View allAll Photos Tagged Transitional
A mule deer buck in velvet rests amidst some lush grasses which are transitioning to fall color. Roosevelt National Forest, Colorado.
Here's another one from my Transition series!
This in particular came up pretty well and I'm really proud of the final result.
For me, "Transition" is a special concept. The most beautiful moments of a day (in my opinion sunset and night) are encased in just a single photo. The look is voluntarily unreal and dreamy. This makes it possible for the viewer to see a totally new representation of a particular place that is impossible to see with your naked eyes. My goal with this concept is to show the viewer places maybe already seen but under a brand new guise.
For those of you who are familiar with Renè Magritte, this is somehow close to his "The Empire of Light" series of paintings.
All comments are welcome as always :)
Location: El Golfo, Lanzarote, Canary Islands, Spain
Canon EOS 60D with Sigma 20mm f/1.4 Art, stack of 8 vertical frames
Just a little bit of autumn red. The leaves have only just start changing colour here. It'll be over before you know.
Hope you're all having a great weekend.
Explore #461 Sept. 27, 2008
Haven't uploading anything in a minute. Going through some transitions and finally getting some order back in my life. The spring air is calling me out to go on some adventures. New things to see coming soon.
Christchurch Transitional Cardboard Cathedral on a walk around the city to catch up on the rebuild of our city. October 15, 2015 Christchurch New Zealand.
The Cardboard Cathedral opened to the public on 6 August 2013 with a Diocesan Dedication Service on 15 August. It has seating for 700 and the Cathedral also provides a venue for concerts, exhibitions, and civic and community events.
Christchurch made, Cardboard Cathedral tubes
The Cathedral makes use of varied construction materials from cardboard tubes to timber beams, structural steel and concrete. It is the largest 'emergency structure' to be designed by Shigeru Ban who, with the support of associate architect Yoshie Narimatsu, contributed his time free of charge and gifted the building's design to the Cathedral, Diocese and Christchurch.
Many of the building materials are being sourced locally and nationally including the 98 16.5 - 20 metre, 120-kilogram tubes. Each tube is coated in polyurethane and laminated timber has been inserted for strength.
The Cardboard Cathedral's triangular window design includes 49, 1.2 metre tall panels and incorporates images from ChristChurch Cathedral's original rose window.
Each image comes from the same position as on the rose window. The triangular panels in the middle of the new stained-glass window use images from the centre circle of the rose window, while the remaining panels use images from the outside circle.
For More Info and photos: www.christchurchnz.com/destinations/christchurch/cardboar...
Official Website (order prints) : Aegir Photography
Facebook : Aegir Photography
Instagram : @aegirphotography
500px : 500px
Sunset over Shell Park in Greenwich, Sydney.
Nikon D810 & Nikkor 16-35mm, NiSi 6 stop filter. PP in PS CC using Nik Software and luminosity masks.
© Andy Brandl (2015) // PhotonMix Photography
Don´t redistribute - don´t use on webpages, blogs or any other media without my explicit written permission.
Transition. I have been thinking of the best way to end the year to express my sincere appreciation of your continued support of the images I capture and share. Rather than a ‘best of’ series, I opted for a new image captured earlier today. Just as we transition from 2023 to 2024, the photo transitions from the reds of the resting wild blueberry plants, to the the browns of the mowed fields just beyond, the green spruce and leafless maples, finally to the snow-covered trees in the not-so-distant higher elevations. Happy New Year and all the best for 2024!
The Transition branded lenses tint to a comfortable shade, evenly distributed across the lens even with steep myodisc curves.
I took some artistic license with the title. This Horned Grebe's eyes aren't bloodshot at all ;o) they're naturally red. Transitional plumage.
Parked between what used to be Marrakesh Restaurant and Fort Fringe, these three backhoes are no doubt getting ready to participate in the upcoming transition of the 600 block of New York Ave. NW in Washington, DC
This photo featured in the PoPville blog.
It never occurred to me that conifers changed colors much the same way deciduous trees do. There are no bright colors but the transition and eventual drop are similar. This cedar foliage is in the process of dying.
I know I have better photos of the white spotted boxfish and I have posted several here on flickr. But this one is rather special.
All juvenile white spotted boxfish are black and white and adult females have the same colours as juveniles. But adult males are more colourful - they have white spots on black on their backs but elsewhere are blue and yellow.
So the one above is a juvenile starting to change to adult male colouration - or it could even be a female changing to a male. A male boxfish has a harem of several females and it is thought that when the male dies then one of the females ( normally the largest ) will become a male.
I haven't found another photos on flickr or .the internet showing the transition colour stage.
Will recently sent me a bunch of different sprues, and one of them was this absolutely striking transition between tan and gunmetal. Most transitions that I've seen are a smooth blend of the two colors, sometimes with some minor ripples or marbling--but almost all the accessories on this sprue had crisply-defined swirls of tan and gunmetal. Some of them look almost like camouflage.
So I threw together a bunch of tan-themed soldier figs to display them. My favorites include the AC8 on the far left, the claymore, and the rippling tiger stripes on the two sawed-off shotguns.
You may need to go to all sizes to really appreciate some of the patterns. I have more that I'll post when I can take more photos.
The break-up of the St. Lawrence River is underway! Note the green water at the shore. This represents water over the ice. Because this island is so close to the power dam at Cornwall, water levels fluctuate cosiderably. Evidentally, the dam has restricted its flow of water thereby raising the river at this point. This causes water to rise up over the shore ice. This will hasten the break-up of the ice. Spring and open water will be upon us soon!