View allAll Photos Tagged SPIRAL
Macro Monday,
Desenho ao fundo:Ilustração de Michele, do Livro "O Caracol Viajante", de Sônia Junqueira.
IMA_1250
The intricate winding of copper tubing from a bar strainer creates a visual tunnel leading into glimmers of light.
Ribbon cable (8 strand) photographed before a black felt background and cropped to under 3 inches. Moderate low key to enhance colors.
A possible choice for the Monday Macro Group. The theme is Spirals. These are corn skewers standing on end with side lighting. The skewers are about 1.5" tall.
Charles Bridge Palace Hotel, Prague Czech Republic
♥ Thank you very much for your visits, faves, and kind comments ♥
Many thanks for all views, fav's - and particularly comments - all are greatly appreciated!
Happy Macro Mondays to you all!
The stairway to the top of Victoria memorial, Kolkata.
© All rights reserved, don´t use this image without my permission. Contact me at debmalya86@gmail.com
#macromondays #spiral
I decided to share this image for the upcoming #macromondays theme called #spiral
A spiral is a curve that starts from a central point and winds around it, moving progressively farther (or closer) from the center with each turn. Unlike a circle, which maintains a constant radius, a spiral’s radius either increases or decreases as the curve revolves around the center. Spirals can be found almost everywhere in the natural world, human creations, and abstract ideas.
In Nature
Plants: sunflower seed arrangements, pinecones, pineapples, ferns (unfurling fronds).
Shells: snail shells, nautilus shells, ammonites.
Animals: ram’s horns, spider webs, certain sea snails and corals.
Weather: hurricanes, tornadoes, whirlpools.
Astronomy: spiral galaxies like the Milky Way.
Microscopic: DNA double helix, microscopic shells.
In Human-Made Structures
Architecture: spiral staircases, minarets, towers, ramps.
Art & Design: Celtic carvings, Islamic geometric patterns, Greek Ionic column volutes.
Technology: coiled springs, rolled-up wires, vinyl records, drills, turbines.
In Abstract Concepts
Mathematics: Archimedean, logarithmic, Fermat’s spirals.
Philosophy & Symbolism: often represents growth, cycles, infinity, spiritual journey.
Culture & Mythology: spirals appear in Maori tattoos, Celtic symbols, Hindu and Buddhist mandalas.
Thank you for visits, comments and favs!
Vielen Dank für Eure Besuche, Kommentare und Sternchen!
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
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