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Taken for group '52 weeks: the 2018 Edition - week 30 Reflection'.
I love reflections in water but I've not been anywhere this week to capture that. I was tidying up and came across a glass cube.
This photo is a single petal on a blackboard with the glass cube on top. It's taken in daylight with flash from above. It's straight out of the camera with no post processing.
I'm appologizing again for the Koi title. However, this shot rolls over to other critters who've established their base at the Bionic Gardens... and just when I thought I managed a smooth reflection shot of the blank overcast and skyline beyond! Boy, this female mallard has a good kick and is lucky not to be a goose. Denver just concluded the cleanup of over a thousand park geese to feed the poor at only a hundred grand. I'm selling my Thanksgiving meal ticket for cash outside the stadium.
I bet the duck is searching its geeklings but we already sent them to DC. Did she look over behind the reeds? No wonder, looking at this pool, they charge an entry fee for everyone, even Denverites.
I wonder if they have have to feed the water fowl? I don't see any standing corn fields anong the high rise housing. but maybe they feed mostly on visitors' Cheetos? The duck gets better feed than the American poor. After following some of the paths that are scattered about the Denver Botanic Gardens, I found a cool spot with a load of water, a good thing on the Colorado plains. It's clear that the pool furnish a good good for water gardens. They especially like water plantings at the Denver Botanical Gardens. It looks like I am getting closer to botanical, and fish, shots like this. Egad, I have a real load of garden shots to edit with over 200 snaps in the directory, let alone for everything else in my massive stash.
So I followed the original path and in my wanderings, I mostly found loads of prople. This shows a change up from earlier snaps. Always the question is whether this is simply art or is the trickling water making visitors head for the John? Well, at least this is green and I snapped away. Next?
This snap is yet another from a recent eDDie trek, this time down to the Denver Botanic Gardens. I have passed untold times but never invested my time or ponied up the entrance fee. This path shouts that upkeep here is far from free, but eDDie bought a season pass so I did another round of sponge bobbing at the right price. Boy, this place is loaded with distractions that were made for me! ...and, did I get distracted. Art in the park indeed.
Since the Denver Botonic Gardens trek, I have made more treks and another with eDDie to the Rockies. At least I was able to snag a load of shots on that mellow day. I filled my film card for the first time ever. OK, I was tapped by the time it was filled anyway.
Three-image pano taken in the channel between the two main bodies of Lake Massabesic, New Hampshire. Strong reflections.
NB: Lens EXIF is incorrect. Lens used was Voigtländer 50mm APO-Lanthar f/2. ISO was ~1250.
Some lovely cloud reflections on the River Forth at low tide today. Managed a walk over the bridge and back - about 3 km round trip. Highlight of the trip was a pair of Peregrine working the Feral Pigeons on the bridge structure. Didn't see the kill itself but one was successful. Needless to say my lens has now been repairs but has not yet been returned but these were the first shots with the repaired camera. Longannet Power Station on the left and Grangemouth straight ahead
I posted a reflection of of my bird bath earlier in the week, this was taken at the same time... slightly different version of the same thing. I like how much color I was able to get out of the reflection :)
After twenty years working in the same building, my job has moved. These are my last shots before I go.
Harlow, Essex.
Reflection is the change in direction of a wavefront at an interface between two different media so that the wavefront returns into the medium from which it originated. Common examples include the reflection of light, sound and water waves. The law of reflection says that for specular reflection the angle at which the wave is incident on the surface equals the angle at which it is reflected. Mirrors exhibit specular reflection.
Just liked the reflections on this long exposure shot. & the angle i took it from .
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Reflection
It was a time
Of exploration
Thought penetrating
Walls of regret
Self-knowledge
Seeking fulfillment
You held him
In burning desire
Until need placed
His book upon
Your shelf
© mBarlew
Mirrored in layers of thin ice forming on the lake on Bluebird Estates, Alberta, Canada, this log house reflection image is inspired by Expressionism.
Expressionistic Movements (Late 19th - Early 20th Century)
Expressionism developed during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Expressionis[m] was opposed to academic standards that had prevailed in Europe and emphasized artist's subjective emotion, which overrides fidelity to the actual appearance of things. The subjects of expressionist works were frequently distorted, or otherwise altered. Landmarks of this movement were violent colors and exaggerated lines that helped contain intense emotional expression. Application of formal elements is vivid, jarring, violent, or dynamic. Expressionist were trying to pinpoint the expression of inner experience rather than solely realistic portrayal, seeking to depict not objective reality but the subjective emotions and responses that objects and events arouse in them. [...]
In the years just around 1910 the expressionistic approach pioneered by Ensor, Munch, and van Gogh, in particular, was developed in the work of three artists' groups: the Fauves, Die Brucke, Der Blaue Reiter.