View allAll Photos Tagged cage
Those who deny freedom to others deserve it not for themselves.
~Abraham Lincoln
Have a wonderful day everyone!
Happy Bokeh Wednesday Eve :)
ETA: I had alot of people as me about the image below "Follow your own path"
and where it was it was taken. It was taken during a visit to Calke Abbey. The Ice House at Calke Abbey is very unusual in design. It was been built around 1820. So no worries.. our little sweetie was not in any danger :)
Night street photography has a certain addictive appeal.
Not withstanding the inherent dangers, there is an atmosphere unique to this environment.
The B&W harmonics seem reversed when composing and the geometrics become an entity in and of themselves.
Please refer to Hanson Aerial Photography most interesting observation below. And also check out his areal photography !!!
Credits here: Caged
Eroded Horns & Midnight eye mask above will be coming soon to IMMODEST. Look out for the release!
Yesterday I finished the work on my Mexico pictures, it took me more than three weeks to process them, make the selections, and throwing out the garbage. So now I have circa 500 shots I could post, but most shots will never be posted here.
It was a different journey from what I normally do, in the first place it was not a photography trip. My main goals were to visit friends and my sister who normally lives in Canada, and I only wanted to see some nature areas in the Huasteca Potosina, and visit the Parque Mariposa Monarca in Ocampo. For the rest I enjoyed some cities In Mexico, like San Miguel de Allende, Queretaro, Oaxaca, Puebla, Aguas Calientes and Guanajuato. All cities are very colourful, and sometimes beautiful architecture can be seen.
This shot was taken in Xilitla. I visited Xilitla to see the surrealistic garden that was made by the eccentric Englishman Edward James (en.laspozasxilitla.org.mx/). Xilitla is situated in a tropical part of Mexico, where rainforest can be found. I had forgotten how wonderful and lush the vegetation can be, while for the rest of Mexico, it was the dry season, so many trees had lost most of their leaves.
To start my Mexico exhibition (I already posted the cathedral in Guanajuato, flickr.com/photos/115540984@N02/52762023163/in/dateposted/) and a wonderful bird (flickr.com/photos/115540984@N02/52769646636/in/photostream/) just this funny shot.
CREDITS:
CHUCK'S HOOD RAF FATPACK @TMD
[AYO] feat [Rezz Room] Caged Heart @UBER
LeLUTKA Connor Head EVOX 3.1 @MAINSTORE
SIGNATURE GIANNI BODY
❱❱❱ For more details (Taxis/Credits) search for MALAMANHADO FASHION BLOG on GOOGLE. Thanks!!!
As I took this photo I began to wonder if because of the way we are treating all of nature now, there may come a time when the only way to see trees is in a spotlit cage. There is a very disturbing poem by Alan Brownjohn called 'We're going to see the rabbit,' where people in the future go to see the very last rabbit in existence. When I think of loss of habitat, I wonder if when all the animals are gone we shall have to do this for plants too. Maybe our Botanical gardens and arboreti are a way of doing this already.
♥ SPONSORS ♥
dress: CODEX_Alice dress Fatpack at WCF Porn Edition
tattoo: ~ Quadrametics — Cybernetic Informatica Neon G (HEAD&BODY) ~ at Skin Fair
eyes: -Birth- ‘Glimmer Custom Eye System’ [AddMe] v1.11 + Birth ‘Soul’ Eye Textures [4Glimmer Eyes] — FATPACK [AddMe]
♥ full credits in blog ♥
M made a staircase for a bank which is an exception, because it is bild like a "Faraday Cage" ... you won't get access to this inner building part, but the managers are safe from lightning strike while climbing stairs ...
it is actually more a drawing / watercolor of mine than a photo ...
;-) ...
ƒ/5.6
24.0 mm
1/30
500
DSC_5777_pa3
“Un seul oiseau en cage la liberté est en deuil.”
Jacques Prévert
Thank you very much for your comments and for your faves.
(Please do not use without my written permission.)
A stack of bright yellow lobster cages stacked on a dock reflect in the sometimes calm waters of the Maine harbor.
My Blog
rachelswallows.blogspot.com/2021/04/caged-kitty.html
Attentionista Blog
attentionmagazinesecondlife.blogspot.com/2021/04/caged-ki...
LUNA CHELSEA
Rowena catsuit in Animal Prints @ The Mainstore
Sexy skin tight latex catsuit with a choice of 19 animal prints.
Sizes: Kupra, Legacy, Maitreya and Hourglass
Kupra Body, Lelutka Lily Head, choker by Cynful, Mask and bento cat tail by Salt and Pepper, Hair by Exile, Pose by Mewsery, Cage by Valkyr, Backdrop by Foxcity
L’Alkékenge, Coqueret alkékenge ou Lanterne (Physalis alkekengi), est une espèce de plantes du genre Physalis et de la famille des Solanaceae. La plante est surtout connue pour son fruit complexe, une baie comestible de couleur orange enfermée dans un calice rouge orangé accrescent semblable à une lanterne. Cette plante est parfois appelée Amour-en-cage, Cerise d'hiver, Cerise de juif.
C'est une plante vivace à racines traçantes. La tige est glabre ou légèrement velue érigée de 30 à 60 cm de haut, anguleuse, non ramifiée. Les feuilles sont ovales acuminées, pétiolées, entières ou grossièrement dentées de 12 cm.
Les fleurs solitaires de 1 à 2 cm de diamètre apparaissent à l'aisselle des feuilles supérieures. Corolle à cinq lobes blanc crème.
En fin de floraison, le calice se referme sur l'ovaire et forme un ovale parcheminé veiné en réseau de 5 cm de couleurs vives allant de l'orange au rouge emprisonnant le fruit. À maturité du fruit, il devient très fin et translucide, d'où la comparaison fréquente avec une lanterne, puis il s'ouvre.
Extraits de :
fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physalis_alkekengi
Voir aussi :
www.flickr.com/photos/145414276@N08/49131747647
Au mois d'août :
livinginsecondlife.blogspot.com/2022/02/cages.html
«La libertà non si riceve, si conquista».
(da "Il profumo della libertà")
More pics on my blog
This is the remains of a Physalis (Peruvian Groundcherry) fruit case after it's spent several months in my compost bin.
It was a bit of an experiment during a fun evening of macro photography with other local photographers. It’s a ten-image focus stack using Affinity Photo 2 for the stacking.
The images were taken over the course of a couple of seconds using the camera’s automated focus adjustment sequence option. And that was where the experiment really began. Once you set up the initial focus, the number to take in the sequence, and the focus step then the camera does the rest. In theory. The problem is where to focus the initial focus and what to set the step size at (which will vary by subject distance and lens). The documentation is a little light :)
This was a sequence of 20 images but some of these were out of focus and discarded (the adjustment had gone too far). I only had time for three series and this was the best view and result.
The camera was on a tripod and the Physalis cage was on my LED light table which backlit it (with some ambient light). The result was a brown cage on a grey background (I didn’t overexpose it). This was corrected in processing using a Levels adjustment to make the grey backlight white.
I then decided to try making it with a black background but keeping the recorded colours in the cage. So using a curves adjustment in LAB mode I inverted the L luminosity channel, which preserved the colours in the mid-tones on the cage.
The rest was sharpening using High Pass/Linear Light blend and USM sharpening, tidying up the spotty background afterwards.
Thanks for taking the time to look. I hope you enjoy the image. Happy Mittwochsmakro :)