View allAll Photos Tagged Splashes,

Green-winged teal making a splash at the riparian preserve

A unique moment in time, captured faster than a blink of an eye.

Each image is as individual as your finger print.

Explore: Aug 24, 2008 #20

Going through some very very old photos that I never got around to posting! This is from the Skagit Valley Tulip Festival in Washington State. These two guys were having a wonderful day splashing in the mud, along with their (very patient) mother who actually helped them run through the biggest puddles and then pose for pictures afterward!

White cream on pink and orange acrylic paints

Just a splash of color to awaken the stream.

 

View On Black

 

The festival of color is due to a large amount of mineral content in this small creek bottom. Makes for some really intersting images.

Splash by Charles Bukowski

 

"...

these words force you

to a new

madness.

 

you have been blessed, you have been pushed into a

blinding area of

light.

 

the elephant dreams

with you

now.

the curve of space

bends and

laughs.

 

you can die now.

..."

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ITA

"...queste parole ti incitano/ a una nuova/ follia./ ti ha toccato la grazia,/ sei stato spinto/ dentro una/ abbacinante regione di/ luce./ adesso l'elefante/ sogna insieme/ a te./la volta dello spazio/ curva e ride./ adesso puoi morire.

..."

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Fase 1: Immaginare lo scatto che vuoi

Fase 2: Tanto gel sui capelli mossi!

Fase 3: Usare cuscini come manichini

Fase 4: Usare il tavolo e molti quaderni perché il tuo amico si è ripreso il suo cavalletto :(

Fase 5: Selezionare ISO, APERTURA, ESPOSIZIONE e INQUADRATURA

Fase 6: Mettere il timer

Fase 7: Cambiare idea sullo scatto ma non poter cambiare sfondo perché inizia a piovere =__=°

Fase 8: Scontornare la tua immagine con ogni mezzo possibile (!)

Fase 9: Usare almeno 3 livelli di Photoshop

Fase 10: Trattare l'immagine come una singola foto

Fase 11: Essere felici del risultato :P

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BROOKLINO (XD) :

Step 1: visualizing the shot you want

Step 2: much hair gel for your curly!

Step 3: Using cushions like dummy

Step 4: Using a table and many books because your friend has taken his stand :(

Step 5: Selecting ISO, APERTURE, EXPOSURE PROGRAM and SHOT

Step 6: Setting timer

Step 7: changing your mind on shooting but it's impossible to change background because is starting to rain =__=°

Step 8: Debluring your picture by any means possible (!)

Step 9: Using at last three levels of Photoshop

Step 10: Treating image as a single photo

Step 11: Being happy with the result :P

 

(sorry for my english)

__________________________________

 

©Alessandra Raimondi

 

Taken for All Photo"Splash di C.Bukowski"

and for Italian Girls Photographers "52 weeks(19a sett)"

Thanks for your visit, comments and/or faves

The only evidence of the devastation further up Swaledale caused by the heavy rain earlier in the week was the colour of the water.

 

The sun was catching strands of the peaty coloured water as it flowed over the waterfall before it splashed at the bottom and turned a much paler colour.

Studio selfportrait

Sketching Stuff Challenge: Splash Some Color

This time Charlie O’Shields walks us through his painting of a paintbrush with a background of splashed color. I went off on a complete tangent though. I happened to have splashed color all over some paper for another project, when I saw the challenge, and knew this was meant to be my answer to it. Instead of sketching before color was added, I looked at what I had splashed and decided it was a dragon breathing fire.

Kuretake Managaka Zig Pigment pen & Daniel Smith watercolor on St Cuthbert’s Mill Millford Cold Press.

If you haven’t signed up for the bi-monthly Sketching Stuff newsletter or want to chacke previous challenges, go here: Sketchingstuff.com

Don’t forget World Watercolor month is coming in July! The store is open. Check out the many other bags and mugs to be found from over 20 different artists. worldwatercolormonth.com/shop/page/3/

@kuretakezig_usa @danielsmithartistsmaterials #danielsmithwatercolors @st.cuthberts.mill #sketchingstuff #WorldWatercolorGroup

En la playa de Barro (Asturias)

Original en diapositiva. Cámara analogica Nikon F60

Tower Beach, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.

 

Copyright © AwesomeFoto Photography. All rights reserved. Please do not use it without my permission.

