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ezimba is a web site that can apply different imaging effects.
I used one picture for all the effects just for consistency for comparison. The title for each photo consists of the category of the effect and the name of the effect. Some effects would be better used on a different image. There are some effects also that appear to do the same thing in different effect categories.
Ezimba also has a Facebook app, Google Android app, and a free iPhone app. Please note that the free iPhone app puts a small logo on the edited image. You can buy the paid ezimba app and not have the logo.
A favourite of mine, just one of many fascinating exhibits in the Fitzwilliam Museum
Details here....
ezimba is a web site that can apply different imaging effects.
I used one picture for all the effects just for consistency for comparison. The title for each photo consists of the category of the effect and the name of the effect. Some effects would be better used on a different image. There are some effects also that appear to do the same thing in different effect categories.
Ezimba also has a Facebook app, Google Android app, and a free iPhone app. Please note that the free iPhone app puts a small logo on the edited image. You can buy the paid ezimba app and not have the logo.
ezimba is a web site that can apply different imaging effects.
I used one picture for all the effects just for consistency for comparison. The title for each photo consists of the category of the effect and the name of the effect. Some effects would be better used on a different image. There are some effects also that appear to do the same thing in different effect categories.
Ezimba also has a Facebook app, Google Android app, and a free iPhone app. Please note that the free iPhone app puts a small logo on the edited image. You can buy the paid ezimba app and not have the logo.
ezimba is a web site that can apply different imaging effects.
I used one picture for all the effects just for consistency for comparison. The title for each photo consists of the category of the effect and the name of the effect. Some effects would be better used on a different image. There are some effects also that appear to do the same thing in different effect categories.
Ezimba also has a Facebook app, Google Android app, and a free iPhone app. Please note that the free iPhone app puts a small logo on the edited image. You can buy the paid ezimba app and not have the logo.
ezimba is a web site that can apply different imaging effects.
I used one picture for all the effects just for consistency for comparison. The title for each photo consists of the category of the effect and the name of the effect. Some effects would be better used on a different image. There are some effects also that appear to do the same thing in different effect categories.
Ezimba also has a Facebook app, Google Android app, and a free iPhone app. Please note that the free iPhone app puts a small logo on the edited image. You can buy the paid ezimba app and not have the logo.
ezimba is a web site that can apply different imaging effects.
I used one picture for all the effects just for consistency for comparison. The title for each photo consists of the category of the effect and the name of the effect. Some effects would be better used on a different image. There are some effects also that appear to do the same thing in different effect categories.
Ezimba also has a Facebook app, Google Android app, and a free iPhone app. Please note that the free iPhone app puts a small logo on the edited image. You can buy the paid ezimba app and not have the logo.
ezimba is a web site that can apply different imaging effects.
I used one picture for all the effects just for consistency for comparison. The title for each photo consists of the category of the effect and the name of the effect. Some effects would be better used on a different image. There are some effects also that appear to do the same thing in different effect categories.
Ezimba also has a Facebook app, Google Android app, and a free iPhone app. Please note that the free iPhone app puts a small logo on the edited image. You can buy the paid ezimba app and not have the logo.
ezimba is a web site that can apply different imaging effects.
I used one picture for all the effects just for consistency for comparison. The title for each photo consists of the category of the effect and the name of the effect. Some effects would be better used on a different image. There are some effects also that appear to do the same thing in different effect categories.
Ezimba also has a Facebook app, Google Android app, and a free iPhone app. Please note that the free iPhone app puts a small logo on the edited image. You can buy the paid ezimba app and not have the logo.
Le idee. Prima di tutto. Più vicini ai nostri Clienti, più aperti e collaborativi, grazie a Seguici, la piattaforma dedicata a tutti i progetti in lavorazione. Sempre, dovunque, Insight è Studio Creativo Aperto.
Fatti un giro: www.insightstudio.it/seguici/tour.php
Guarda come funziona: www.insightstudio.it/seguici/video.php
Ideas. First of all. Closer to our Customers, more friendly, more collaborative, thanks to Seguici, the web platform containing each project we do. Ever, everywhere, Insight is "Open Creative Studio".
