View allAll Photos Tagged Sliderssunday
The Squirrel Show must Go On 😄
With the help of © LIM The Teddy Bear 'Big Hoss' could crack the Giant Hazelnut, but the outcome was other than expected, especially not in favour of Little Joey....
>>>pl see also
[Dedicated to CRA (ILYWAMHASAM)]
😄 Happy Sliders Sunday 😄
Three Squirrel photos taken in a Wild Garden in West Wales (Ceredigion) and merged to one, added a hazelnut and gave the squirrels a voice using the Photostudio 2000 Software and
Uploaded for Sliders Sunday
ƒ/2.8
84.3 mm
1/100 Sec
ISO 160
[Text and image copyright Caren (©all rights reserved)] ️
please respect my ©copyright : Do not use any image or text without my previous written authorization, NOT even in social networks. If you want to use a photograph, please contact me!
Bitte mein ©Copyright beachten!
Meine Fotos und Texte sind ©copyright geschützt (alle Rechte vorbehalten) und dürfen ohne meine vorherige und schriftliche Zustimmung NICHT von Dritten verwendet werden, auch nicht in sozialen Netzwerken. Falls Interesse an einem Foto besteht, bitte ich um Kontaktaufnahme!]
Why not? The Golden Autumn Foliage is so impressive that it needs to be conserved in a Glass Ball 😄
And BTW: On a Sliders Sunday - anything is possible 😄
[Dedicated to CRA (ILYWAMHASAM)]
Took a photo of a tree with golden autumnal foliage, added a spherical shape, enhanced the colour and uploaded the image for the group
Canon EOS 450D - EF 70-300 mm IS USM
ƒ/7.1
300.0 mm
1/320 Sec
ISO 800
View of Mt Rainier & a nice restaurant on Pier 70 from Elliot Bay Park in Seattle. Happy Sliders Sunday!
Redruth railway station opened west side of Redruth on 31 May 1838. The railway had been built to move goods to and from local mines and the harbours at Hayle and Portreath. A passenger service started on 26 May 1843; nearly 200 people travelled on the first train from Redruth to Hayle.
HSS!
Photoshop & Snapseed: Sliders Sunday
“The eyesight for an eagle is what thought is to a man.”
― Dejan Stojanovic
don't forget May 22 Flickr will be down for file migration, etc
blog.flickr.net/en/2019/05/08/planned-maintenance-and-fli...
happy sliderssunday my friends!
This little cabin has been abandoned for a couple of decades - so imagine my surprise when I saw a couple pull up with a travel trailer and prepare to move in. But then - the temperatures started to drop, and another Alaskan winter set in. The next time I saw the cabin, it was once again abandoned, and looking pretty forlorn.
*Posted for Sliders Sunday - Processed to the MAX! HSS!
To create this I layered together 4 or 5 totally random shots. With the resulting shapes, and after a lot of colourising and contrast tweaking they formed whatever this is!
HSS!
Explored October 5, 2020
#sliderssunday
Do you remember the Mendelian laws of inheritance? We've learned them in school on the basis of how the eye colours of fruit flies (the notorious Drosophila Melanogaster) are inherited to further generations according to dominant or recessive characteristics, although Gregor Mendel himself conducted his groundbreaking genetic experiments with pea plants. Unfortunately, the significance of Mendel's laws was never truly understood or acknowledged in his lifetime (1822 – 1884). His studies, however, were rediscovered three decades later, at the turn of the 20th century, and, following their rediscovery, American biologist Thomas Hunt Morgan (1866 – 1945) began to experiment with Drosophila in his "Fly Room" at Columbia University. It was Morgan who discovered that genes are carried on chromosomes; he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1933. Further Fly experiments (with a less successful outcome) were conducted by a certain Dr. Seth Brundle in 1986 (aka "The Fly"). So where exactly does my image come in here, you may have already asked yourself (if you haven't stopped reading my lengthy introduction long before – which I could totally understand). Well, during one of those numerous teaching experiments with fruit flies, which numerous generations of students have conducted ever since modern genetics became part of school curriculums, something must have gone very wrong. And who knows, maybe Dr. Seth "Brundlefly" Brundle himself had led one of those biology experiments? Experiments in which some dinosaur genes were mixed with those of an innocent fruit fly... Which resulted in the creation the biggest Drosophila the world has ever seen – the Olympic Brachosophila Megalogaster? Nonsense, of course, and you know it ;-) But doesn't this kaleidoscoped image of the Olympic stadium's interior (the roof, mostly, taken at a dutch angle) look just like an ultra close-up of a (fruit) fly's face? Not one that you'd like to see buzzing around your fruit bowl, that's for sure, but let's say that the other "third party genes" that were used in this crazy experiment came from a puppy. So this would be the friendliest, cuddliest giant dinosaur puppy fruit fly you'll ever come across :) OK, I'd rather stop before you start to believe that I was a part of those experiments as well ;-)
Happy Sliders Sunday, Everyone, stay safe and take care, dear Flickr friends!
