View allAll Photos Tagged SOMEHOW
Somehow i am really fascinated by lynx.
I really like to watch them, study their behavior and of course take some photos of them too.
Here is one i took in Autumn..
Thank you all for your views, comments and faves!
Merry christmas to all of you, your family & friends!
Somehow this little frog magically appeared on the Giant Amazon Waterlily leaves. At the Blue Lotus Watergarden in the Yarra Valley. (PS Generative Fill AI!). HSS
Somehow my entire history, all images, contacts, groups everything was deleted from Flickr.
Flickr does not know what happened. After researching it I found this has happened to many people.
I plan to rebuild my contacts and social network, please follow me if you like my photostream,
Keep your passwords safe and your images backed up. Flickr is irresponsible and not a good platform, or partner for sharing your images and creative works.
if you know of something better please let me know.
Somehow reminded me of the movie, but without having a reason for it, didn't it? Maybe the striped shirt? The dog was also amazed, what was he standing there? Does he have a treat? Cool moment, and click.
Hat mich irgendwie an den Film erinnert, ohne dafür aber einen Grund zu haben, oder doch? Vielleicht das gestreifte Hemd? Der Hund war auch erstaunt, was steht der da so rum, hat er vielleicht ein Leckerli? Cooler Augenblick, dann klick
Somehow Mr. Cam managed to slip out of this picture. We are OCC and exploring this fantastic new build of Zee's. I highly recommend it. Meanwhile, back to work.
Photo: Taken at Drune Diesel
I was in the mountains for some days. Somehow they are still missing snow in the area of Vals, but it was wonderful for a walk.
Somehow I can't help but be reminded of those frowning stone heads on Easter Island each time I look back at this one...
somehow, this has become my favorite image of the series, and I have tried to get the morning light closer to how I remember it...
Mexican Hat, Utah.
Somehow I missed seeing this football unscathed by the fire, I would have loved to photograph that! ...can u spot it?
Somehow we got sun here thanks to her running slightly early. Shame the 57 was working as much as it was but I suppose it's a fair train for her.
For a video follow this link: www.youtube.com/watch?v=45DqhWMvvpM&ab_channel=JamieT...
Somehow got talked into a Harry Potter themed photo shoot... here are the nerds ..err.. I mean results ;)
We wish you a Wonderful Christmas.
Somehow, not only for Christmas,
But all the long year through,
The joy that you give to others
Is the joy that comes back to you;
And the more you spend in blessing
The poor and lonely and sad,
The more of your heart’s possessing
Returns to make you glad.
– John Greenleaf Whittier
Somehow, I didn't find any palm trees in the way and could get a clear shot of this beautiful cross. Happy Easter!
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Please!! NO Awards or Large Graphics...Group Buddy Icons are OK. Thank You!
© CPMcGann. All rights reserved. If you are interested in using my images, please contact me first.
……I somehow think the Captain of this vessel might be a tad unhappy with this crew member!! hope you are all good, just got back from a few days in North Cornwall - suffice to say we had ‘mixed weather’ - Force nine gales, blooming cold for the time of the year and rather wet on occasions, despite all of that we had a super holiday. Will catch up with all your streams over the W/end.…..
For the interested I’m growing my Shutterstock catalogue regularly here, now sold 85 images :- www.shutterstock.com/g/Alan+Foster?rid=223484589&utm_...
©Alan Foster.
©Alan Foster. All rights reserved. Do not use without permission.……
Somehow, the Friday feeling isn't quite the same with the way things are... but hope everyone has a fabulous weekend nonetheless!
Dolycoris baccarum
Prees Heath East - Shropshire
Somehow this week's theme was a big challenge since I only had a small mirror handy and the weather was dull (I prefer natural light). Thank you all for stopping by!
Somehow this showed up as public....I really had not checked it for posting ...so this is from camera to here...I would have liked to have him in the upper right, rather then center.....Have a great weekend!
248 / 365
I somehow forgot to tag this one for my photo a day project.
© Web-Betty: digital heart, analog soul
Wilbur and I stood on the tidal beach near the sinking hulk of an old ship which has been moored here for 46 years at the mouth of the Rogue River. A brief history: On January 21, 1881, the Mary Duncan Hume was launched from Gold Beach, Oregon. The ship was constructed in Gold Beach from timber logged in the area. The ship is 96 feet long and 9 feet wide. The ship served 97 years in commercial service along the Pacific Coast. In the summer of 1978, the ship returned to Gold Beach to this final resting place. It is on the National Register of Historic Places.
Somehow I have to say, I find my Gargoyle AV strangely attractive...like she would deliver some interesting messages if you listened to her.
Somehow this one disappeared off my Flickr feed last night, so re entering. Very strange and very sad. :( HMM
Somehow this image had slipped through the net, I'd totally forgotten about it along with another one from in the hills I found at the same time.
I hadn't intended to shoot the hut on this trip as I've been trying to concentrate more on shooting new or less shot locations and far less of the classic 'done to death' spots.. but coming past here this evening the light was just fantastic and nice clouds to boot, so why wouldn't I shoot it...? was never gonna happen... The thing about Scotland is it can be very easy to stop literally everywhere that you see something good, and you don't end up getting anywhere..
I've shot this from loads of angles before, including this one, in pouring rain, thick cloud, freezing fog, and latterly a full on blizzard, so to see the scene like this for me made a refreshing change and another one to add to the collection of images from here, which I have to say is one of my favourite spots in the entire of the UK.
