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Abstract Floral Face
[Dedicated to CRA (ILYWAMHASAM)
😄 HaPpY Sliders Sunday 😄
Photo of a Nasturtium
post processed to the max:
enhanced saturation, conrast and colour temperature, then framed it - ready to upload for the
ƒ/4.0
4.5 mm
1/800 Sec
ISO 100
Steaming raindrops.
Done in iPiccy and PhotoScape. I'm not sure about this one, so helpful comments welcome.
Better viewed large and thank you for your favourites. :O)
... created for Sliders Sunday
If you like anything on my photos, I'm very pleased... just share your kindness, I'm grateful in advance for your views, likes and comments... a lot of thanks :)
Red-eared slider (Trachemys scripta elegans) basking on a dead tree. These American turtles are an invasive species in Europe,
Żółw czerwonolicy (Trachemys scripta elegans) wygrzewający się na martwym drzewie. Te amerykańskie żółwie są w Europie gatunkiem inwazyjnym.
Shot yesterday during our outing with Robert at High Park. We had a fabulous day and the weather could not have been better.
HSS
Lightened the original in PhotoScape, then moved to LunaPic for the kaleidoscope effect, before going to iPiccy for a bit of extra something and finally finished off back in PhotoScape.
Here's the original:
www.flickr.com/photos/44506883@N04/48219436261/in/datepos...
Better viewed large and thank you for your favourites. :O)
From both many and from a few years ago on this date in my archives. Slid to capture that old times feel.
The pond/common slider (Trachemys scripta) is a species of common, medium-sized, semiaquatic turtle. Hatchling and juvenile pond sliders have a greenish upper shell (carapace), yellow bottom shell (plastron), and green and yellow stripes and markings on their skin. These patterns and colors in the skin and shell fade with age until the carapace is a muted olive green to orange brown or brown and the plastron is a dull yellow or darker.
Let it slide is a track by Alabama 3 , and is fine for watching the sun slide behind Kynance Cove. The wild flowers sprinkling the short turf were superb, mainly spring squill, thrift, kidney vetch and sea campion. A great way to start the week.
I pushed the sliders all the way up on this one to enhance the texture of the petals and the navy blue and fuschia pollen and stamens. There were two of these blooms in a bouquet of all dusty pink blooms and grey-green eucalyptus leaves. --
An otherwise gray day turns into a burst of brightness over the thin ice on the skating pond. From my On This Date archives.
HSS! ;o))
The original shot of crocuses was taken by: skagitrenee It was originally used for a 'Treat Me' challenge organised by Kreative People Group
A link to the original image is in the first comment field
Texture "textura mia manuscrito" kindly supplied by Ana Librillana
Other textures are my own.
My Sliders Sunday set is here: Elisa Sliders Sunday
My Post-processing set is here: Elisa Post-processing
My Textured set here: Elisa Textured set
My Spring Flowers set: Spring Flowers
One from a while back - looks like one of my Quality Street wrappers got stuck to the lens :)
Happy Sliders Sunday!
HSS. Wondered out finally the other day and made it to the end of the pier. Gosh it was cold and windy. Yes, I had my hiking stick and my CLEATS on my boots.
© All Rights Reserved - No Usage Allowed in Any Form Without the Written Consent of Sharon C Johnson/MyRidgebacks
Explore February 12, 2008
An image rescued from my On This Date Archives, taken on a 5F morning when the sea smoke, low tide and direct sun conspired to challenge me and the camera! Sliders to the rescue!
Ok, it's weird, and it's only a log in a pond, rotated, cropped, & aspect-corrected, with some of the sliders cranked up. But hey, it's Sliders Sunday! Hope yours is a Happy one!
Lovely welcoming flower display for visitors on the canal just before the Viaduct. Processed for Sliders Sunday in Luminar 4.This tool has amazing sky replacement properties. I might have gone a bit over the top with this slide.
Red-eared Sliders. Like alligators, a bird photographer in SE Texas cannot avoid turtles. Riverstone Wetlands, Sugar Land, Texas.
This is another very old slide. . .Taken in early 1964 by my Dad. Back then Dad would sometimes take my brother Kevin and me to a spot on Brown Road in suburban St. Louis. Brown Road ran right next to the eastern edge of the Lambert-St. Louis Airport. We, and other people, would pull off onto the shoulder of Brown Road and get a great view of the airliners on final approach to Runway 30L. The end of 30L was very close to that road, so the airliners were very low by the time they flew over on final. The guy watching this beautiful TWA Constellation is. . .you guessed it. . .Me! I was 14 years old. My brother and I would take turns standing on the sill of the open passenger side door of Dad's 1962 Chevy Impala. We wanted to get as close as we could and it was a cool view of those classic planes. This part of Brown Road is still there but has been renamed James S. McDonnell Blvd. in honor of the man who started the McDonnell Aircraft Corporation, now McDonnell Douglas. In current photos I see that the farm buildings in the background are now gone, but many of the trees behind those buildings are still there. My brother and I loved "hangin' out" on Brown Road all those years ago. . .
Year: 1964
Film: Dynachrome (I'm not familiar with this film so I don't
know anything about the ASA rating)
Camera: Voigtlander Prominent (Rangefinder)
Lens: Nokton 50mm 1.5