Watch the Video: www.insightstudio.it/seguici/video.php
Take a Tour: www.insightstudio.it/seguici/tour.php
el negro lo saque de la página topshop es el mismo fue un regalo de cumple tiene el ticket de cambio y todo :) en la pág. tiene un valor de $92.00 dolares ($45.000 pesos apróx.) no sé cuanto costo aquí pq repito fue un regalo jiji!
cuanto me ofrecen? :) es precioso pero me queda un poquitin apretado en las caderas y eso.. mañana subo fotos reales :D
us.topshop.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?b...
ezimba is a web site that can apply different imaging effects.
I used one picture for all the effects just for consistency for comparison. The title for each photo consists of the category of the effect and the name of the effect. Some effects would be better used on a different image. There are some effects also that appear to do the same thing in different effect categories.
Ezimba also has a Facebook app, Google Android app, and a free iPhone app. Please note that the free iPhone app puts a small logo on the edited image. You can buy the paid ezimba app and not have the logo.
1965 Cub Cadet lawn tractor. I restored this tractor and built the loader for it using Northern Tool hydraulic components.
ezimba is a web site that can apply different imaging effects.
I used one picture for all the effects just for consistency for comparison. The title for each photo consists of the category of the effect and the name of the effect. Some effects would be better used on a different image. There are some effects also that appear to do the same thing in different effect categories.
Ezimba also has a Facebook app, Google Android app, and a free iPhone app. Please note that the free iPhone app puts a small logo on the edited image. You can buy the paid ezimba app and not have the logo.
Blackboard is a form of a course management system that professors and universities use to keep all course work and information organized.
Museum of Modern Art, NY
www.momastore.org/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDispla...
Bio Design: Nature + Science + Creativity
For centuries, artists and designers have looked to nature for inspiration and for materials, but only recently have they become able to incorporate living organisms or tissues into their work. This startling development at the intersection of biology and design has created new aesthetic possibilities and helped address a growing urgency to build and manufacture ecologically. Bio Design: Nature + Science + Creativity, by William Myers, a New York-based design writer and design history teacher, surveys recent design and art projects that harness living materials and processes, presenting bio-integrated approaches to sustainability, new innovations enabled by biotechnology, and provocative experiments that deliberately illustrate the dangers and opportunities in manipulating life for human ends. The first publication to focus on this new phenomenon and closely examine how it fits into the history of architecture, art, and industrial design, this volume contextualizes the shift toward bio design through comparisons to previous transitions in art and design practice, clarifying its implications for the future.
Inside the Electron Analog Four 4 voice analog synthesizer. More processors.
MR4A16BMA35 is Everspin 16MV MRAM www.everspin.com/product.php?pn=MR4A16BMA35&hjk=16&am...
The big processor in the middle is a Freescale Coldfire 32 bit MCU.
www.freescale.com/webapp/sps/site/prod_summary.jsp?code=M...
The circlet of 9 gold shells forms a girdle, which has 8 intervals into which beads, now missing, would naturally fit. The girdle could have been worn by a small woman. It was slipped over the head and arms to rest on the widest part of her hips and to cross the lowest part of her abdomen. It might also have been worn by a dancer to make musical sounds while she danced. Such girdles were commonly depicted on the little dolls of wood or faience often found in the Middle Kingdom tombs. www.egyptmemory.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisp...
ezimba is a web site that can apply different imaging effects.
I used one picture for all the effects just for consistency for comparison. The title for each photo consists of the category of the effect and the name of the effect. Some effects would be better used on a different image. There are some effects also that appear to do the same thing in different effect categories.
Ezimba also has a Facebook app, Google Android app, and a free iPhone app. Please note that the free iPhone app puts a small logo on the edited image. You can buy the paid ezimba app and not have the logo.
32" Sony FD Trinitron WEGA flat screen television. Three years old and in perfect condition. Originally paid around $800 for the TV and $300 for the stand.
