View allAll Photos Tagged PSExpress
iPhoneography image captured at a Village Fete. App workflow detailed at skipology.com/iphoneography-workflow-at-the-fair/
Arizona Ballet Theatre's Nutcracker Stylized Congratulations Bouquet Amaryllis
iPhone 7 Plus two Lens Camera
2X Macro = Twice life size
Post Processed With PS Express
IMG_0204
I know it’s not yet but seeing as though all the shops have stocked up on Halloween gear, I thought what the hell.
Public market
- Traditional fixed markets in Mexico -
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traditional_fixed_markets_in_Mexico
Tequisquiapan, Querétaro, México
iPhone4 Hipstamatic
© All rights reserved
Otomi girl
Tequisquiapan, Querétaro, México
The state of Querétaro in central Mexico has long been home to the Otomí people. In fact, the state capital is built on the remains of a 15th Century Otomí village.
www.mexicantextiles.com/grouppages/otomiqueretaro.html
iPhone4 Hipstamatic
© All rights reserved
Beautiful, light, fluffy snowflakes were gently falling outside my window this morning, but they were nearly impossible to capture. So I added a PS Express snow filter to enhance the shot. ❄️
The start of our boat tour on Mazinaw Lake at Bon Echo Provincial Park. The word Mazinaw originates from Algonkian, which means "painted rock" giving the rock its name. Mazinaw Rock is a 100-metre (330 ft) high cliff in Addington Highlands, just north of Cloyne, Ontario, Canada. It stretches for 1.5 kilometres (0.9 mi) along Mazinaw Lake, and is a landmark in the Bon Echo Provincial Park. Beneath the cliff itself, the lake's depth reaches 145 metres (476 ft), making it the second deepest lake in Ontario besides the Great Lakes. This means the cliff face continues nearly straight down for a total of roughly 245 metres (804 ft). The rock is composed of granite and black dykes. The quality of the rock varies from good on the more popular routes to bad on the less used routes.
The rock is credited in giving the name to Bon Echo Provincial Park, because it is responsible for the large echo that is unmistakable during thunderstorms and fireworks displays. Bon Echo is French for "good echo". The face of the rock is riddled with over 260 native pictographs. This gives it the largest collection of visible pictographs in Canada.