View allAll Photos Tagged Three
A study of three windows on an abandoned farmhouse near Maysville, NC.
This is an HDR derived from three RAW images, double-tonemapped in Photomatix, then a bit of Photoshop work to mask through the windows, with just a splash of Topaz Detail.
Get even creepier, and View On Black
Who says computer games are unsocial? :) For ODC, Nerdy.
iPhone 3GS this week, cause I'm out of town...
MUST BE VIEWED IN STEREO TO FULLY APPRECIATE!
A 3D (stereo) crosseye view.
TO SEE THIS IN 3D, there's a tutorial here:
The Expedition traverses Three Lakes Wildlife Management Area using the Florida National Scenic Trail.
Florida Wildlife Corridor Expedition. From January 17 through April 25, 2012, a team of explorers including photographer Carlton Ward Jr, cinematographer Elam Stoltzfus, bear biologist Joe Guthrie and conservationist Mallory Lykes Dimmitt, set out to trek 1000 miles in 100 days to showcase the opportunity to protect a connected corridror of natural lands and waters throughout peninsular Florida for the benefit of wildlife and people. Learn more at FloridaWildlifeCorridor.org. Photograph by Carlton Ward Jr / Carlton Ward Photography / CarltonWard.com.
Celebrating the work of Mary Blair as found on the Grand Canyon Concourse at Disney's Contemporary Resort at Walt Disney World. The breathtaking mural was designed specifically for the resort that opened in 1971.
"In a real dark night of the soul it is always three o'clock in the morning"
-- F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Crack-Up
334/365 (1826)
For the 365 treasure hunt, #35 Handwritting.
Today I complete 5 years of 365ing.
It was also 3 years ago today that my Dad died. This was his calendar from his last month with his various appointments.
2nd November would have been my sister Maureen's 58th birthday, but she died as a baby. Dad never forget her and always bought flowers on her birthday.
I still have a lot of my parent's things, like this, and can't part with them. Even though they are completely worthless, they mean a lot to me.
Roy Lichtenstein
American, 1984
Painted aluminum
121 1/2 x 43 x 26 1/2 in., 527 lb.
2005.111
[Description and information copied from Getty website]
In this sculpture, painting's basic building block, the brushstroke, has been playfully transformed into an oversized, three-dimensional form. Made from aluminum, three vertical "strokes" of pure color are frozen in space and rise to a height of more than ten feet. One edge of the yellow brushstroke cuts through the dominant stroke of black and blue; the yellow also curves into a diminutive stroke of red paint.
Each brushstroke is a fully realized three-dimensional form that, somewhat implausibly, allows the viewer to experience a stroke of paint from different vantage points. The sculpture humorously reminds us that paint is literally three-dimensional.
Roy Lichtenstein first explored brushstrokes as a subject in a series of paintings initiated in 1965. As with many of his works, he used a comic book source--a panel of an artist at work from Strange Suspense Stories --as the basis for his brushstrokes. The subject became one of the artist's most recognizable images and he would return regularly to the brushstroke motif for more than thirty years. In the early 1980s, Lichtenstein began creating sculptural brushstrokes.
and now for something completely different ... after pizza tonight, completely unscripted and spontaneous.