View allAll Photos Tagged Triptych
Overlook Neighborhood, Portland Oregon.
In-camera triptych. Scanned negative.
Olympus PEN EES-2 (half frame camera), Fujicolor Superia 200, expired 2/2007.
I recently posted a photo of this rusty wreck of a building and it was not particularly popular. Allison suggested cropping the windows and creatng a triptych. I thought the idea was worth a try. It does isolate three very different interior views.
Forest Park, Portland Oregon.
In-camera triptych. Scanned negative.
Olympus PEN EES-2 (half frame camera), Fujicolor Superia 200, expired 2/2007.
See adjacent shots - not my original idea, and not a rip-off of Monet's Rouen cathedral series... It has simply been always interesting to try different views of the same place...
I created this triptych of a viewpoint from the clifftop in Eastbourne where there is a prominent rock formation known as the Sugarloaf (see the third image)
The sky was amazing, giving a wonderful light to the scene showing the top of the cliff and the pathway leading down to the beach (at low tide)
Triptych of Common Redpolls that have chosen our yard this winter. Home, Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada. 7 February 2022.
Hardwick Hall in Derbyshire is an architecturally significant country house from the Elizabethan era, a leading example of the Elizabethan prodigy house. Built between 1590 and 1597 for Bess of Hardwick, it was designed by the architect Robert Smythson, an exponent of the Renaissance style. Hardwick Hall is one of the earliest examples of the English interpretation of this style, which came into fashion having slowly spread from Florence. Its arrival in Britain coincided with the period when it was no longer necessary or legal to fortify a domestic dwelling.
After ownership for centuries by the Cavendish family and the line of the Earl of Devonshire and the Duke of Devonshire, ownership of the house was transferred to the Treasury in 1956 and then to the National Trust in 1959. The building was approaching ruin and required stabilisation and restoration
First light, last leaf, and waiting for the next coffee...
Smile, Monday is coming :)
18 11 2012.....thanks!
Flickr Lounge ~ Tell a Story (Diptych or Triptych)
Thank you to everyone who pauses long enough to look at my photo. Any comments or Faves are very much appreciated.
Messing about in my shed today ...
... with 1 x Backdrop / 1 x Shelf / and 1 x Telephone ... Oh, and some dodgy, unstable setting up ! 😂👍
Am trying to make a triptych with no skills and no app…. This is a screen shot of 3 pictures of her not being where she should. Let’s see if this worked. And if it’s acceptable
First: You mean I’m not supposed to be here?
Second: REALLY?
Third: Ok I’ll leave
(Very low tech - lined the three pictures up and took a screenshot.!)
A wonderfully colourful collection of moths all found in my porch on the same morning
l to r
SMALL MAGPIE MOTH
The Small Magpie is common, easily disturbed by day and often attracted to light. The caterpillar feeds from a rolled or spun leaf in August and September before spending the winter in a tough silk cocoon in a hollow stem or under the bark.
GARDEN TIGER MOTH
The Garden Tiger is on the wing towards the end of the summer, during July and August. It is a night-flying moth of scrub-covered sand dunes, woodland edges, wet meadows, parks and gardens. The striking caterpillars are large, black and covered in long, dense, black and ginger hairs and they are commonly called 'Woolly Bears'. They feed on stinging nettles, dock leaves and many garden plants.
CANARY SHOULDERED THORN MOTH
Aptly named after the canary-yellow thorax, or 'shoulders', this is a fairly common species all over Britain.
It has a single generation which flies from July to October, and is regularly attracted to artificial light.
It frequents woodland, gardens and a range of other habitats, and the larvae feed on a variety of deciduous trees.
This is left over from a Macro Monday project (I forget which one). As it so often happens, we do several takes on a subject and have to chose one.
But with some of them it's a shame to bury them without ever seeing the light of day. Anyway, I thought the feather would be good for a triptych.
Happy Easter everyone!