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Speckled bush cricket (a young larva) after a walk through the flower of a evening primrose. Then she cleaned the feelers of the pollen. These are pulled several times with the help of the forefoot through the "mouth".
Punktierte Zartschrecke (eine junge Larve) nach einer Wanderung durch die Blüte einer Nachtkerze. Danach hat sie die Fühler vom Blütenstaub gereinigt. Dabei werden diese mehrfach mit Hilfe der Vorderfüße durch den "Mund" gezogen.
Danke für deinen Besuch! Thanks for visiting!
bitte beachte/ please respect Copyright © All rights reserved.
The praying mantis cleaned her antennae while taking pictures.
Danke für deinen Besuch! Thanks for visiting!
bitte beachte/ please respect Copyright © All rights reserved
Gawdy Sensor Ship
Plenty of sensors on this one including those ostentatious radars, a spinny round thing and a non-spinny round thing. All a little overblown?
Hello there. Relevant comments welcome but please do NOT post any link(s). All my images are my own original work, under my copyright, with all rights reserved. You need my permission to use any image for ANY purpose.
Copyright infringement is theft.
The incredible combination of a modern small smartphone sensor from a 3x camera module (Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra) in combination with Lightrooms AI denoise feature (or the one from Camera RAW in Photoshop or Bridge)
Just look at the parasols in the background
No Sensor Ship
No sensors or modern equipment showing on this one
Hello there. Relevant comments welcome but please do NOT post any link(s). All my images are my own original work, under my copyright, with all rights reserved. You need my permission to use any image for ANY purpose.
Copyright infringement is theft.
Great day to ride. Perfect weather. Just enough wind to keep me from being absolutely euphoric. :-)
The cadence sensor isn't working. Maybe a dead battery.
Trek 730
Despite their name, green tree pythons can sport a variety of colors. Adults are generally bright green with flecks of white, yellow, black, or other colors along their backs. Juveniles are almost never green, instead adopting vibrant shades of yellow and red.
Green tree pythons are one of the smallest pythons reaching only about five or six feet in length.
As a nocturnal snake, the green tree python catches its prey at night. It uses infrared heat sensors on its lips to track warm-blooded prey in the dark. The green tree python feeds on insects, other snakes, lizards, frogs, birds, bats, and occasionally small rodents.
Breeding season for the green tree pythons begins in late August and lasts until December. Eggs can be laid from November to February. Hatchlings will emerge after an incubation of anywhere from 39 to 65 days. (nationalzoo.si.edu/Animals/ReptilesAmphibians/Exhibit/Pro...)
For the Macro Mondays Theme: "Photography Gear"
WARNING: Don't try this at home!!!
Note: No real harm was done and the sensor and camera survived the (photoshop) experiment without any scratch or (water)damage 😉 Thanks for your concerns...
Thank you very much for your time, faves and comments. It's much appreciated.
Happy Macro Mondays
I used to think that for a good capture I need a modern camera with large sensor, sticky autofocus, tons of cutting-edge features...
Since I started to use vintage film cameras something changed in me. The more I dive into photography, the more clearly I feel that the photography is about moments and light, not technologies...
change your attitude to the World around you, things, events, people, to yourself after all... And the World will shine with new colors, will open up in a new light...
horcruxes:
olympus : street : black and white
© All rights reserved. Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit written permission.
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Posed street portrait taken for my 100 Strangers project in Glasgow, Scotland.
This picture is #82 in my 100 strangers project. Find out more about the project and see pictures taken by other photographers at the 100 Strangers Flickr Group page
Coming to the close of a grey, wet and windy day on a street shoot I spotted Shannon listening to some tunes outside of the Gallery of Modern Art in the city. I simply loved her outfit, beret and her beautiful locks of hair that complimented the colours so well. I approached, with a slight wave and, after she had removed her earbuds, introduced myself and asked if she would like a portrait.
Shannon, a television and theatre actor from Glasgow, who has coincidentally worked in the show Outlander as has one of my previous 100 Strangers, was waiting for her friend in town and I decided to make the most of the location at the GoMA rather than relocate.
Light was atrocious with a heavy overcast sky and using natural light only, a higher ISO than I would like was used - though grain is so easy to remove from images on the 5D MkIII sensor.
I added a little warmth in post and edited initially in Lightroom with some frequency separation work in Photoshop to clean up the image, although her skin was immaculate and needed little work. I have forwarded the images on to Shannon and I hope that she likes them. It was a pleasure to meet her, albeit briefly, and I wish her the very best in her continued acting career.
I have a couple more images I may post at some point in the future but I loved the pure honesty of this one, such a natural smile captured during the brief shoot. Enjoy!
So I produced this a couple of days ago, didn't exactly work out as planed, or hoped, but that's how it is, ..or that's why it does not get boring. Some things are naturally harder to photograph than others..
But I wanted to do this for a while, these random wildflowers are pretty tiny (which is nice) but just fragile overall. The stems are so thin, like a piece of fiber or fine stitching thread, there is no way of picking a flower (within 30 sec it's withered away) or even putting a clip on it or anything, it's that fragile. When the light changes or goes away, the flower just closes.
Since it's summer now, I have pots and bucket with flowers, cacti, succelents, vegetables everywhere *g*, so I actually have these random yellow flowers (I do not even know the name of) in a pot and that's how I managed to convince them to cooperate a little bit, to do some photo stuff with me.
Some might wonder what this red thingy in the reflection of some of the droplets is *g*.
