View allAll Photos Tagged contact
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Candid eye contact street photography from Glasgow, Scotland.
Previously unpublished image from August 2019. I just loved the bright yellow/green coat being flanked by hues of purple. Quite the range of eye contact here - shooting with a huge DSLR (my only option as I don't own anything else), I have to hide in plain sight. Enjoy!
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Street photography from Glasgow, Scotland. To answer the question of what happens after that split second of eye contact in my shots - well, the split second after this is laughed his socks off. Enjoy!
In the world of dance, there is a special kind called Contact Improvisation. You have to keep in contact with your dance partner. This situation reminds me on it.
Here an example: Edifice
Contact Improvisation Dance Theatre
m.youtube.com/watch?list=PLQxUNeybGZtS4WRSR7KU8rO7NJOb1i-...
Ciel de feu sur les montagnes.. sky fire over the mountains..
Utilisation et reproduction interdite
Use and reproduction
Merci de contacter l'auteur avant toute utilisation
Thank you to contact the author before any use
What if you're little satellite dish was chosen by aliens to make first contact with the people of planet earth?
Would you have anything to say that is worthwhile?
Is you're inviatiation to them for a snack and a beer valuable enough for beings from another planet to join you and chill on the couch?
Did you ever think that it can be physically impossible for them to be a couch potatoe?
Maybe they better pass by, ...let it go, like Elsa did, and turn to you're neighbour, ….or even better, another planet.
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Candid eye contact street photography from Newcastle upon Tyne, England. Her wafting hair caught my eye with the subtle back-lighting as I made my way to the train station to head home. The reflection of the city in her glasses lifted the shot for me. I'm away on assignment again for a few days, I should be back over the weekend, so I wish you all a great weekend of shooting ahead and look forward to more of your awesome photography. Enjoy!
Sculpture by Laurel Nannup.
It symbolize the first contact of Europeans and the indigenous people of this area. The Sailing ships of the European settles looks in their eyes as a boat with a big bird on it.
Thanks a lot for your visits, comments, faves, invites, etc. Very much appreciated!
© All my images are protected under international authors copyright laws and may not be downloaded, reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without my written explicit permission. All rights reserved. Please contact me at thelma.gatuzzo@gmail.com if you intend to buy or use any of my images.
Visit my instagram if you like: @thelmag and@thelma_and_cats
THANK YOU ALL MY KIND FLICKR FRIENDS.
YOUR FAVS, COMMENTS AND INVITATIONS ARE VERY MOTIVATING AND APPRECIATED.
Shape and colors of a Monday after Christmas! lol!
Have a nice week ahead! Happy Blue Monday!
Thanks a lot for your visits, comments, faves, invites, etc. Very much appreciated!
© All my images are protected under international authors copyright laws and may not be downloaded, reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without my written explicit permission. All rights reserved. Please contact me at thelma.gatuzzo@gmail.com if you intend to buy or use any of my images.
8x4
From a series "From the deep, dark, dangerous recesses of a disturbed mind"
Ongoing Project
This Month I am featuring "Work in Progress", "Work Completed" but still not Premiered, or new ideas that are in their infancy.
There will be 8 groups of 4 pics.
Each day a new pic from a new group will be shown and then it will be repeated throughout the month.
Hope that makes sense!!!
Taken on Texel island, Netherlands.
Living by the sea means you need to get used to those birds. While they can be very loud, they really don't bother me. I've been living here for few years, and so far never ever had I situation when a bird was obnoxious. I did however, hear stories about them being somehow aggressive while getting fed by humans.
The European herring gull (Larus argentatus) is a large gull (up to 26 in (66 cm) long). One of the best known of all gulls along the shores of western Europe, it was once abundant. It breeds across Northern Europe, Western Europe, Central Europe, Eastern Europe, Scandinavia and the Baltic states. Some European herring gulls, especially those resident in colder areas, migrate further south in winter, but many are permanent residents, e.g. in the British Isles, Iceland, or on the North Sea shores. European herring gulls have a varied diet, including fish, crustaceans and dead animals as well as some plants.
While herring gull numbers appear to have been harmed in recent years, possibly by fish population declines and competition, they have proved able to survive in human-adapted areas, and can often be seen in towns acting as a scavenger.
© All rights reserved.
All my images are protected under international authors copyright laws and may not be downloaded, reproduced, copied, or edited without my written explicit permission.
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Candid eye contact street photography from Glasgow, Scotland. That split-second of eye contact before a considered reaction - during which he gave me a massive cheesy grin straight down the lens. Enjoy!
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Candid eye contact street photography from Glasgow, Scotland. Enjoy!
Contact print on fomatone MG 131, Developer Kodak Dektol.
Digital Negative, photo taken with a phone.
Castello di maestro
All photos they may not be used or reproduced without my permission. If you would like to use one of my images for commercial purposes or other reason, please contact me.
Three views of a peculiar connector socket... and each of those evokes something totally different to me, as the titles of the three variants can attest. And it was not even intentional at the time of the shooting. 😇
The socket consists of a matrix of 6x6 (minus the ones in the corners, so 32 in total) golden plated contacts, whose directions are alternating at 90° of each other for each row, so as to guarantee an optimal robustness of the connection, probably. The dimension of the square matrix is 4x4cm, so it complies ideally with the 3" rule of the Macro Mondays group.
For the context, this socket is part of an old electrical device. I salvaged it from an electronic waste collecting point, out of curiosity, as It didn't look like anything I had seen before. With this week's "Socket" topic, it became obvious that I could finally make good use of the "thing". Entering in a search engine some reference number I found on the object, I could trace its origin as being a "communication test device" being used by the army.
Having opened it, I was impressed by the thoughtful engineering that went into its conception. Now that the object played its role a last time, I happily returned it to the electronic junk collection point, albeit as a heap of dissembled parts. 😊
Gypsophila (baby's breath)
Exposed for 30 minutes under four 15w UV tubes.
KODAK Bromide WSG-2D paper, expired 1970's