You are welcome to visit my iStockPhoto or shutterstock. com/g/jameschen (remove space) to buy it.

Inspired by bikeracer and this discussion in the Techique Group.

Montenegro, Budva Old Town

a canada goose descends to an open area of the icy lake surface with an impressive splash

Taken for 52 of 2011 - Week 5 - Water!

 

Had fun splashing in the water today! Click on image to see in black! Accepted for the San Diego Fair 2011!

As a photographer, I love capturing spontaneous and natural moments of wildlife. This image shows a sparrow in the midst of a refreshing bath. The movement and splashing water capture the liveliness and joy of the moment. It is this authenticity and the beauty of everyday life that I aim to capture through my lens.

 

Als Fotograf liebe ich es, spontane und natürliche Momente der Tierwelt einzufangen. Dieses Bild, zeigt einen Spatzen inmitten eines erfrischenden Bades. Die Bewegung und das spritzende Wasser fangen die Lebendigkeit und Freude des Augenblicks ein. Es ist diese Authentizität und die Schönheit des Alltags, die ich durch meine Linse festhalten möchte.

05022020

Splash mechanics

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To view more insights into my photography, please visit www.facebook.com/mentorgraphy

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To view my varied portfolio & my photography blog, do visit www.mentorgraphy.com

 

Low level image taken on the coastline of Whitstable, North Kent in England. T ken with the Canon wide angle

 

Framing & Composition Techniques in Photography

 

Bulldog Images on Getty

 

Splash Art with Water & Milk

 

Canon R5

Canon RF 24 105

Waves splashing against the rocks at the Dana Point Marine Conservation Area, Dana Point, California.

Z72_1976-Edit: I got this from the US Forest Service website:

"Splash Dams

 

The structure before you is known as a “splash dam” (also referred to as “surge”, or “flash” dams), part of an old transportation system for the movement of logs and railroad ties from the forest to sawmills in the valley. The process began by dragging or rolling logs into the river bed while water was being stored behind the dam. When conditions were right, the gate was opened and the logs were “flushed” down to small ponds near the flume entrance. The flume, a raised wooden V-shaped structure, then carried the ties, with the help of water, to processing facilities near Dayton, Wyoming. Ties moving down the flume were reported to reach speeds of nearly 80 miles per hour. Parts of the flume were built as early as 1892 by the Starbird and Hall Logging Company. Construction of the “splash dam” occurred around 1905."

Using Splash Art Kit to create this Splash. Clear water in a solution of Red food dye with 3 Flash units, Red, Green and clear gels.

Belly Flop Barry still doesn't improve on his landing technique.

Waves crashing

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without explicit permission.

© All rights reserved

 

Massive splashes created by massive waves yesterday at Shore Acres. See how small the people on the rock on the right are in comparison to the splash. The lookout area is 65 feet above the water, so you can see how crazy high the splash really is! It was also beautiful how the setting sun illuminated the water.

157 / 366

 

Splash in a bottle

 

Playing tonight and trying to do something different, I managed to get the drip into the neck of the bottle but I don't really think this was the best shape of bottle to use. Just because I like a bit of colour I added gels to the speedlights but then reduced the saturation in processing.

 

Some testing with flashes. :P

 

Canon EOS 5D mk II

EF 100mm f/2.8 Macro USM

1/125 sec @ f/13

ISO 100

 

Strobist:

- Canon 580EX II, 1/128 power, attached to the camera, reflected from right through a silver umbrella

- Nikon SB-900 in slave mode, 1/4 power, bare, left back

 

Gorgeous summer beach time!

LARGE

 

She worships the ground he walks on.

  

One Lencarta Superfast 600 behind a heavyweight Translum screen, wearing an Aputure Fresnel attachment to create a radial gradient. I use this rather than a grid as it allows me to control the fall-off for a given size of spot, plus, unlike a grid, which blocks and absorbs the light around the edge to create the fall off, a Fresnel lens focuses the light towards the centre - so you keep almost all of the light, just in a different pattern. This becomes important for motion freezing work like this as you need to keep the flash output low: these IGBT controlled lights reduce their output by shortening the duration of the flash. The SF600 is on 5.5 here - ie only half a stop above minimum power, so the flash duration will be in the 1/10000th of a second region.

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