Nikon D7200 (APS-C crop sensor)
Micro-NIKKOR 55mm f/2.8 AI-S
(thus ~82mm full frame equivalent)
ISO125, 55mm, f/8, 1/160sec
reproduction ratio: ~ 2 : 1
tripod, focus rail, stacked (21 imgs)
extension tubes, flash, DIY diffusor
The dogs are dueling over the fence, causing the motion sensor lights to come on. Mooky and Kona need to chill. 100 Days of Darkness 8/100.
The light in the frame could be seen as all sorts of correct and otherwise. It is included here not just for the explanation below. There is one picture here in two edits with each having a crop.
Please Note – do not read the next two lines that are bracketed thusly [].
[If you would like the less serious explanation then I truly believe that my fellow Puffle-Gwuin* was accidentally releasing his Aura within range of my sensor.]
Also no need to read this footnote indicated by * and even less need to read **.
* Puffle-Gwuin this term is being used to describe Members of the Puffin Hated Society that so far has no real structure and two Members both with and wearing Puffin Hats.
**The black and white design of the Hats Puffin has been referred to as a Penguin Design and the hat does look somewhat Penguin-Like so I have made Puffle-Gwuin as combined name.
© PHH Sykes 2024
phhsykes@gmail.com
We were koming back from a wonderful day out in the kar...and I was trying differents settings on the kamera and shooting to a "there's no words to describe it" sunset... and well .. when i get home... and downloaded the piks.. he or she.. this presence was there.. I never saw it when I took the pik...
;)
'Olive 56' aka US Air Force 55RW's Boeing RC-135W 'Rivet Joint' 62-4138/OF caught through the heat haze high over the South Coast at FL350
Headquatered at Offutt AFB, Nebraska, this one was out of Mildenhall for Souda Bay, you can make out the various underbelly and 'cheek' mounted sensors these reconnaissance aircraft are equipped with
The Rivet Joint aircraft support theatre and national level consumers with near real time on-scene intelligence collection, analysis and dissemination capabilities
276A9028
Comet NEOWISE (C/2020 F3) over some of the eroded hoodoo formations at Dinosaur Provincial Park, Alberta, July 14-15, 2020. A faint aurora is at right. The foreground is lit by starlight only; there was no light painting employed here.
This is a stack of 12 exposures for the ground to smooth noise, blended with a single untracked exposure of the sky, all at 20 seconds at f/2.8 and ISO 1600, all with the 35mm Canon lens and Canon 6D MkII camera. Taking lots of shots and stacking them allowed the foreground to be brightened without introducing too much noise and ugly banding artifacts the non-ISO invariant sensor of the 6D MKII is prone to. An alternative would have been to take a single very long (multi-minute) exposure at a lower ISO just for the ground, but even then stacking several would still be best.
LENR employed on all shots on this warm night to eliminate thermal noise and speckling. ON1 Dynamic Contrast filter applied to the ground. Plus some dodging and burning applied to the ground using a neutral grey layer on Overlay blend mode to better sculpt the otherwise flatly lit foreground on this dark, moonless night. The sky is lit by twilight that is perpetual in summer at this latitude of 51° N.
This Panorama caused me a lot of headaches because it is ruined: take a look at the stars: they are not round, they are strokes. No, it’s Not caused by too long exposure, it’s a 20mm lens and 5s. This is caused by some strange behavior of the ibis in the eos R6II in combination of my Nodal Ninja 5 panoramic head. It ruined nearly all panorama takes of this trip. Initially I thought of a shaky tripod, loose screws and other causes. But it is more sublime: I left ibis settings untouched when I put the camera on the tripod, as ibis recognizes being on a tripod (not like to the EF System where it is recommended to switch stabilizers off) worked pretty flawless with the R6, but with the R6 II I got stars as strokes instead of pinpoints. Here is my finding: there is some movement/activity of the ibis after the panoramic head is turned rapidly and locks to the next angular position. Although I use the 2s shutter delay, the sensor seems to get moved/shaked by the ibis for a longer time.
Solution is easy: switch off stabilization. This option you can find in the red menu (especially when utilizing a lens without stabilizer).
But why I didn’t experience that problem with the R6? Because this option to switch on/off ibis is simply missing in the R6 when using a third party lens w/o stabilizer!! It is only visible with canon lenses without stabilizer.
If the lens has build in stabilizer, you switch it on/off using the switch of the lens body. Hope this findings help others avoiding this flaw.
Beside this, that night was epic: weather couldn’t get worse of the whole week, clouds and clouds so we drove to Finland and further to Sweden, there were some clear sky forecasted. We decided to stay overnight in Kilpisjärvi instead of heading back to Tromsø that evening which was the best decision ever. The show we got was phenomenal, it began already at sunset and lasted until dawn. This pano I took at 4:55. that was a night!
You may have noticed i've not used my Leica M240 much since getting the Leica CL. I thought it was time to dust it off for a shoot. What amazed me after time away from the camera is how bad the low light ability of the M240 sensor is. It felt like the jump from the M8 to the M9 or M9 to the M240. Very noticeable! It shows how good the CL sensor is.
Low light and 1/30 motion blur gave a quite filmic looking photo to my eyes - imperfect. Fun catching up with Becca tonight after a long time.
Leica M240 + Voigtlander Nokton 40mm f1.4 + Leica M240 B&W preset
M240 presets - mrleica.com/shop/
Agfa Optima Sensor is a very simple scale camera, but showed good enough results, which even surprised me. I took the photo with a new film of the Yashica Golden 80s. The film also made me happy!
Just a quick little doodle.
Wheel-inside-basketball-hoop joint's are totally Tobyhein's idea, I just kinda lifted it.
Gallery (when moderated)
This is a tower located at the summit of Mt. Washington and it has many sensors and tech for the weather observatory.
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my written permission.
© Toni_V. All rights reserved.