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Same as here after a "little" gimping to fill out the missing spots. Just don't zoom in too much ;-)
Check out the stereographic projection or see an immersive version with interactive viewer.
12 Months of the Same Image -- #12 -- December
We don't even have any snow yet, but this completes my year's set. Thank you to the administrators & participants in the group.
Magellanic Woodpecker (Campephilus magellanicus) is a huge woodpecker that is in the same genus as the extinct Ivory-billed Woodpecker. To give an idea of size, the Great Spotted Woodpecker is about 8 inches (20cm) l0ng and weighs about 85g. But the Magellanic Woodpecker is about 16 inches (40cm) and weighs in at about 340g, though females are a bit smaller. This is a male with a red head while females are black-headed with a more prominent curly crest. They are only found in mature Southern Beech (Nothofagus) forests in the extreme south of South America where they are scarce and difficult to find. They have large territories and occur at low density and I had looked for them on four different occasions before I eventually caught up with them. But when I did see them I saw both male and female, and they weren't especially shy. Like many species in South America they are named after the Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan (c1480-1521). I photographed this one in Tierra del Fuego National Park close to Ushuaia, the most southerly city on earth.
Same Place, Different World
Infrared photography has a way of revealing the world in a completely unexpected light—literally. What you’re seeing here isn’t snow, though it may look like a winter scene. This was taken in full sunlight, with spring foliage reflecting infrared light in a way that renders it bright and frosty. It’s one of the strange and beautiful qualities of infrared landscapes become dreamlike, even alien.
With infrared photography, the visible light spectrum is blocked and only infrared light is permitted to pass. The sky shifts to deep bronze, vegetation glows in near white, and shadows fall in unusual ways. It’s all very surreal—and that’s part of the magic.
Same location, same time of year as yesterday’s image, but an entirely different mood. That’s one of the things I love about photography—how a slight change in method can open up a whole new way of seeing.
Pitt Lake British Columbia Canada
Website: www.sollows.ca
Contact and links: www.linktr.ee/jsollows
This days 365 is in the comments.
same location, different day, i just like the main more.
But i might swap them?
Same cat as previous image "After dark, the cat rules the road," different day on Trok San Chao Rong Kueak Alley.
I have chosen this section of a local stream as the subject of my second 12 Months of the same image. I am hoping that it shows a good range of variation at the year progresses.
Same story, different day.
I don't know why but I really like this shot!
It makes me think...
(My PhD is killing me)
Same watercolour but with the addition of a plant - which, being in focus (simultaneously with the background), is something the camera alone cannot do!
"In the art of living, man is at the same time the artist and the object of his art, he is the sculptor and it is the marble, the doctor and the patient." Erich Fromm.
I wake up once again in another city in the world, in another country, this time I am in Bangkok, the capital of Thailand. It's so early that my body just asks me to stay in bed. I still have not fully recovered from the long journey from Europe. But once again, there is a photo to get, once again, there is rain forecast and once again, I am willing to try it because the opportunities when one is so far from home are quite limited.
My goal is the Wat Benchamabophit, better known as the Marble Temple. An architectural jewel built at the end of the 19th century with Italian Carrara marble, the same stone that so many Renaissance masters used for their sculptures. This Thai Buddhist temple, which can not hide a slight western influence, is one of the most beautiful in Bangkok and I could not leave without immortalizing it. I knew that at dawn it was open, and I knew that if it rained it was not going to be an impediment, since I was going to be covered under the portico from which I was thinking about taking the photograph. Once there, I could enjoy in solitude a magnificent place, that at any other time would have been full of tourists and faithfuls. Once again I got the photo and the effort of getting up early was worth it.
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“En el arte de vivir, el hombre es al mismo tiempo el artista y el objeto de su arte, es el escultor y es el mármol, el médico y el paciente.” Erich Fromm.
