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The second light trail shot I got from the other night. I tweaked the white balance here to make the headlight trail look whiter which also makes the image a lot colder, but had the effect of enhancing the "blue hour" sky.
Would have been a lot better if the lights extended to the end of the image properly. Oh well, with more time (and patience) I could have probably cloned and filled the gaps.
I added the moon because it was actually out, but tucked behind the tree. Naturally on a long exposure like this, the moon would have been an overexposed blurry mess, but I thought the addition would break up the flat sky.
Tidying up and ended up making one of these. I think Umamen's one has a tighter radius, but this one used only clear parts. Haven't seen this before, but tell me if I'm wrong. 1x1 flat, round clear tiles used to connect.
No belville this time , just wanted to share the technique.
50049 and 50007 approach Pontrilas with 1Z50, a circular tour from Birmingham International in glorious conditions.
A round robin is a tournament in which each competitor plays in turn against every other. Yesterday, my garden companion was doing his very best to compete with the multitude of local decibels emitted from near-by building works, overhead aircraft, car alarms etc. I heard his sweet subdued song by standing under his tree, but I doubt his robin friend a few gardens away will have heard his delightful conversation.
Hancock Shaker Village, Pittsfield, Massachusetts, MA, New England, the Berkshires, autumn, fall, hay, round barn, iPhoneography, Hipstamatic, HipstaPrint.
Number 3 in my Round theme for this week. Inner dome pattern Taj Mahal, Agra, India taken in 2002 on old film camera a scanned into computer.
My 2nd big tornado of the year, once again in the Watertown area. Seems like this is the place to be if you're a fan of tornadoes... well, as long as they stay away from the city itself.
The finest hour has come for Kyiv chestnuts.
Aesculus × carnea, or red horse-chestnut, a medium-sized tree, an artificial hybrid between Aesculus pavilion (red buckeye) and Aesculus hippocastanum (horse-chestnut). Its origin uncertain, probably appearing in Germany before 1820. It is a popular tree in large gardens and parks.
Aesculus × carnea's features are typically intermediate between the parent species, but it inherits the red flower color from Aesculus pavia. Its showy flowers are borne in plumes on branch ends, blooming in spring and producing leathery fruit capsules in fall. It grows up to 40 feet tall and 30 feet wide, with a round head that casts dense shade when mature. Its leaves are dark green, palmately compound, and deciduous, each leaf divided into five large, toothed leaflets.
Lai Tak Tsuen, a housing estate built in 1975 with unconventional design of building in cylindrical shape
勵德邨