Talking to a guy in Glencoe he has actually been into the hut, apparently it isn't as nice on the inside as the outside would suggest... rather than have my vision dashed, I prefer to keep my own imagined vision of an elegant leather sofa, a roaring fire, and a good bottle of malt.
Have a look at the difference in the one shot in Winter - www.flickr.com/photos/pete37038/38278980432/in/dateposted/
Somehow these four images, all taken within 20 seconds of each other, almost demanded they be grouped in a collage. Kira is our 5-year old Jack Russel/chihuahua/??/?? mix that joined our household last July, and all I can say is thank heaven I'm not still using film because I'd be in the poor house with this photogenic little gal in our life.
Somehow finding a gap in the fairly thick cloud cover, Direct Rail Services 68018 'Vigilant' leads 37716 through Moore working 6K05 Carlisle N.Y. - Crewe Basford Hall a few minutes early.
10th July, 2019.
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Somehow it's been three weeks since I was at the botanic gardens. When last here on 26 March, barely anything was blooming. Over the last three weeks things have bloomed and gone beyond! I missed the weeping cherry blossoming.
But so much is still blooming!
Masks are mandatory. Thankfully at the hour I was there, it was sparsely attended so I was able to keep removing my mask to take in all the smells. The Japanese garden smelled heavenly!
I'm so glad I made it back before everything has gone beyond blossoming.
As the sun sets on 2020 it's worth remembering that, despite all its troubles and sorrow, there has still been wonder and joy and people to cherish
Somehow Albania seems to "roll" during the cold seasons, at least this was also the case during the last winters. Since the (later) spring then with rarity value.
Seen in Leipzig, about 1830km from home.
Somehow, at 800 metres above sea level and 100 kilometres from the nearest coast, Gaddings Dam has a sandy beach.
Somehow the dowitcher looks like Pinocchio when it’s in a frame with a yellowlegs.
Greater yellowlegs, Tringa melanoleuca
long-billed dowitcher, Limnodromus scolopaceus
Somehow I managed to get up early this morning. I just made it onto the hills in time before the sun disappeared completely.
Somehow I neglected to post this shot from our August trip out west, taken on the first evening at the North Rim.
I am investing a great part of my domestic quarantine in rummaging through my archives to unearth some forgotten, hopefully worthwhile shot to process. When this bracketing resurfaced from a stray nook of my hard disk, it struck some chords deep in my soul (most assuredly my brain was somehow performing an on-the-fly processing of those rather flattish, unassuming untouched RAW files). For a fleeting, precious moment I felt strongly the heartwarming sensation to be free to hug and cuddle again my wife, Laura, albeit at some indefinite time when Covid-19 will allow us to relish such an invaluable moment. Please do not ask me why on Earth this specific scene stirred this specific emotion inside me, so I will not be forced to admit that I have not the faintest idea. Rather, allow yourself the freedom to feel whatever emotion this scene will stir in your soul. I have got my own gift. I hope that this picture will gift you with the emotion you need most.
This picture comes from a sunrise session at the beautiful meanders of the river Adda, just a handful kilometers downstream the Eastern arm of Lake Como, dating from April 2016. That morning I arrived at the location a lot earlier than the earliest hints of dawn, so I took shooting the river by night - admittedly a whole bunch of utterly worthless bracketings, at least until proven otherwise (never say never). And I did a thing I do only in exceedingly rare occasions: I raised my sensor gain to a maddening 640 ISO. Of course, being used to shoot at a constant 100 ISO, I foolishly forgot to restore the usual setting as the light was growing and took my precious exposure bracketings at such high ISO till 8:00 AM. As a result of this sloppy attitude I had to fight a monster amount of chroma noise (I viscerally hate it)*. I found no way to get decently rid of that noise by using the rich armoury of denoising tools offered by Darktable - quite possibly because of my qualified failure to set them properly in such a demanding situation. Luckily, by mere trial and error, I got an almost decent denoising using DFine 2 and blending the denoised images with the original ones by the LCh Lightness mode (hope that my memory is not deceiving me); this, rather suprisingly, allowed me to retain most of the details while taking the greatest possible advantage of the denoising itself.
Incidentally, this picture has a closely related fellow image in my photostream, Awakenings: the same location, the same morning, just taken some 10 minutes after this one, some 20 meters downstream - ah, and one of the handful of bracketings of that session taken at 100 ISO, after I realized my mistake ;-)
* I am afraid I am being a bit unfair here, because the worthy sensor of my Nikon D5100 is quite less noisy than those of many other APS-x sensor cameras (and the in-camera management of thermal noise on long exposures is really good). The problem is, the less light you get from your subject, the more noise you get in the sensor data, the ISO gain magnifying an unfavourable signal-to-noise ratio. Of course an early, partly cloudy morning shooting session neatly falls into that sort of context.
I have obtained this picture by blending an exposure bracketing [-1.7/0/+1.7 EV] by luminosity masks in the Gimp (EXIF data, as usual, refer to the "normal exposure" shot), then I added some final touches with Nik Color Efex Pro 4 and a selective bit of Orton effect as a final garnish to get the desired ambiance. RAW files has been processed with Darktable. Denoising has been a vexing issue; I got the best results by courtesy of good old DFine 2 and the Gimp.
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This is where we are.
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This is my first upload in nearly two months, which is absolutely insane. I don't think I've ever had a semester that felt busier, with everything going on in my life. That's not really a good excuse, because I think I've been avoiding photos, just a little bit. I need to remember why I love them, which means thinking less about the end product, and much more about the process. But, I think I'm back.
This is mostly just to get back in the swing of things.
It is. SO. COLD. here.