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Two Sisters Antiques is located in downtown Sandwich,IL. The old brick home is historically significant as one of the earliest permanent structures in the town, built in the 1850's as a meeting house for the fledgling towns early leaders. It has been added on to several times, but still shows a lot of great early details inside...
Have a awesome bench Monday all!
Two snowdrops growing through the undergrowth in February 2017. The background is a mixture of last years fallen leaves and a distant tree trunk, all diffused by using f3.2 on a macro lens.
Was inspired by an article in The Onion: www.theonion.com/article/coworker-with-two-computer-scree...
Taken last year when everything froze... We're not quite at that stage this year... Just yet haha. It's all down hill from here...
This is Two Jack Lake in Banff National Park.
shot with a fujifilm x-s10 and a canon ef 180mm f3.5 l usm macro lens, on a fringer ef-fx pro ii adapter
Looking around this scene for compositions I can across a row of rocks that I thought would look good as a foreground element leading the eye to the two lovely water falls in the background. Setting my camera as low to the floor as possible.
The two distinct bright stars the (roughly!) point to the Southern Cross (Crux), in the band of the Milky Way. Shot from Hawker, South Australia over 3 nights, Nikon D810A, Sigma Art 135mm at f/2, ISO200, 180 second subs, mounted to a ZWO AM5 EQ mount, controlled by a ZWO ASIAIR Mini. Processing in APP, Photoshop
Susie (left), Shay (right)
Tolerance in coexistence in the same space and time.
Makes me happy to see them master that!
John Lennon - Imagine
GROUP: MACRO MONDAYS
THEME: TWO
SUBJECT: TWO FROM A CLUSTER OF MANY
I don't know what this plant is called but the flowers are in clusters and these two are part of a cluster. These flowers are very tiny, no bigger than 3/8" so even with the empty spaces, this is no more than 3/4" horizontally. I believe this is probably the closest I have photographed a subject for Macro Mondays.
Maybe photo stacking would have helped me with this but though I know the logic behind the process, I have never tried it before.
Happy New Week, Everyone!
Two Windows. © Copyright 2022 G Dan Mitchell.
Two windows and metallic walls at the Contemporary Jewish Museum, San Francisco.
On my photographic walks in San Francisco — part of a familiar routine that begins with a train ride to The City — it isn’t unusual to pass through the area around Moscone Center and SFMOMA. Just a bit north of here I often follow a route that takes me on sidewalks that don’t border the streets, and I end up passing the fascinating architecture of the Contemporary Jewish Museum, with its angled, metal exterior walls.
As appealing as this structure is, I’ve often found it difficult to photograph. The area around it is somewhat constrained by the proximity of other buildings, and those buildings are visually quite dissonant with the design of this one. So, at least for me, photographs of the larger scale of the building are difficult, and I still don’t have one that I really like. However, moving in closer and working the textures, reflected colors, and the angles and surfaces close up is more promising.
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, Amazon, and directly from G Dan Mitchell.
Shotenkyo station / KYOTO TANGO RAILWAY
Urake, Kumihama town, Kyotango city, Kyoto pref.
京都丹後鉄道 / 小天橋駅
京都府京丹後市久美浜町浦明
We found this fascinating.... a stained glass window fixed with a hinge to the side of this window in the gallery at Lanhydrock, so that it can be folded in or out. Couldn't find any information about it...
HWW!
I've always loved sparrows. They've always have been a sign of peace to me when it comes to the death of a loved one. I've known people to feel this way as well about sparrows and like them for the same reason. My favorite bass guitarist (Steffan Lessard) just got a tattoo of two sparrows on his arm. I love that and it's a wonderful tattoo.
These two similar First Generation (C1) Corvettes were parked side by side at a local Cars & Coffee event. The one on the left is either a 1959 or 1960 model and the one on the right is a 1962, the final year for the C1 series Corvettes.
I like that the 1962 model here has the style of white sidewall tires in which the white portion does not touch the wheel rim. The wide whitewall tires were pretty much universally discontinued on model year 1962 cars and newer.