Drosophila Megalogaster – Schau mir in die Augen, Kleines :)
Ihr erinnert Euch doch bestimmt noch alle an die Mendelsche Vererbungslehre und die berühmte Drosophila Melanogaster mit ihren dominanten bzw. rezessiven Genen, die über die Vererbung der jeweiligen Augenfarbe entscheiden. Was wäre, wenn jemand bei einem der unzähligen Biologie-Experimente, die Generationen von Schülern mit Fruchtfliegen durchgeführt haben, nicht nur Fruchtfliegen(-Gene) gekreuzt, sondern evtl. noch ein paar Dinosaurier-Gene dazwischen gestreut hätte? Das Ergebnis könnte die größte Fruchtfliege sein, die die Welt je gesehen hat, die unglaubliche "Olympische Brachosophila Megalogaster" mit Augen so groß wie zwei Stadiondächer ;-) Nun ja, Ihr habt es schon erraten, dies ist eine kleine Spielerei mit einem Foto vom Olympiastadion für den Sliders Sunday. Ich hatte hier einfach aus Spaß mal eine Aufnahme mit schräger Perspektive gemacht und dabei überwiegend das offene Dach mit ins Bild genommen. Nachdem ich in Photoshop das Bild kopiert, gespiegelt und neu zusammengesetzt hatte, schaute mich plötzlich eine riesige (Frucht-)Fliege an ;-) Keine, die man gerne daheim um den Früchteteller herumschwirren sehen möchte, aber ich kann Euch beruhigen: Bei dem manipulierten Experiment kamen als "Drittanbieter-Gene" nicht nur die eines Dinosauriers hinzu, sondern auch die eines kuscheligen Welpen. Diese Fliege ist also gaaaanz lieb und verschmust und will bloß spielen ;-)
Ich wünsche Euch einen guten Start in die neue Woche, bleibt gesund und passt auf Euch auf!
Back in LunaPic, really must try something else soon, but finished off in PhotoScape.
The original:
www.flickr.com/photos/44506883@N04/47934502018/in/datepos...
Better viewed large and thank you for your favourites. :O)
A combination of different effects applied to my photo of colourful wood, see original in my first comment.
Dedicated to RHC (ILYWAMHASAM)
Green and rust. Still a beauty and one day it'll be as good as new.
Photoshop Topaz Suite
Sliders Sunday.
HSS!
This was never going to go anywhere good as a photo so I thought I would tinker with it for Sliders Sunday.
Late one afternoon last November, desperate for getting out and seeing something different in our pandemic constrained lives, we drove up to the local viewpoint when the sun was going down over the Welsh hills.
It was cold. We had no inclination to get out of the car. But the scene was interesting as we had fortuitously parked in just the right place to see this backlit tree.
I only had the phone with me and to pass the time I took some shots through the windscreen (as you do :) ). The image was really mucky from the mucky windscreen but, hey, it was a nice view across the Severn estuary...
Fortunately, I took the image in raw, so I was able to retrieve a lot of tonal range while developing it in Affinity. I then threw it at Nik Color Efex, using several filters include bleach bypass to heighten the skies and a bicolour filter to add the colour gradients.
A bit of tidying up using inpainting in Affinity followed, and then I took it into Topaz Studio for a painterly effect starting with the Color Pencil I preset, with a vignette and a textured overlay, a fair bit of tweaking...
I'll post a link to the in-camera image so you can see where we started.
Thank you for taking the time to look. I hope you enjoy the image. Happy Sliders Sunday :)
October the month when our chiles are harvested and roasted or made into ristras to see us through the winter months.
Ristras also used as decoration in New Mexico.
HSS!
Sliders Sunday: Snapseed and Photoshop
[Dedicated to CRA (ILYWAMHASAM)]
Took a photo of the copper surface of my entrance door
(Please see first comment box).
Changed the pattern by transforming it into a Zig Zag shape
then
uploaded the Slider Creation for the group Sliders Sunday
GigaSet GS 290
ƒ/2.0
4.0 mm
1/20 Sec
ISO 965
I rarely ever use textures. It is something I like and admire in other people's work but something I just can't seem to get the knack of. This image has about three textures added on to it with various other sliding - and, honestly, I am not sure even what I did to even achieve this...lol...I guess that is part of the fun with sliding...HSS everyone!
The other night went for a ride south of town and spotted new fox kits for the year on the side of the hill warming themselves by the sun rays.
Sliders Sunday. - HSS
Had a meeting down in London in the week. Never have much of a chance to see the sites, just in and out on the train, managed to snap a few though!
HSS!
Project 52