Asking $600 for both.
I love this moving link to my Etsy shop at Fossil USA!
(click on Etsy first)
www.fossil.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ContentView?lang...
ezimba is a web site that can apply different imaging effects.
I used one picture for all the effects just for consistency for comparison. The title for each photo consists of the category of the effect and the name of the effect. Some effects would be better used on a different image. There are some effects also that appear to do the same thing in different effect categories.
Ezimba also has a Facebook app, Google Android app, and a free iPhone app. Please note that the free iPhone app puts a small logo on the edited image. You can buy the paid ezimba app and not have the logo.
My brother-in-law installed the marble tile backsplash. We used about 25 sq. ft. of tile, so even with the supplies this transformation only cost just over $300--thanks to free labor of course!
Replacing the range hood with a microwave hood was one of the first things we did in the kitchen. We then moved one of the big cabinets we took down on the other side of the kitchen to where the old microwave was and it's made a huge difference. Here's what the kitchen looked like before.
Countertops - IKEA Pronomen
Flooring - Trafficmaster Allure in Teak
Backsplash - 3x6 Grecian white marble from Home Depot
Wall color - Benjamin Moore Aura in Ice Cubed Silver
Cabinet and shelf color - Olympic in Sentimental
Appliances - Whirlpool
ezimba is a web site that can apply different imaging effects.
I used one picture for all the effects just for consistency for comparison. The title for each photo consists of the category of the effect and the name of the effect. Some effects would be better used on a different image. There are some effects also that appear to do the same thing in different effect categories.
Ezimba also has a Facebook app, Google Android app, and a free iPhone app. Please note that the free iPhone app puts a small logo on the edited image. You can buy the paid ezimba app and not have the logo.
ezimba is a web site that can apply different imaging effects.
I used one picture for all the effects just for consistency for comparison. The title for each photo consists of the category of the effect and the name of the effect. Some effects would be better used on a different image. There are some effects also that appear to do the same thing in different effect categories.
Ezimba also has a Facebook app, Google Android app, and a free iPhone app. Please note that the free iPhone app puts a small logo on the edited image. You can buy the paid ezimba app and not have the logo.
ezimba is a web site that can apply different imaging effects.
I used one picture for all the effects just for consistency for comparison. The title for each photo consists of the category of the effect and the name of the effect. Some effects would be better used on a different image. There are some effects also that appear to do the same thing in different effect categories.
Ezimba also has a Facebook app, Google Android app, and a free iPhone app. Please note that the free iPhone app puts a small logo on the edited image. You can buy the paid ezimba app and not have the logo.
www.messersmith.name/wordpress/2012/04/16/holy-macro/
Our encore performance of Wedding Day is now securely in the past, most of the major time consuming tasks to create a whole new life are accomplished and my new work assignments are finally beginning to trickle in. I have about a month to get myself oriented with my co-workers and begin the climb up a couple of steep learning curves before another trip to Dallas and then St. Louis, which will take us to the end of July. So, I decided to take a few hours of "personal time" to exercise some of the many capabilities of the new Canon EF 100mm ƒ2.8 L IS USM 1-to-1 Macro Lens. Aside from being a mouthful to describe, I have to say that it is more fun to fool with than any other lens I've ever owned (quite a box full over about fifty-five years of photography).
When I decided that my new work required a radical upgrade of my equipment, I settled on a Canon 5D Mk II camera body, mainly because it seemed the most bang for the buck and its HD video capabilities are so good that many independent film makers are using it as a prime capture tool for raw footage. For lenses, I compromised and bought two Canon zooms, a 17-40 and a 70-300. These choices created an awkward "hole" in the focal length range right at the "normal" focal length of 50mm, but I reckoned that I could live with that.
However, this left me without a decent macro capability. Neither of the new Canon lenses were significantly better than the macro capability of my Canon G-series cameras, the latest of which is the marvelous G-12 which I gave to my bride as a pre-wedding gift. Gracie now has no excuse for not taking great pictures. I have always been captivated by the creative wonders of macro photography, but I've never had a purpose-built lens with which to fully explore the tiny landscape.
