View allAll Photos Tagged Tracing
sea smoke and the morning sun and ice on the beach, Lake Michigan, Upper Peninsula, Michigan - December 12 2024
Not the shot I wanted to get because I couldn't get out there in time. Sea smoke on the upper Great Lakes is one of my favorite weather phenomena living in this region. It's how you know it's cold cold out there.
0F / -17C air temperature.
-10F / -23C wind chill.
The Trace is seasonal, so make sure you come back again to check it out. maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/The%20Trace%20Too/128/128/22
My blog: tizzycanucci.com
Wondering what the practical limitations are on rendering complex origami objects with the 3D traceover technique.
My tracks in the sand were almost gone before taking my leave, but traces of the desert in me will stay forever.
The feeling of walking barefoot in the untouched softness is incredible.
This drawing I felt was a personal message to me from the universe, as it really chimed with my inner self. Life is to be savoured to its full craziness and fun potential!
Could have gone the usual way but decided on paddock hopping instead. Go try stay of the beaten path sometimes, its fun! Hunua Ranges, New Zealand.
Snail trace.
Todos nosotros intentamos dejar huella de nuestro paso por el mundo. Esta solo es visible cuando alguien se fija en ella, de otro modo pasamos inadvertidos. La huella de este amigo, sin el ser consciente, permanecerá mientras esta foto sea contemplada, asi como la de aquellos que quedan retratados por nuestra cámara, da igual lo importantes que hallan sido, tendrán memoria en nuestras imágenes.
All of us try to let trace our way through the world. This is only visible when someone looks at it, otherwise pass unnoticed. The footprint of this friend, without being aware, exist meanwhile this picture exist too. as well as those who were portrayed by our camera, no matter how important they were,they will have memory in our images.
The masons had a loft on the upper floor of the L-shaped corridor leading from the north transept of the Minster to the chapter house. Here they stored templates for the complex mouldings of the stonework. This arm of the loft still has a tracing floor, a plaster surface on which the masons worked out some of the larger shapes they were designing. Although difficult to see the shaped inscribed on this surface are very closenin size and shape to the main arcade arches of St Michael le Belfrey, the parish church alongside the Minster built in the early 16th century by the masons employed at the Minster. Recently the chapter house roof has been dated to 1288, with some earlier timbers reused in it. The corridor leading to it is likely to be of the same date.
Another one taken at the office. The evening sun sometimes casts beautiful patterns on the staircase walls. Which I obviously idealized a bit with DxO.
Thank you everyone for your visits, faves and comments, they are always appreciated :)
I am working on making an origami rat skeleton in just three seperate segments. This is segment one which features the tail, legs, hips and lower spine. The second segment will be the ribcage and the third segment will be the skull and front legs.
During the 1990s I did a bit of 3D modelling and rendering, starting with a Commodore Amiga 500 (some single frames took more than one day to render!), and later I learned 3D Studio on DOS (with a 33Mhz 486DX).
This photo is not a render, it's a real photo! It was done using a handheld snooted strobe to light paint the scene, giving it this more-than-real computer generated look.
Introducing a new photo series, "Tracing the Underground," bird’s eye views of the cryptic signatures that locate utility lines, trenches and ducts under the streets of New York.
The series of 16 images can be seen on my portfolio site.