View allAll Photos Tagged PERCEPTIONS

Multiple-exposure composed of three separate images

 

Uncropped with some minimal subtractive cloning in the centre of the image, along with some additive cloning on the edges

 

Started out with the intention of cleaning up and simplifying the chaos which often ensues from the spontaneous and unpredictable nature of handheld, manual shooting of multiple exposures.

 

Afterwards, I switched it up and decided to go with the flow of grungified deconstructivity by adding to the gritty details along the edges of the photo to stretch it out and let it breathe a bit as it gradually broke up against a dark flickr background.

 

Originally thought of an alternative title that went something along the lines of "How aliens perceive human advertising" or a "Fly's eyeview of the urban landscape".

Canon EF85mm f/1.2L II USM | Rollei Retro 80S | R09

Though Winter has been brutally cold and many with more snow than other areas or snow in places that don't get snow, my perception is Wisconsin had a mild Winter so far.

Movement aberration through a rolling train window.

I often like to think about our place in the universe... and scale... and relativity. For all we know, this big honking Earth of ours... teeming with what we know as lifeforms... is merely a molecule in some other, much larger structure.

 

Could be. After all, the microscopic view reveals entire worlds and civlizations invisible to our unaided eyes. And even a macro lens gives us a whole different perspective on size and scale.

 

And since I'm too tired to write today, I'll just repeat some doggerel I created as a kid, which basically says the same kind of thing (and suggests that I have changed very little in the past 30-plus years):

 

To a flea it's a four-lane highway

To an ant it's a mountain pass

To a cow it's plain delicious

To me it's a piece of grass.

 

(P.S. This is my first photo taken with my first-ever macro lens, which Husband Mike bestowed upon me for the big Four-Oh.)

   

Pandemic street photography full of symbolism.

Camera movement in the bluebell woods. I figured out that I get a much smoother movement if I keep the camera close to my face rather than holding it a little further away.

  

Some call them weeds I call them beautiful…

 

I took this shot at the Salford Quays watersports centre, these canoes were stacked up and looked interesting, and the name perception intrigued me too.

Firth of Thames, New Zealand

I always try to catch the light and the moment. It`s like dancing Tango Argentino: A passion!

Saturday I danced with the light and this shot is the fusion!

 

A moment and the light as well:

Assassin's Tango:

www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=As0...

 

Taken and edited with Iphone 4

This is my by far my favorite style of photography, long twilight exposures.

 

Im on a run of lackluster sunsets, but today i was determined to go home with a shot. After seeing the result I need to get out more when its rubbish.

 

wind was blowing a gale, I could literally see the camera wobbling.

Somehow managed a sharp image. to do with the law of averages I assume.

 

just switched to lightroom 4 and cant find where they hide the photo info menu, anyway.

 

approx 8 min, lights turned on for last 3min (lucky touch)

 

3 stop hard Hitech

lee bigstopper

f 4.5

iso 100

 

minimal PP

- couple of different contrast masks

  

Check out my Travel & photogaphy Blog | Website

 

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"It is our failure to become our perceived ideal that ultimately defines us and makes us unique." Conan O'Brien

A little gem from the book Steal Like an Artist.

 

I'm working on an idea I got in the shower for a series that I can already tell will be a challenge. But I am very excited for the outcome and can't wait to share with you all!

  

www.etsy.com/shop/MortPhotography?ref=hdr_shop_menu

 

www.instagram.com/mortalyssa/

 

This time of the year is high season for drunk driving. People attending Christmas parties and driving (more or less) drunk home.

 

Luckily this is no longer an acceptable behaviour compared to 10 or 20 years ago where "just drive carefully" was the motto.

 

We seems to forget that alcohol influence on our perception, so we can not judge how to drive a car. And when not to try at all.

 

Punta Marina Terme, Jan.2019

 

Sony A6000 with Selp1650pz, minimum edit in Adobe Lightroom and Gimp

 

Album: "Dietro Punta, ricordi di Deserto Rosso". Take a look at www.flickr.com/photos/simonepelatti/sets/72157706418034334

 

#countryside #industrial #cold #sunset #dark #PuntaMarina #Ravenna #contrast

 

We do not see nature with our eyes, but with our understandings and our hearts.~William Hazlett

 

"The question is not what you look at, but what you see." Henry David Thoreau

Photography, over other art forms, has a powerful ability to offer the viewer an anchor in the authentic. There is a commonly held perception that because the ‘photographic’ image mechanically represents the genuine place, (that anyone can visit the location and see it for themselves), it offers the image a perception of trustworthiness, accessibility beyond the surface engagement. Now that said, there is also a flip side to this, a mistrust born out of new technology, that is corroding the once universal acceptance and ironically stimulating the respectability of film, as a non digital medium, (but that’s another story). I’ve previously explored this ‘reality’ in some depth and don’t wish to cover similar ground here. But what does stimulate my intrigue, is the psychological edges of this trust perception, (as for many reasons, we each have differing leaves of skepticism), and the way in which this can stimulate creativity, which is the area that continues to fascinate me. It offers us as photographers a way of maintaining the perceived ‘reality’, but the ability to twist and distort the imagination, developing further complexities and in turn more powerful visual and conceptually meaningful pieces of art.

