View allAll Photos Tagged alien
Got a bit wet on exit as the water level gained 6 inches in the short time we were under here.
full set here...
What is this? The surface of a newly discovered alien world? If we encountered extra-terrestrial life, would we even recognise it? SETI? 👽
Alien Beauty.
Jellyfish may be venomous, but they are have strange beauty
2014_10_23_EOS 7D_6098-Edit v1
A cool looking moth type insect I found in the garden ages ago, mmmmm where is the skin moisturiser ?
at least they worship green! maybe an invasion is in order!
on MY screen this is green! i knew it was off! not yellow. no! green. lol!
Slightly out of focus because this little guy was just going crazy and wouldn't stay still.
(110/365)
The volcanic landscape of this unnamed habitable planet is dominated by up to 3 meters high plants, called Tajinaste Rojo by the local humanoid species.
Dust from the planets biggest sand desert accumulates in the lower atmosphere and and blocks the view of the stars near the horizon.
Higher in the sky, the galactic band of the planets home galaxy becomes visible. Molecular clouds are partially blocking the view of the dense star fields near the center of this SBc barred spiral galaxy.
The familiar looking dark clouds prove that this alien world shares the same galactic neighborhood in the outskirts of one of the galaxies spiral arms with our home planet Earth.
EXIF
Canon EOS 6D
Canon EF 24-70mm f/2.8 L ll
iOptron SkyTracker Pro
Sky:
Stack of 6x 90s @ ISO1600
Foreground:
Focus stack of 6x 1s @ ISO100 during early blue hour.
One of the spikes above the entrance to the Grand Lisboa Casino in Macau - with a little bit of postprocessing ;-)
Originally uploaded on May 21, 2007
© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.
This prairie in the Everglades National Park show startling foliage that contrasts with the barren environment giving it an other worldly feel.
It's been four years since I've tried one of these, but I had promised myself I would try them again because they are fun and you get all sorts of intriguing results.
This time I tried with a different camera for the Macro Mondays theme of Motion Blur this week. This is the sort of theme I tend to enjoy, though looking at some of the others that have already been posted today I don't think I have achieved their finesse and imagination!
My thanks to Kerry for pointing the theme out to me. I've been so busy lately that I would have probably missed it. Even so this attempt was a bit rushed and ad-hoc.
The approach is straightforward: place a little camera in the centre of a record deck pointing up in a darkened room, set it to the speed for singles (45rpm if you are too young!) and dangle something glittery above it.
You may have spotted the problem with this: how do you press the shutter button? Well that's not the only problem. Taking the image in the middle of a sunny day was a problem even with the curtains shut. Not having three arms was also a problem to hold a torch, trigger the shutter and hold the dingly dangly (cocktail sticks with tinsel tassels in this case) above the spinning camera, as was getting the image down to less than three inches...
Technology solved the first problem: just use the camera's remote control software on a tablet. It worked!! Yey.
My wife said I wasn't allowed to grow a third arm as none of my shirts would then fit :(
And the three inches was solved with cropping...
This is for MM but also fits my 100x motion project :)
Thank you for taking the time to look. I hope you enjoy the image - it's looking deep into your mind (though I'm OK because there is certifiably nothing left of mine). Happy Macro Mondays and 100x :)
Ok there is a problem with this image that you might spot if you are the sort who uses your alien intellect. At 45rpm with a one-second exposure, you might expect the scene to rotate by three-quarters of a turn. but it looks more like five-eighths (check out the green line).
No.... I have no idea either (though the turntable may need adjusting... or my arithmetic...).
Just below the summit of Legges Tor, which rises above the central plateau of Ben Lomond, we come across some interesting equipment. The ski lift is obvious enough, but my title reflects a little confusion as to the origins of the solar panel on the right.
My first thought was a weather station, but that seems unlikely since we lack the means of measuring rainfall and wind speed (there's no anemometer). Is it an alien probe? My guess is that it in fact measures seismic activity and relays this information electronically.
Interestingly enough, this is the only place on the entire mountain that has mobile phone reception. So one would think that our phones can tap into whatever signal is being emitted from this "probe". Any suggestions warmly welcomed.
During one of my photographing trips in the near desert, I saw a UFO or an unidentified flying object. I followed it and came across an alien from outer space.
The alien actually looked like an octopus. However, I immediately knew that it is not an octopus. How did I know that, you say?
I have just told you that I was in a desert. Have you ever seen an octopus living out of the water, silly?
People around the world started asking scientists questions about UFOs. Scientists who did not want to reveal such important secrets made an agency called NASA which stands for "Never Ask Scientists Anything."
Any way, I do believe that there are aliens living on other planet away from us. I do. I mean I do believe in aliens not that I do live on another planet. Although, to say the truth, I sometimes think that I did come form outer space.
Do you believe in aliens from outer space? Or do you really think that God created the whole very wide universe just for us?
How arrogant are humans!
Here are ten signs that aliens do exist:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=f6UvXFw1u9s
UFOS caught on tape
Eerie green overhead lighting inside the underground tunnel connecting the 3 platforms at the Keswick Railway Terminal. This light was special as the service pipes ran across the tunnel directly beneath it. I had to lie flat on the ground to shoot this one.
This, to me, is the most aesthetically pleasing of the hoodoos in the Valley of Dreams. I think the area was first photographed and made popular by the Germans.
Explore #5 27/03/20
A vivid imagination may be required here to appreciate the title....
I love taking really intimate landscape images showing details just as much as the bigger vista images, when the chance presents itself as it did here, the overall scene was great but the tiny details would get lost in the bigger picture so I set about getting right in amongst the freezing scene to see what could be picked out...
This was the result, with the water still flowing between the 2 sets of jaws of the 'ice beasts' either side of the river...
People ask me a lot about aperture choice in shots, this isn't focus stacked, I just upped it to f/14 to compensate for the small loss of DOF at 70mm length, I could probably have gotten away with f/11 but seeing as it was snowing like buggery and freezing cold I wanted it in the bag, and not get home to find a soft image, as the entire image was taken with detail in mind.
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Lots more images from this shoot, and others, on my website here - updating regularly
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62. Alien Predators - Poland - 8/04/2017...
Sony SLT A55V + Tamron 90.0 mm...
Cat: Close-up ...
© 2016 Zbigniew Walkiewicz...
“Sometimes I arrive just when God's ready to have somone click the shutter.” - Ansel Adams...
137
"Macro Mondays" "Queen"
(Figurine of Alien Queen /face is half a credit card)
The "Alien" (also referred to as "Xenomorph XX121") is a fictional endoparasitoid extraterrestrial species that is the eponymous antagonist of the Alien film series. The queen was designed by Cameron in collaboration with special effects artist Stan Winston, based upon an initial painting Cameron had done at the start of the project. In the years since the release of Alien, the Alien has become one of the world's most recognized movie monsters and a pop-cultural icon. In 2003, the Alien was voted as the 14th most memorable screen villain by the American Film Institute.
The alien bug horde breaks through the factory interior and attacks the Space Marines defenses spread through the upper levels.
A disk-shaped flying craft supposedly piloted by aliens; a UFO.
Uma nave voadora em forma de disco supostamente pilotada por alienígenas; Um OVNI.
"Science Fiction Series"
Arte Digital - Digital Art
Image-editing
Effects - Texture - Collage
Double Exposure
Software: Pixlr; Windows, PicsArt Photo Studio, Snapseed
In another Galaxy
Em outra Galáxia