View allAll Photos Tagged Spectrum
IMG_1255c 2023 08 13 file
A Spectrum of Color fills the Southern edge of the Apache Casino Sign....Lawton,OK
The Spectrum Angel has three expresions, worn on each side of its face. They are: SLEEP, AWAKE, PAIN
Built for the BrickNerd Cube contest.
w.a.v.e.s. (Windsor's Artists, Visions, Energies & Sculptures) is a two-day festival connecting communities through waves of art, culture and technology.
This was in Windsor, Ontario. Not sure why it says Detroit, Michigan in Locator
At certain combinations of time of year & time of day, the sun through the beveled glass in a door projects a rainbow onto a table top.
Low Key for Macro Mondays
An image from the summer, but which has been catching my attention in the folder due to the lovely combination of silver and gold colours.
Taken with the IR/full spectrum converted Nikon D80, Kolari-like QB19/KG3 filter and 18-55 kit zoom (this was before I sorted out a Helios 44M for IR work).
The source files for this image are fairly poor, the kit zoom simply does not focus properly onto the converted sensor and this is as sharp as it gets. Added to that, the D80 does not have very good dynamic range, meaning that colours are either lost in shadow or highlights are blown out. Added to that, the white balance is "away to Gourock" as we say in these parts, meaning "all off to one side", with a magenta cast to the whites.
To overcome these difficulties, there's been a lot of post processing, with highlights repaired with texture from a bracketed shot and lots of selective colour balance work. Not perfect, but there's a limit to how much effort should be put into rescuing a raw file with problems.
Spectrum Bear should be half a mile upstream in Kingston upon Thames, being a member of the Bear Art Trail inspired by Michael Rosen's "We're Going On A Bear Hunt". Having been thrown in the river by vandals, then rescued by paddleboarders, its seen here awaiting transport back home.
Antares Spectrum
The Star & thinner spectrum is as captured, and underneath I stretched out the spectrum vertically and added it in so you can see it a bit easier. This is a thin & wide img, best viewed on a pc
captured with :
Celestron C6 XLT
Rspec Star Analyser 100
ZWO ASI62MC
Skywatcher EQ35M
Like RAINBOWS, That meet not really meet, yet actually Spectrums.
A collage made today from photos that were taken, Nov, 2014. Everyday a different "rainbow", that is made naturally from the structure of the windows and light that enters and touches the floor.
When I named back then in 1990, a shop- gallery I owned... "SPECTRUM", I had a reason.
I did not realized then that my artworks will be hanged later in my life, at my parents home like a gallery.
AND THERE... At the "Colourful Magic Gallery" I can find everyday Spectrum..
Coincidence... ?
2 images.
Thanks for visiting.
May we be able to sEE everyday the RIGHT light, in able to create correct for us.
Copyrights (c) Nira Dabush.
My first aurora borealis experience turned out to be a memorable one. When the beams of light started dancing, it was hard to keep the composure. We went to see the Perseids while hoping for some northern lights. In the end, everybody felt like "screw the meteors, this is stupendous!" LOL
This shot is from Marconi Tower. There is a reflection of the green lights from the Atlantic ocean. This is was easily one of the most amazing phenomena I have ever witnessed in my entire life. I missed the May 10 display because we were clouded out, so having the privilege to see this felt very special. I clapped my hands when the show was over. It did feel like the entire spectrum of colors was raining down into the ocean, coloring it along the way :) I do not mind the clouds as they make the atmosphere more special. Note the rising Capella on the right, the Perseus himself, and chi&h double cluster and other celestial goodies. Indeed, I think the green streak in the upper left is a portion of a Perseid.
This colour display was done completely in camera; no photoshopping, filters, or presets. All that was done in Lightroom was fixing things like shadows, highlights, whites, blacks, and contrast since it was shot in RAW.
This effect is the result of three things: the polariser filter on my lens, the window I had during the flight, and the angle of the sunlight hitting my window. Pretty cool, right? I ended up liking the effect – and knowing it would happen either way because of my window – I played with it throughout the trip. This is one of my favourites that I've processed so far, and I will post more in the future.
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"Emerging Spectrum" shows Argentina's most iconic mountain, the Fitz Roy that can be seen in Parque Nacional de los Glaciares. It was taken during the sunrise in the late fall conditions. I was returning to this location multiple times during my stay in the park to be able to capture entire spectrum of colours. I was waiting for the first light to strike the Fitz Roy's peak and aimed to combine on my photo morning sky and cascading river with richness of beautiful fall colours of the surrounding flora. I hoped that all these elements would create the real picture of Patagonia's natural beauty at this time of the year. I was having a lot of fun taking this photo while balancing on the edge of the rock in the middle of the river's stream.
I can't find words to describe what feelings one has while seeing this Patagonia's morning beauty. It was simply breathtaking. I hope this photo successfully shows the cheerfulness I was experiencing while capturing this scene.
Playing around with the sunlight streaming from behind the abbey to enhance the colour spectrum in it whilst contrasting with silhouette of abbey and trees.
Sunlight split in its spectrum by an angled mirror onto a greyish wollen carpet.
Taken usin a Nikon D7100 with 20 mm extension tube and 50 mm prime lens. Supported by a homemade bean bag.
n.*Spectrum:
1. Physics: The distribution of energy emitted by a radiant source, as by an incandescent body, arranged in order of wavelengths.
2. A graphic or photographic representation of such a distribution. The visible spectrum is the portion of the optical spectrum that is visible to the human eye.
Hazy Visible Spectrum, St-Janvier, Quebec, Canada.
PixQuote:
"What makes photography a strange invention-- with unforeseeable consequences-- is that its primary raw materials are light and time."
- John Berger
Aspens trees of various sizes show off a spectrum of color down the side of the the canyon of the South Fork of Bishop Creek in California’s Sierra Nevada mountains. Every year here is different, and this year the color overall seemed a little behind last year, perhaps a whole week behind. Red-orange colors however seem rare in my experience chasing aspens in these wonderful mountains. Aspen trees grow in clonal colonies with shared root systems. Those individual colonies tend to change all at once together, so it’s not unheard of to find green trees next to golden trees next to barren trees, as each colony changes at a different time. It seems as though in this scene I can spot at least five colonies that have slightly different colors. Down by the creek at the bottom of frame the trunks are tall and more mature. As we look up the slope they get smaller and smaller, with the smallest trunks on the steepest slope probably subject to repeated avalanche assault in the winter. The light here was early in the morning with the harsh direct rays blocked by the high rocky walls.