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©Jane Brown2013 All Rights Reserved. This image is not available for use on websites, blogs or other media without explicit written permission
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hi friends !
This Sunday will the the closing party for my exhibit Shifting at the beautiful White Pines Gallery within the Elysion. If you have time, I would love for you to join me at 1pm SLT.
For those of you who have visited , thank you so much for taking your time ... I truly appreciate it !
It's wonderful to have friends who are so supportive <3
Many thanks to Syn Beresford for considering my work for her gallery... Syn, it was truly a pleasure to work with you !
Here's your ride if you can make it
Hope to see you there !
daze <3
**quick note... the sim is open to members only and there is a joiner fee if you are not a member. I'd encourage you all to visit the sim... it's a perfect spot to relax, explore, dance, and photograph
Sponsors
Hair - Camo Rimon Braids @ Sabbath
Fishnet - Skoll x 1990 Felicia Bolero @ Sabbath
Top & Shorts - Worn Junk Lover @ Sabbath
Papa Great Egret arrives at the nest to give mama a break at the Smith Oaks rookery, High Island, Texas.
HMM😊😊😍 abstract
This measures an inch and a half square inches
This photo was taken on February 26th, 2024 at 14:07:25 pm
With heartfelt and genuine thanks for your kind visit. Have a wonderful and beautiful day, be well, keep your eyes open, appreciate the beauty surrounding you, enjoy creating and stay safe! ❤️❤️❤️
Home Studio Photography - NEF NX Studio Tiff 15 part All logo psd part dn two psd Focus Stacking 2521 JPEG 7.70 MB.
Photography:
The camera takes a series of shots (8 photos) starting from a selected focus position (Foreground) and continuing toward infinity.
The camera must be set on a Tripod,
Exposure must be locked on the first image taken.
Finally, all images must be checked to ensure that all subjects in the scene are in focus and adequately covered.
All eight photos were loaded into an application to merge a single image with all subjects in the desired depth of field in sharp focus.
I'm adjusting to some new 2011 realities here--holiday revelries (a cat bumping into a glass of limeade) fried my laptop! Suddenly I'm down to just my iPhone to make my online connection, and I'm stumbling a bit. It's a reminder of another year's passage from the days when I called myself a newspaper photographer and had an abundant gear locker onhand! Instead, I've called myself a "marine Salvage Connsultant" (Travis McGee fans will note the reference). The lesson here is to watchout what name you answer to--you can end up becoming "the act", as I maneuvered the Westerbeke diesel engine I just scrounged off a sunken sailboat, the irony wasn't lost on me.
Recommended monitor brightness: 90-100%
There are four notable things about this image:
1. It’s shot with a lens that opens as big as a hungry python. In my 30+ years of photographing this and that, this is my first f/1.2 creation. And I am hooked!
2. The star trail colors are real and barely enhanced. “Why don’t I see colors myself?”, you are pondering perhaps, referring to your own experience of visually inspecting the night sky. Well, to see the faintest light at night (dark adaptation), our vision uses rods–achromatic photoreceptors in our eyes that sense only light, but not its color (scotopic vision). So, stars seen with our own eyes appear just white (or lighter shades of gray). In reality, as seen here, they are like crazy poets. Very colorful.
3. The scene is lit by a stray distant car’s headlights (on foreground trees) and all the stars in the universe (minus the one closest to us).
4. I don’t blame you if the scale of this image is not immediately apparent. To 'scale it' however, if you are so inclined, notice the diminutive dot of light on the dunes under Mount Herard. That’s a photographer, likely shooting the same thing as me, but unlikely with a python.