View allAll Photos Tagged Transitional
Autumn is turning into winter as the first snow is lining the banks of river Nidelva. Taken at Øvre Leirfoss, Trondheim on a sunny October Sunday.
It was beautiful one month back and withered today.
For, "All people are like grass, and all their glory is like the flowers of the field; the grass withers and the flowers fall." 1 Peter 1:24
(The flower on the left was recorded exactly one month ago: www.flickr.com/photos/puthenthope/35340236652/in/dateposted/ )
Models: Mina
Hair: Transition Salon
MUA: Minaz
Latex: Dead Lotus Couture
Photography co-production with FYi Photography
Singing in the Chinese New Year, the year of the sheep, are this group of singers known as Transition. They are performing in the City Museum in Bristol.
goodbye fall. i love you. i'll miss you.
hello winter. i hate you. go away.
i moved this leaf so i could get a good picture.
shhh don't tell. i cheat. thats not the point. the point is it was snowing and i wanted a picture and lucky me we had a few leaves on the deck and the snow was just starting to fall. (: good pciture. good picture.
ok that's all. have a great week. im off of school for a bit!(: so happy.
[Something about Taipei]
The southern village of the 44th arsenal was founded by the KMT government in 1948 as the very first military dependents' village in Taiwan. The nowadays abandoned village locates at the most prosperous area of Taipei. Through a broken window, I stared at the once tallest skyscraper in the world, Taipei 101, and took probably the most conflicting image I've ever taken. In the heart of Taipei, this village witnesses the past, present, and future of Taiwan. Even if 60 years goes by, she still stands. Even if being surrounded by skyscrapers, she still stands. She stands to remind us of who we are and what we've been through. Most importantly, she stands to make sure that this island is becoming a better and better place.
A photo from a recent visit to th National Glass Centre at Sunderland. An exhibition by Magdalene Odundo called transition II. The installation is one thousand handmade glass large baubles that fill the room in a wave. Really worth a visit!
Natural Transition
Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. Copyright © Akshay - All Rights Reserved.
Models: Jordan
Hair: Transition Salon
MUA: Minaz
Latex: Dead Lotus Couture
Photography co-production with FYi Photography
The rebuilding of Leighton Buzzard station has begun, with the up slow line buildings already gone, to be replaced by a new entrance, spreading over site of the former Dunstable line trackbed. The rest of the former LNWR buildings will soon disappear also. 86609, a locomotive still in traffic, passes with a Garston to Felixstowe FLT empties. 6 October 1990.
Pentax K1000/35mm
Kodak T-MAX 400
Branches of beautiful tiny blossoms, that will soon transform themselves into beautiful
maple leaves. (Beat viewed on black)
The old and new order at Wolsztyn. The guard of train 77420, the 06:07 departure from Wolsztyn to Leszno converses with the driver of Ol49-59 just before departure on a misty Saturday 18th January 2014. The new order of the day, a class SA132 unit , the type which are now diagrammed on the Poznan services, stands in the adjacent platform.
© Gordon Edgar - All rights reserved. Please do not use my images without my explicit permission
*** For best viewing experience, please click anywhere inside the image to view on black ***
Having recovered from yesterday's early morning visit to the Desjardin Canal at the West end of Burlington Bay (Hamilton, Ontario) and reviewing the images more closely, I realized that aside from some nice landscape opportunities, I had also stumbled across some nice abstract captures. Either that or the effects of the the early morning with the group of four had me seeing things and the new Nikon was even able to capture that. Anyway, along the Desjardin Canal is a walkway, parts of which float and are surfaced in steel plates as opposed to the more conventional asphalt path that forms the rest of the Waterfront Pathway around the bay. When there is a junction between the two types of construction, an (approximately) 30cm/1 foot transition plate provides a smooth junction, presumably to minimize the risk of tripping. Over the years, various paint schemes have been used to alert users of the path to the transition, and over time each has been worn away and replaced with newer colour schemes. In the early morning light, the mix of sodium vapour orange and the dawn light causes some strange colour casts, which, in trying to correct them somewhat, simply exaggerates the colours. That, combined with some aggressive post processing yielded this. Holi, Easter, and bright colours in the early morning. - JW
Tech Details:
Taken using a hand-held Nikon D7100 fitted with a Nikkor 18-105mm VR lense set to 35mm, ISO125, Aperture priority mode, f/5.6, 1/80 sec, exposure bias EV-0.67. PP in GIMP: adjust tone curve to expand the range of the histogram to cover the full range, shape the tone curve to increase steepness, increase saturation overall significantly, adjust colour balance to reduce blue-green cast, increase contrast, sharpen, add fine black and white frame, add bar and text on left, scale to 1800 wide for posting.
