View allAll Photos Tagged Redux
Nothing happens to us without a reason. Nothing ever happens what you might have expected to happen.
Orange and Geometric Shapes are the two themes I picked for this Redux image.
HMM and best wishes everyone for a very safe and healthy 2022 everyone.
London laid out on a rainy night, as seen from the BT Tower,
Centre Point and Tottenham Court Road to the left, past the London Eye, to (I think) the new high rises being constructed in Vauxhall at the horizon towards the right.
I like to make the cakes and I like to make the photos of my creations then, my favourite theme in 2020, February 24, is "Sweet or Savoury”
this one is the detail of my Xmas cake this year
"Macro Mondays"; "Redux 2020".
The MM theme for today is redux 2020. This was a possibility that I **didn’t** choose- it’s a piece of glass and translucent with shades of the same blue color.
Thank you all in advance for your views, favs and comments. Best wishes for a happy and healthy New Year. HMM
Ulley Country Park - 111022 - I reshot this having found a better viewpoint that didn't have the powerlines in the frame. On the day the light was better too so the tree's shadow was better defined
"Squared Circle" was the theme July 6 and is my Redux for Dec 28 2020. Photo is a drill bit. The blue is due to fluorescent light on right and incandescent on left. Camera mode set for incandescent and fluorescent light shows blue. This photo ends my fourth year of meeting every weekly theme challenge. Macro Monday has been a learning experience and a lot of fun. Just wait to see what other members submit for the week.
White on white - a rather simple shot of my mobile earphones on a piece of A4 paper, lit by a slave flash pointing at the white ceiling and set for 3 stops of overexposure. A little bit of postprocessing in Lightroom - to reduce texture and vibrance (to make the whites look whiter).
Here's an old photo that I somehow never got around to editing and sharing on social media.
I captured this shortly before sunset in October 2013... at Herbert Lake in Canada's Banff National Park.
If it looks like those two logs in the foreground were carefully arranged to lead your eyes into the photo and towards my primary subject... they were indeed.
Not only did I deliberately include them like this in my composition... but I also dragged them out of the forest behind me... and then placed them in the water .
I felt that a photo with some logs in the foreground would look much better than a photo without logs. So was I cheating?
I can often spend many minutes removing stray twigs and fallen branches from my forest compositions before I press the shutter. Is this also cheating?
Should rearranging nature before taking a photo of it ever be deemed more acceptable than using the clone brush to remove those distractions afterwards?
I think that both are perfectly acceptable. But I wouldn't mind hearing what my other photographer-friends think?
P.S. No clone-brush or transform tools were used in the making of this photograph. ;)
Pair of topaz earrings in paper rose for Macro Mondays Dec 27 theme "Redux 2021"
Paper Art - Aug 16
Pair - Apr. 12
or
Flowers - Nov 22
Circles - Apr 19
Zed - May 10
This post is an alternative crop of a shot I posted about a month ago.
The crop was suggested by another Flickr user. I think I prefer it to my original square crop. Thanks for the suggetion [https://www.flickr.com/photos/zeejenkins].
70751, Temple of Airjitzu, was one of the most beautiful Lego sets to come out in 2015. Yet I somehow felt it could be gaudier. To that end, my version features cherry blossom and a more upmarket market building. Other than that, I'm happy with how the temple roofs turned out. The technic pins are strung on rigid hoses.
The movie theatre has become motorized and is now showing an action-oriented block buster.
At dusk, a ninja comes out. Can you find her?