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I was very surprised to see this bird in my birdbath this morning. I had never seen one like it before. Thanks to Cornell's Merlin Bird ID app, I learned it is a European Starling, which is considered invasive in California.
facebook.com/michelle.anne.robinson
Snapseed, Stackables App, Superimpose
Love this Prisma App, I could spend way to much time trying out old photos and making new art. Prisma app is free
Happy Slider Sunday !
Dec. 9, 2023: Two tractors parked under a tree in Ballard, California. Intentional Camera Movement image using four second exposure with Bluristic app on iPhone. #flickrfriday #offroad
I think… One part is like a boat on a sea and somebody is trying to push it over, on this weird little account of drawing w/o any importance, it was s'pose to BE a flag, but now like the boat is going back and the water is taking over
Post-processed in Apple's Photos App, followed by further processing in the Affinity Photo App.
The processing was done on my Apple Macbook Pro 15 inch, 2016 computer using a mirrored 45 inch Roku TV screen for my old eyes...;).
Tags:
"Affinity Photo App" "Canon Powershot SX70 HS" "Apple's Photos App" Moon "Waxing Gibbous" "January 4, 2020" "Saturday Night 8:41 PM" "Cloudless Night Sky"
Excerpt from brucecounty.maps.arcgis.com/apps/Shortlist/index.html?app...:
689 Princes Street: This home was built in approximately 1875 by Abraham Joseph Evans (1839-1912) who was an architect and builder from Swansea, South Wales, who came to Bruce County in 1861. It is one of the most authentic, well-kept examples of the Second Empire style of architecture in the Municipality of Kincardine. The ornate exterior features decorated gables in the roof, a belvedere, bay window and front portico as well as rows of dentils which highlight all three stories, and the ornate iron cresting work on the top of the tower.
Designation By-law 2015-102 on December 7, 1978
Apps used: Apple on-board camera, Decim8, Snapseed, Glaze, Over, Superimpose
This piece is from a set of recent geometric abstract images. Giving credit where it is due, I was greatly influenced by the remarkably rhythmic black and white Rotring work of Carrie Meijer.
I set out from a blank white panel to create a deliberately noisy piece, full of urban busyness and movement that reflects the anonymous character of public space. I echoed the formalistic complexity in Carrie’s work with my own structural layering and color methods.
My upper grid is built from multiple layers of letters and characters from the “Pixel” block font found in the Over app. Through a series of masking steps I trimmed and shaped the letters into a kind of skeletal scatter pattern, then selectively applied a number of thin irregular white line masks over the composition. The randomly placed color blocks added a sense of organic humanity interacting with the space.
The lower grid is made from a photo of my house apped through Decim8, and a black block with random bits of color run through Glaze. Both grids were then combined in Superimpose.
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Image made using Sony Smooth Reflection App. 16 images merged in camera. Two textures used my own cracked paint and Shadowhouse Creations Old Canvas Texture. Post Processing in Lr CC,PSCC & Analogue Efex Pro 2. My thanks go to Andy Gray for sharing his ICM post techniques.
Shot using my iPhone 4 and processed with the TiltShiftGen app and then a filter on the Instagram app.
9/365
Just downloaded Waterlogue and started experimenting with presets and options.
Thought I would put up a few of them so people can see what it does. So far I am liking it a lot!
all images taken with iPhone 5s and edited on iPad in Waterlogue. Berries was captured with phone and olloclip macro lens.
These are straight out of the app. No other apps and layers were applied before or after the photos were imported into the app.