View allAll Photos Tagged Slices
not exactly what the recipe called for, but I keep forgetting to make the right kind when lemons are on sale and they don't sell it at our grocery stores, so this was the closest I could get.
Richard Wilson's sculpture "Slice Of Reality".
Taken on my Mamiya C330 with 65mm lens + hood, using Ilford FP4 Plus film, f8@250th, developed in Ilfosol S diluted 1:14 at 25° for 6.5 minutes.
Today I taught Little Pip the secret to the perfect sandwich. While some barbarians think it’s all about the ingredients, the true art of a perfect sandwich lies of course in the perfect slice!
Only a chosen few, specially trained in the way of the bread knife, manage to command the ancient art of bread cutting. The slice has to be just right, neither too thin nor too thick.
While Pip seemed to concentrate very hard on the slice I was cutting, my monologue apparently was slightly lost on him, because as soon as I had cut two slices he grabbed them and jumped into the fridge where the ingredients where.
Sigh, culture is lost on some… ;-)
sliced rainbow trout - Close-up of a sliced fish.. To Download this image without watermarks for Free, visit: www.sourcepics.com/free-stock-photography/24721439-sliced...
Made using torn and moulded cotton wool with liquid latex, set with powder and foundation for a base then painted with face paints and eye shadows. Sliced Eye on Friend is my second attempt at Sliced Eye - Original but rather on my friend instead of myself and I am very happy with how I managed to refine it to be a thinner wound as it appears slightly more realistic without needing to put detail into the centre ‘flesh’ area.
Just a few images showing the long preparation needed to get this place up and running. Upgrades are continual... Slice of Broadway will like to thank all our friends and family in making this possible.
Slice of 2G19 Blue Cake. Would have liked to have seen the chocolate overpower the blue a little less.
Richard Wilson's sculpture "Slice Of Reality".
Taken on my Mamiya C330 with 65mm lens + hood, using Ilford FP4 Plus film, f8@250th, developed in Ilfosol S diluted 1:14 at 25° for 6.5 minutes.
Now this is a pretty unusual photo. Perhaps I'm the first on Flickr that have done this ;)
One day at work (I'm working at a Fuji Foto Center in central Gothenburg, Sweden) I came across this scene on the Fujifilm Frontier 340 digital minilab that we use to print negatives and digital orders to paper copies. Now this is a frame from a negative that has been misplaced in the unit reading the negatives. So it came up on the Frontiers correction sreen halfways, as shown. I figured it was a pretty nice way of slicing this diver into two and decided to cease the moment on a CCD.
Voilá!
Ps. I'm not sure this is legal in any way, so don't send the man in blue at me ;)
Two blooms of the tiny oxalis weed growing in my Phoenix, Arizona yard. Looks good large view. Hard to get the bright yellow to show enough definition and also to capture the delicate green veins from the center of each bloom. See the previous photos and the set for more images detailing the life cycle and variety of this "invasive species" to Arizona.
So, I finally bought more polaroid after running out nearly a year ago. Nearly $100 for 40 shots, and I blew through 3/4 of them today and got only a small handful of decent images. The exposure was way off on a lot of them and I've never really had that problem with my camera before. Anyway, I miss shooting polaroid.
These were shot here today. Amazing place. It's so sad to see it in the condition it is in. I shot three rolls with the Holga, Brownie Hawkeye Flash, and Great Wall, but I don't feel too optimistic about any of them. The Great Wall is a difficult camera for me to use. The viewfinder is so dim I can't compose the shot and it's just difficult to operate.