Enter the Canon 1-1 macro. This was my first serious image with the new lens on the night before our April Fool's Day Wedding, a Hydrangea purchased at Safeway to decorate the church for our do-it-yourself ceremony. If you click to enlarge you'll see that the image speaks for itself:
I'm now using it as a desktop background on my Toshiba Tecra. It feels strange to say that I take little credit for this picture. It's 90% equipment. I pretty much just pointed the camera and clicked. I'm used to fiddling incessantly in Photoshop to coerce an image file to comply with my imagination. Using the right gear makes most of that unnecessary.
Another thing which impressed me immediately is the amazing increase in working distance one gets with the 100mm 1 to 1 macro. I'm used to sticking the lens right up in the bug's face to get an image on the sensor large enough to work with. Even with that, I usually had to crop and enlarge, meaning that I was losing detail on every shot. Careful sharpening can bring back some "apparent" detail, but it's really faking it. I snapped this shot of the funny little black bee at nearly two feet and it suffered only minor cropping for the sake of composition:
The amount of adjustment required to get used to shooting from much farther away is disconcerting. I was sitting on a rock down at Beaver Creek with Gracie when this lizard crawled up into the greyish light about three feet away. I had only to lean forward a little to grab him with the heavy Canon.
In fact, it's very easy to get too close at first and have trouble finding your subject. It sometimes seems like trying to find a star in a telescope. I feel like I need a "finder" scope.
Another thing which I am really loving is the range of creative effects that you can squeeze from the enormous variety of tricks one can conjure up from the very broad selection of apertures ranging from ƒ2.8 to ƒ32. I'm sad that this might be getting a little too geeky for some readers, but there's really no way to talk about it without the technical terms. If some of it seems befuddling, have a look at my post on The Exposure Triangle. In this shot of pretty orange flowers which are blanketing the high desert now, I wanted a slightly blurred background to showcase the detail of the blooming plant while maintaining full sharpness for the subject:
This was dead easy. I just set the 5D to show me the live image on the screen, put the body in the Aperture Priority mode and twiddled the aperture control wheel until I could see that the entire plant was in focus while the background was blurred just the way I wanted it. I never had it so easy. I could achieve a similar effect with Photoshop from a fully focused image, but it would take a lot to time.
Just a little more twiddling of the aperture control produced a very arty shot right out of the camera:
Here I opened up the aperture to 2.8 to reduce the depth of field dramatically, creating a bare suggestion of the plant itself, tightly focused points of interest and a cool, furry canvas of contrasting colors. Really, the lens is doing all the work for me. I'm gobsmacked!
This shot proclaims, in a tiny little voice , that spring has arrived:
This image shouts, "Spring has arrived!" by zooming the focus of attention onto the crisp young leaves:
Again, the effect was created by a few clicks of a little black wheel about the size of your fingernail
This shot was spoiled only by the unfortunate position of the sun. Had our shiny giver of light and warmth been over my shoulder, as any photographer knows it should be, the dark pinnacle would have been magnificently red, contrasting nicely with the blank blue sky. However, I would have lost the dramatic back-lighting which makes they fuzzy flowers glow so brightly. The big Canon macro lens comes with a hood about the size of a beer can, so flare and dimming of contrast from internal reflections are very unlikely. You can turn it around when you don't need it, shortening the lens by about four inches.
Which brings to mind matters of weight and size. Unobtrusive, this rig is NOT. Here are some bananas for comparison:
By the time you get the lens on and a twin battery grip you have maybe eight pound of gear to lug around, not to mention another fifteen in a back pack with spare lenses, and two flashy things.
Still, the exercise is good for me and my Geek Index has risen astronomically. And, I can take cool , super sharp closeups such as this:
Bugs . . . where are my bugs? I hope things liven up around here.
If I'm in an arty mood, I can back off another few feet and do this: