View allAll Photos Tagged colour_splashed

With colour splashes adorning its head, it would make Van Gogh happy.

He Just wanted to spring up to wish you a Happy Easter

when life gives you lemons.

 

i could have easily done the same type of photo that i did for last week theme haha but thought i'd change it up a bit and do something different.

 

i decided to add colour splash to the photo as i thought it made the photo pop a bit more with the yellow of the lemon.

My beautiful beardie.

Zingo is a Hypo Rainbow Citrus Tiger Morph.

 

Taken at the Total Warrior event in the Lake District

April iPhone Photo Project Let’s be creative today and emphasize one particular item in our photograph. Use the “everything else is black and white but one thing is still in colour” technique (is their a name for it?) Believe it or not, there’s an app for that! (More than one, actually!) #iPPPDay11

 

Made using the ColorSplash app, taken and edited on the iPhone.

 

Note: I started out intending to just do George, but the treatment was quite engaging and I decided to continue with the little George on the tree. And then the yellow chair. (I've always loved those leopard chairs, ever since I was a kid.) And then a tree. And then, for balance, one of the painter men. And finally, the green paint can. And the Wet Paint sign. Fun. Just like a colouring book.

Love this shot... some of my best ...

Trinity Hospice Colour Splash 2019 Held annualy on Starr Gate Beach, Blackpool.

2 Street Performers stood in the highstreet at Edinburgh Festival Fringe 2012.

 

Facebook: www.facebook.com/SianWatsonPhotography

This photo was taking with a Nikon D3100 during the Edinburgh Fringe Festival 2012.

Every August, the Edinburgh International Festival transforms one of the world's most beautiful cities, presenting three exhilarating weeks of the finest creators and performers from the worlds of the arts - for everyone.

 

2 Street Performers - Edinburgh Festival Fringe by Emily Watson is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.

This pic is a selective colour edit using an app for the iPod Touch

Camera: Olympus Trip XB40 AF (AF is for Auto Focus)

Film: True Print 400ASA (cheapo free film from my Dad and its probably expired since he's been digital for a few years now)

 

This was the £2.99 camera from Oxfam and as I'd read somewhere online, the only similarity to the previous Olympus Trip cameras is the name, nothing more.

  

Photography Blog

Pinup Girl, Pinup, Retro, Vintage, Manchester City Center, Castlefield Dress Model: Eve, Black, Dress, New Rocks, New Rock Boots, Wall, Archway, Cards, Goth, Gothic, Goth Girl, Wheel, Iron, Sun Glasses, Ray Bans, Coloursplash, Colour Splash, Selective Colouring

Australia on Collins shopping centre, located in Collins Street Melbourne, is currently having a "spring colour splash" display featuring colourful umbrellas, in their atrium.

Taken back in June at a Semi-Pro testing day at Snetterton, Norfolk.

Colour. Splashes of. When things seem a tad monochrome.

 

Just an Italian creeper, thassall.

 

The local gales seem to be dying down. Just as well.

There are still leaves on the pear tree in the yard. Their colour has evolved from the initial yellow characteristic of its Fall colours, to what appears to be, from a distance, a dull brown. Yet on closer inspection, each leaf has range of colour splashes on the surface, as seen in this sample. - JW

 

Date Taken: 2016-11-27

 

Tech Details:

 

This was taken indoors on a large window-lit white sheet and background. The leaf was fastened using masking tape on te stem in a suitable position to a large plank. No artificial light was used. Taken using a tripod-mounted Nikon D7100 fitted with a Tamron 90mm f/2.8 Macro 1:1 (272E), ISO100, Auto WB, Aperture priority mode, f/5.6, 1/8 sec with an EV+0.67 exposure bias to help burn out the background and its imperfections (determined by histogram and test exposures). PP in free Open Source RAWTherapee from Nikon RAW/NEF source file: scale image to 9000x6000, adjust exposure to about 1.5 stops brighter than as-shot to help burn out the background, enable shadows/highlights and recover highlights in the leaf and also pull up the deepest parts of the shadows in the leaves a little, very slightly boost contrast in L-A-B mode (no adjustment to Chromaticity), boost vibrance very slightly, sharpen, save. PP in free Open Source GIMP: adjust the tone curve to set black point and then pull up the curve at about 20% in from the right/dark end to the default level and then pull up the mid-point of the rest of the curve slightly to brighten the mid tones after which I pinned the curve at about 10% from the brightest/right end and pulled up that section further to blowout the ‘white background’ even more, sharpen, save, scale image to 6000x4000, sharpen slightly, save, add fine black-and-white frame, add bar and text on left, save, scale image to 1800 vertical for posting, sharpen slightly, save.

Thought I'd try some colour splash. I went into my school's media room to print some stuff and the lady in there, Val, has decided to add a couple of my pictures to her wall of awesomness. Her wall consists of many cool photos I wish I'd taken and I'm honoured that she likes my photos that much, Isn't it nice when something nice randomly happens to you?

Bekki in yellow with our sprocket rocketand colour splash flash.

Morris Commercial J-type

The Morris Commercial J-type is a 10 cwt (0.5 ton) van launched by the Morris Commercial subsidiary of Morris Motors in 1949 and produced until 1961. After the formation, by the merger of Morris' parent company, the Nuffield Organisation, and Austin, of the British Motor Corporation in 1952[clarification needed] Commercial was dropped and the van was marketed as the Morris J-type.

 

The van followed the emerging trend of having forward controls and sliding doors on each side. It was made in both left and right hand drive versions. As well as complete vehicles, the J-type was also supplied in chassis form to external body makers and it appeared, amongst other uses, as a pick-up, tipper truck, ice cream van and milk float. Many were bought by the British Post Office and these differed from standard in having rubber front and rear wings.

 

The J type is fitted with a 1476 cc four-cylinder side-valve engine based on the one used in the contemporary Morris Oxford car. Drive to the rear wheels is through a three-speed gearbox and initially a spiral bevel type rear axle, later replaced by a hypoid type.

 

The van was updated to the JB in 1957 when an overhead valve 1489 cc, BMC B-Series engine was fitted along with a four-speed gearbox.

 

An Austin version of the van appeared in 1957 known as the Austin 101 and differed from the Morris only in badging and radiator grille styling.

 

Production ceased early in 1961 after over 48,600 had been made. It was replaced by the Morris J4.

 

Sweet William flowers at Cawdor Castle gardens. I don't know what the blue flowers are.

Lomokev lets me play with his accessories in the park.

After the wide-open colour splash yesterday, this was taken at f22, hand held.... Early morning commuters. Spot the cyclist tail-gating the car on the left. Taken with a Carl Zeiss Jena Pancolar 50/1.8, radio-active version.

Took some water splash shots (used food colouring). Merged the various shots to make this comp - but only after cleaning up the mess.

Colour splash for a winter's day, courtesy of the beautiful Ginkgo biloba tree.

10 minute excercise during coffee break, you've got to love the iPhone.

This photo was taken at in New York in August 2012. I had been told that the Flatiron has very interesting architecture and I set out to try to capture this. As the yellow taxis are so iconic of New York, it was perfect that there were a few passing whilst I took the photo. I wanted to emphasize this in this photo and so I removed the colour from the rest of the image.

 

The camera used was a Nikon D7000, with its kit lens. The photo was taken in aperture priority mode to f/14 and ISO 400. The camera operated the shutter speed at 200th of a second.

Navitas, Aarhus on a foggy day...

1 2 ••• 21 22 24 26 27 ••• 79 80