Me despierto una vez más en otra ciudad del mundo, en otro país, esta vez me encuentro en Bangkok, capital de Tailandia. Es tan temprano que mi cuerpo solo me pide seguir en la cama. Todavía no me he recuperado totalmente del largo viaje desde Europa. Pero una vez más, hay una foto por conseguir, una vez más, hay previsión de lluvia y una vez más, me dispongo a intentarlo porque las oportunidades cuando uno se encuentra tan lejos de casa son bastante limitadas.
Mi objetivo es el Wat Benchamabophit, más conocido como el Templo de Mármol. Una joya arquitectónica construida a finales del siglo XIX con mármol italiano de Carrara, esa misma piedra que usaron tantos maestros renacentistas para sus esculturas. Este templo budista tailandés, que no puede ocultar un ligero toque occidental, es uno de los más bonitos de Bangkok y no podía irme de allí sin inmortalizarlo. Sabía que al amanecer estaba abierto, y sabía que si llovía no iba a ser impedimento, ya que iba a estar cubierto bajo el pórtico desde el que pensaba hacer la fotografía. Una vez allí, pude disfrutar en soledad de un lugar magnífico, que a cualquier otra hora hubiera estado lleno de turistas y fieles. Una vez más conseguí la foto y el esfuerzo del madrugón mereció la pena.
Although taking photos of lightning at 240 fps lacks resolution of a dSLR time exposure, it more than makes up for the incredible detail it achieves. Case in point above:
29 movie frames were used in the top image (stacked and lightened in Photoshop) (excluding all but the brilliant cloud to ground (GC) image at bottom). While the bottom image is dramatic with its illuminated foreground, the finer (fainter) step leaders are all but lost by the overwhelming brilliance of the CG. This is why night images of lightning with a dSLR are a lot more difficult to capture. Each bolt varies in brightness, contrast with background, structure, distance, etc.
For slow motion clip: www.youtube.com/watch?v=GhPOcNax2zw.
Picture of the Day
Frosty same view different day.
Canon EF 70-200 f/4L lens on a Canon EOS 5D Mark II. Converted to black and white in Lightroom Classic.
Thank you for you visit to my little space here on Flickr.
Same limestone cliff as in my previous picture.
The beach I'm standing on is called Phra Nang Cave' Beach. It's in Krabi, Thailand.
"Getting a round in"
An afternoon in the pub.
It makes a trip into Wellington for some groceries a bit more interesting.
"The Iron Duke" Wellington Somerset, UK.
Cleo is a serious cat, even when she is relaxed. She has always been that way, it's part of her personality.These last weeks she has been even more serious than usual. I guess it has to do with the loss of her brother Paddy. Cleo is not really close to other cats and I never had the impression that she cared much about Paddy, although he was the only cat she really accepted. She and Paddy had the same age and they had more or less grown up together (more or less because at that time Cleo belonged to my sister's family and only came by for a visit). Today I often see her curling up on a blanket which used to be one of Paddy's favourite sleeping places. Maybe she feels closer to him that way.
Texture by osolev (www.flickr.com/photos/13796443@N05/7008261449/)
Same shooting position as yesterday's posting. The left edge of this photo is the right edge of that photo.
I increased the saturation of red, but minimized its luminance. I maxed out the saturation of blue and maxed out its luminance. Also did some slider gymnastics: maxed out shadows, maxed out contrast, and increased brightness to 0.34; all in Photos for Mac OS.
Ditto on everything else from yesterday's posting.
#14919
coming back from the moon , I had something to eat , then left again through the wormhole which took me to Mars, the red sand and mountains of Mars are very spectacular and impressive.
Oeps back to earth where you can find the same spectacular landscapes in Iceland, again, near Myvatn ,just hit the road nr 1, when leaving Reykjahlid, east first turnoff to the left once your down the hill, then follow the tourists to the parking
Same place & roughly the same angle as the last post, but later and with a whole different mood...
Même endroit & plus ou moins le même angle que dans la précédente photo publiée, mais un peu plus tard avec une toute autre ambiance...