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Another shot from the potato fields earlier in the year with the deep furrows!
Muckleton - Shropshire (April 21)
Gàrgola de la Llotja de la Seda de València (S.XV), edifici declarat patrimoni de la humanitat per la UNESCO. (Gargoyle in te corner of the "Llotja", in Valencia. This amazing building was declared World Heritage by UNESCO).
Project 2020/366 - Day 064: R Street Colors
Spring is getting much closer, as evidenced by these colors seen close to the intersection of R Street and New Hampshire Avenue in the Dupont Circle neighborhood of the District.
[CC5354]
My husband has some really cool hidden treasures in the cupboard - Fujica ST605 with Pentacon macro bellows
Processed using RawTherapee, HaldCLUT Film Simulation - Black and White - Polaroid 672
It should be an easy week in flickr Lounge this week, and yet here I am, almost at the end of Monday again. So here is one of the shots I took last week. I hope to make a better attempt at a new shot for Tuesday.
There's a minor pond in a little town in Frederick County, Maryland that gave me a huge but simple scene to photograph
while back in the eastern US for the holidays.
Angles Pond was the name I gave this little water feature on the edge of a charming town called Burkittsville, in Maryland. There are a lot of angles in this particular capture, and I chose to name the pond after the photo's character, primarily so I'll remember it
far into the future.
I have a great many photographs of ponds, each one with a different name and, as such, a different and unique identification.
Angles Pond is now added to that list. So far this mnemonic device is working pretty well.
I was in Pisa two weeks ago, it was the first time for me to visit the city and the tower Pisa. It was quite an exciting moment to see the amazing angle of the tower, however , those people who stood on the posts made me more excited.
Mon site : www.nicolasrottiers.com
Mon profil Instagram : www.instagram.com/nicolasrottiers/
Ma page Facebook : www.facebook.com/nrphotographie/
shot with a fujifilm x-s10 and a canon ef-s 10-18mm super wide angle zoom lens, on a fringer ef-fx pro ii adapter
Another shot from Glasgow, Scotland. I was truly surprised how often it rains in Scotland. But on the other hand, in 10 mins, the weather can be completely different. After long days of work, I had some time to see the local architecture. Besides beautiful classical buildings, there were modern architecture as well.
This viewpoint has been taken many times by different photographers and as I was in the vicinity I thought I'd better get it ticked off my bucket list.
When I arrived here before sunrise, I saw lots of tiny lights on the water.
They were standing in the water through the night, just for a glorious moment.
In the autumn, huge schools of Ayu(鮎) rush to streams of western shore in lake Biwa,
so their predators gathered here, and anglers gathered here too hunt for a big one...yes, never stop dreaming.
Several petroglyph sites in northeastern Utah feature large human figures with an object dangling from one hand. The objects have various shapes, and many researchers have speculated that they coulld be trophy heads. This warrior has a shield in one hand and perhaps a victim in the other. I chose a low angle to emphasize the threatening spirit I felt when I saw this rock art. It is located at McKee Springs in Dinosaur National Monument. The photo was taken on slide film in 2001 and scanned as part of my project to archive my old images.
Detail of Centenary Building, City University, Islington.
Designed by architects Sheppard Robson & Partners in a brutalist style, the Centenary Building was opened in 1969 (originally as the High Voltage Engineering Laboratory; it was converted into lecture theatres in 1993-4).
Behind the metal frame and glass panels, stairs and an escalator lead up to an enclosed walkway (overpass) over Macleod Trail, one of Calgary's busiest roads, and on to Chinook Centre shopping mall.
Note how the curved design of the red benches contrasts with the straight lines and angles of the structure behind them.
Regarding architecture, it is often said that "form follows function." While true in many cases, this ignores the fact that architects can also use frivolous architectural forms to show off, to indulge their egotism and vanity, and to attract attention to themselves for the purpose of obtaining future commissions. Viewers should ask themselves, "What is the purpose, the function, of the diagonal linear forms and triangular shapes on the outside of the structure [in the photo above]?" Mere decoration? Artistry that enhances the urban environment?
Copyright J.R. Devaney
Here is an example for the first weeks lesson assignment. This is a wide angle landscape image from Great Falls National Park in Virginia.
I shot this with a D300 (aps crop sensor) and used a 12-24mm wide angle lens. Notice the sweeping perspective created by using this lens at its widest setting.
In order for these wide angle landscape to work well, you need to get in close to your foreground. For this image I choose the rock as a great foreground and positioned the lens within 2 feet of it. This creates what is known as a near/far composition. This image works well also because of the dramatic clouds at sunset. If the sky would have been clear, this image would not be nearly as strong and I would have need to consider shooting a completely different composition with much less sky in the shot.
Technical details:
Nikon D300
Nikon 12-24mm f4
Singh Ray 3 stop ND grad hard edge
raw capture at ISO 100
2 seconds at f16
Add your comments and questions below!
4th February 2016
Issy-les-Moulineaux
Camera: Yashica FX3 - 1987 - 50mm
Film: expired Fujicolor 24
Stand dev C41
Walking and noticing
Suburban angles,
Quotidien things.
St. Augustine Beach (Crescent Beach), Florida, USA.
1 September 2024.
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▶ Photo by: YFGF.
▶ For a larger image, type 'L' (without the quotation marks).
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▶ Camera: Olympus OM-D E-M10 II.
— Lens: Olympus M.40-150mm F4.0-5.6 R
— Edit: Photoshop Elements 15, Nik Collection (2016).
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