 

Now personally speaking, I actively desire my perception, of what is ‘reality’, to be challenged. I want to be surprised; I want to be left puzzled and to be questioning how and why. For me this area of photography, offers to stimulate my visual and conceptual imagination. It flirts with science and art to illuminate the new. I have a desire to base my images in the ‘real’, but to seek out twist and extend that perception, is my creative goal. Think of it, like having the ability to see behind our known horizons, deep into space, beyond atoms and quarks. For in those yet undiscovered, grey areas of our consciousness, lies the greatest creative rewards. New connections are waiting to be discovered, new horizons sort out and examined.

 

Now I’m sure it sounds like I’ve lost the plot to a few of you, and I genuinely don’t mind you thinking that, but if what I’m writing makes you just wonder for a few seconds, look into that deep abyss, then I’m happy. Our world is not strait forward, it is not easy to understand, answers to questions only open up more questions without answers, but that is to me paradoxically humbling.

 

There seems to be a purposeful divide between what we know and what we are able to comprehend in any moment. Yes if we sit down and think about the black and white facts, (that we are on a rock crust, over a massive ball of molten rock, spinning at a 1000 miles an hour in an infinite universe), then we turn the facts into feelings through our imagination and things become really interesting. It’s an indescribable feeling of being connected to something more powerful, something that we are not in control of but are part of and struggle to even perceive. This is this feeling that I love, like the feeling one gets when stood at the foot of a mountain, gazing up and up and up, like the feeling at the edge of an ocean without the ability to conceive the vast enormity beyond our perception.

 

Ironically the ability to comprehend these ‘scientific facts’ seems to rely on allowing the mind space to imagine and drift into creativity. It is these feelings that get me excited when looking at the boundaries of our own perception. I cannot easily find the words to do this feeling justice; only insufficiently describe it as natural optimism. But it is this feeling that I’m trying to describe and make links to the unknown here. For me this feeling is wonderful catalyst to optimism, I feel very humbled by the knowledge that we as humans are so insignificant, that I just don’t matter in the scheme of things. Bizarre to make that statement because our world seems to excel in making the center of the universe individual. And for me this feeling is to be found at the edges of my perceived photographic reality, a gateway into my imagination but based on known facts.

 

Let me attempt to illustrate these words with an example, turning to this image in particular, for me it feels unusual. The composition was very important in the making of it and I paid close attention to the diagonals here in an attempt to highlight the semi-circular inlet. But what I didn’t fully expect to happen was the way in which the long exposure (three minutes) not only simplifies the wave motion but, offers us a glimpse underneath the surface. The graduating color tones then become a depth chart with a turquoise vibrancy fringed by white oxygenated turbulence.

 

It leaves me wanting to dive in and go deep into the ocean in an attempt to discover the as yet undiscovered. I know on one level that there is an underwater landscape here beneath the waves, and the long exposure hints to this by showing me some elements of depth, but from this perspective above the water, I can only imagine this as I’m relying on what I’ve been told, (having never dived). The water is then a physical barrier, but a portal to another perception. Am I making any sense? Do any of you feel the same? Are the men in white coats about to knock on my door?

 

Anyway this image was made on the south side of St Michael's Mount, I’d been to the area last year (well not so far around as this) and really wanted to try and make another image that championed the unusual geology and exploited the wonderful greens and blues in the sea. So as I took the tour around the House, I was eyeing up the location from the buttresses, but keeping the other eye firmly westward trying to second-guess the weather. It was very overcast and what you see here was a storm coming in, (a common feature of this ‘summer’), but I wasn’t disappointed as it offered me a different take on the location.

 

Time became precious due to the extended second guessing, (and a very nice Cornish cream tea), so on a tighter than comfortable schedule, I had to endure. You see I had to make it back around the other side of the island by 5.30pm, for the last ferry back to the shore, but managed to rattle off five or six three minutes exposures in this very inspiring location before the cats and dogs arrived. By the way I did just manage to make it back for the ferry! if not I'd have had to wait for the tide to go out enough to wade thy deep, camera firmly held high, along the winding cobbled road connecting the mount to the mainland. (Not even imagining how furious Cathy would have been!) Anyway it always amuses me that people are prepared to get wet wading through the incoming tide here. But it does make me chuckle watching them each year I visit the mount.

 

Modelo: Evelyn Heinrich

© P E D R O • H E I N R I C H

digital art 2008

playing with different tools in PS

stock photo(came with program )

Movement aberration through a window on a train ride.

Sometimes, reflections add a dimension to reality that only deepens our perception of that reality. Here, baskets of tulips float among the sprawling branches of a southern live oak. Taken last year from a pond at Brookgreen Gardens in South Carolina.

Another Facebook rescue from the days when Christmas lights were all incandescent.

"Design is not just what it looks like and feels like. Design is how it works."

Steve Jobs

 

JAN GARBAREK

We see only what we want to see...

Marrakech, Morocco, January 2011.

 

Copyright © Ioannis Lelakis.

All rights reserved.

When the doors of perception are cleansed, man will see things as they truly are, infinite.

 

William Blake

I find that looking up or down my driveway through a lens can confuse perception later.

 

Is this a photo going up or down?

It is going up to the ridge but it could be either if one did not know!

more unmotivated photos from an ailing week

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