holland

Over & Over Again. Self-portrait in the studio for an assignment. Kayak (my yellow lab) enjoyed it.

Camera: Nikon D200

Lens: Nikkor 18-35 mm f/3.5 - 4.5D ED-IF

 

4 Frames - f8.0 @ 30 seconds ISO100

Tai Mo Shan, Hong Kong NT

 

This electrical storm was awesome. I cant believe how LOUD some of the thunderclaps were....especially when you live on the 34th floor and they are going off right next to you!

Found in an huge abandoned hotel in Czech Republic. Reminds me of the movie "The Grand Budapest Hotel".

Taken in Reynisfjara, Iceland. This is a final assignment in a photoshop-course.

multiplicity self portrait project

Happy Friday! Hope your head didn't explode ;)

85/365/2018, 2642 days in a row.

The spite of our townhall plus a nearby flower basket superimposed.

 

I don't know anything about doing double exposures, either in camera or in post. but I did try some in camera. So that counts for sliding, I think.

 

Then, I did some more sliding in post.

 

HSS.

 

© AnvilcloudPhotography

Scanned print.

 

Mamiya 645 ProTL with Mamiya-Sekor 45 mm/f2.8N.

 

Bergger Pancro 400 @ 250, semistand developed in Fomadon R09 1:100, 1 hour.

 

Printed on Fomatone MG 131 (24x30 cm) and split toned in Moersch MT3 (setting between B and C) and selenium.

 

Borgvik, Värmland. July 15, 2019.

All rights reserved ©

Model: Julia van Dijken

 

This image is protected by copyright, no use of this image shall be granted without the written permission from Stefan Witte.

  

www.stefanwitte.com

5 times blown highlights :-\

Bethesda Terrace Arcade, Central Park, NYC, was created in the 1860s as a part of the Park's main architectural feature. A grand staircase connects the Mall to the subterranean arcade.

 

It was conceived to be an ornate interior that would act as a distinct counterpart to the open terrace and Lake. The highlight of the arcade is the magnificent Minton Tile ceiling designed by British-born architect and designer, Jacob Wrey Mould, who also conceived of the decorative carvings throughout the Terrace.

 

Installed in 1869, there are more than 15,000 colorful, patterned encaustic tiles, made by England's famed Minton Tile Company. Encaustic tiles, originally created to cover floors, are made of individual colored clays pressed and fired into the tile to form the design. Bethesda arcade is the only place in the world where these Minton tiles are used for a ceiling. The niches that flank the walls of the arcade are covered with trompe l'oeil paintings that resemble the colored stone inlay design that was never completed. Over the decades, the 50-ton ceiling deteriorated. In the 1980s, the tiles were placed in storage. Thanks to charitable donation, Central Park Conservancy was finally able to restore the ceiling and the arcade in 2000.

 

Source: CetralParkNYC.org

  

Week No: 23

 

Theme: Multiplicity

Category: Creative

Addy wanted a shot to show her friends so I put this together real quick for her.

nature follows pattern, and sometime it may be thought that you have seen the exact same thing. well, they are kinda same. here you will see how four migrated birds behave the same, making it a multiplicity.

 

thank you for viewing it.

 

please try to see in lightbox pressing L

early morning explore of an old school - 3 shots blended into 1

another me would be great sometimes

One possible interpretation of the theory of Quantum Mechanics is that there is an infinite amount of parallel universes coexsiting. In each universe, a slightly different outcome occours at one point in time, resulting in each of those universes going off in different directions. This is what I have attempted to visualise here.

Quarantine Day 86. Playing like I did when I was a kid.

 

(Or, when one photo cliché is too few.)

23: multiplicity

 

Garnitzenklamm, Austria

T'was a tad busy on the 'Dee this morning....snappers everywhere!! :)

Same place, but a different perspective with Multiplicity #1.

 

Sembawang Wharves, Yishun, Singapore. Another great place found by my flickr friend Rajesh (rags1969). We somehow managed to get into that place without being checked at the security gates (two of them)!

 

Technical note: 5 exposures tone mapped HDR with Photomatix, then post-processed with CS2. Please check the whole HDR set.

 

Please check my interestingness page

2 4 5 6 7 ••• 79 80