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D7A_0633_desjardinwalkwayplatepaintadjbarsigx1800
Curcuma Zedoaria is native to Asia and has been naturalized in Costa Rica where it is called "Resurrection". The robust leaves of this plant die back at the time of the year's end, which is also the beginning of the dry season. The blossoms of the plant spring up amongst it's dried leaves as the dry season is coming to an end. around the time of the March equinox. As the rains arrive the foliage of the plant begins to sprout up to begin another cycle of growth.
Sunglasses: BCBG
Top: Forever 21 (also worn here)
Cape: c/o Mod Cloth (also worn here)
Satchel: c/o Tory Burch
Denim Leggings: Old Navy
Flats: Nine West
Arwork for Elysium Art Fest @InWorldz. March 2013.
"Expected transition" by PralineB.
We have no fear of time passing.
We have always known
That the Birds People take care of trans-humans.
They carries the universe,
The beyond, the unspeakable, in their bellies.
They are the elders of the Watchers.
We are the one,
We are the all.
The transition is occurring always
Under the watchful eyes of the Birds People.
They know the matrix creates the merger,
The merger creates the multicolored, multiple and unique being
Fused in the Birds to the infinite.
The universe and the beyond belong to the Birds People.
PB.
The Transition branded lenses tint to a comfortable shade, evenly distributed across the lens even with steep myodisc curves.
Watercolour and ink on 140 lb. Arches. Third in the Transitions series, and again (I never learn) taken through glass.
Autumn Color Transition. Eastern Sierra Nevada, California. October 4, 2017. © Copyright 2017 G Dan Mitchell - all rights reserved.
Brush and aspens undergoing the autumn color transition in the eastern Sierra Nevada
When we think of fall color in the Sierra Nevada, for many the first (and perhaps only?) thoughts are of the aspens. The aspens are beautiful — more about them in a moment — but they aren't the whole show. For example, where the high desert environment meets the mountain environment there can be a lot of spectacularly colorful brush, and the dried grasses contribute their own golden brown tones. Willows can become quite yellow, and even some ferns can glow in the right light. I suppose that this photograph is largely about aspens, but it chose to include some of those other color sources, too.
The aspen color transition is not a sudden thing. In fact, if you start with the earliest oddball individual yellow leaves, often seen by mid September and sometimes earlier, and look all the way out until late October when the last leaves finally fall, you can be looking at a period of as long as six weeks. (To be clear, the core of the season is still the first half of October plus a little.) Even in individual locations the color rarely changes all at once, and brilliantly colorful trees may stand next to trees that are still green. This location along the eastern base of the range is a fine example. Obviously some of the trees are approaching peak color. But if you look closely you may spot a few trees that are already bare. And the great or almost-entirely green trees area still several days to a week before their best color.
G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, "California's Fall Color: A Photographer's Guide to Autumn in the Sierra" is available from Heyday Books and Amazon.
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All media © Copyright G Dan Mitchell and others as indicated. Any use requires advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.
"Then followed that beautiful season... Summer....
Filled was the air with a dreamy and magical light; and the landscape
Lay as if new created in all the freshness of childhood."
~Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
On my way home from work in New York, I decided to get off the highway and go through the back roads for some late afternoon photos. As I was driving by the Hemlock Reservoir in Easton this scene caught my eye. I love the transition from flowing water to ice along the shoreline.
The last few times I shot here just off the road someone called the Easton Police on me as a suspicious person. Well it happened again. I was two feet off the road and standing on the water companies property and some nosey person called the Easton Police on me for trespassing. What I did was stand on the other side of the guard rail so I wouldn't get hit by the speeding passing cars. So I was lectured and given the boot. I was ready to show the two Officers my badge, but decided not to and just laughed at them. I watched them drive away and then parked their car in a distance hiding behind some trees to see if I was going to drive away. I couldn't resist calling a few of my fellow Officers of what happened for a good laugh.
View in lightbox
Greetings all! We're back with another tidbit to help your riding improve. Transitions between gaits can be tricky. The timing alone can be a lot to think about. Consider, no matter what gait or style you are switching between, the transition should occur between the shoulder and girth of the horse. See the picture above as a reference. Green is a perfect spot for a transition, blue is satisfactory, red is too late or too early.
Find a friend, and make a game of it. Practice switching between a walk and a trot, and see how close you can get. As always if you have questions or need help, please reach out!
...early on a rain-washed morning. I liked the clear view into the lobby (see, still Terra Cotta color.) Occurs to me now that I should eventually get a nice daytime view so it doesn't look like a dark ending to the transition story... but today's weather is unlikely to produce a "nice daytime view" :-)
Sticking with the iPhone since I took the others in this series with the iPhone.