View allAll Photos Tagged bokeh
Macro Mondays Theme - Seasonal Bokeh
Seasons Greetings to my flickr friends from all over the world. Thank you for your comments, help and encouragement. You are my inspiration!
© 2013 Nicola Riley
The pleasing or aesthetic quality of out-of-focus blur in a photograph, usually with a fast prime lens wide open. While in live view, I shot this by mistake, clicking the shutter before the camera had finished focusing. Not recommended to do it that way!
Happy bokeh Wednesday, everyone.
Photographed on September 22, 2013 in a modest garden in Ypsilanti, Michigan.
View my collections on flickr here: Collections
Press "L" for a larger image on black.
From a visit up to the Farne Islands last week.
This was placed 2nd in this week's Wex Photographic 'Wex Mondays' competition, which was nice!
Farne Islands, Northumberland
Nikon D750 / Nikon 70-200 f/4 & 1.4x Teleconvertor / 1/4000th f/5.6 / ISO800
Three shrooms at a row... they remind me of a family, e.g. mother, son and sister ... or whatever combination you can make up:-)
Smile on Saturday - Catch the Bokeh
Ein Ahornblatt, vom Wind bewegt, wurde immer mal kurz vom Licht gestreift und weckte so meine Aufmerksamkeit.
Es mutet wie eine herbstliche Fotografie an, ist aber Anfang Mai aufgenommen bei einem Spaziergang im Hamburger Treppenviertel.
Never really used the wide aperture on this lens since I got it. Nice bokeh at f1.7 :)
Minolta x700
Lens: Minolta 50mm MD 1.7
Film: Fuji Superia 400.
Printed by Borealis Lab (Montreal). Scanned at home.
Montreal, spring 2019.
Sun, -12 degrees and sparkling snow. Perfect weather for shooting, the drawback is that your hand freezes no matter how hard you try to keep them warm.
my face again surprise surprise
i need modelsss
i got a flickrmail from flickr reminding my pro account expires december 3rd.
there's no way i can afford a new one so say goodbye to allll my old pictures </3
A father capturing a sweet memory for his family during the Christmas season in Orchard road. It is lovely.
The world after the ice storm was a cathedral of glass, but to the worm inching its way through the crusted soil, it was a strange, brittle apocalypse. The soft earth it once knew had turned to stone, its tunnels sealed tight by frozen veins. Grass blades, once flexible ladders, now stood rigid like spears, each coated in crystal. Above, tree roots shimmered with unnatural hardness, creaking with the weight of their frozen armor. The worm moved slowly, every shift a negotiation with the cold—each inch a reminder that the world had changed overnight into something beautiful, yet unkind.
From its view, the air was silent but heavy, as if the cold had swallowed sound itself. Droplets clung like diamonds to the ceiling of its tiny underworld, yet none of it offered warmth or comfort. And still, it moved—instinct pushing it forward, even as its world cracked and sparkled with an eerie stillness. The worm, blind but not unfeeling, sensed that this crystalline world would not last. Beneath the ice, life waited—not defeated, just paused. And so it pressed on, a small, soft witness to nature’s harsh but fleeting spectacle.
happy bokeh wednesday!
best viewed on the lightbox for the details of the lamp!
(with special regards to those of you who like biking in southern regions ;))
Let`s take a sip of bokeh.
Canon EOS 60D + Vivitar S1 70-210 -1:2,8-4,0 VMC
Wide Opened
Vivitar S1 S/N
09961305
made by Cosina