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Any guesses as to the make? The car was in New Westminster, the background is English Bay, and the moon was over Miami.
Lower Otay Reservoir with the rolling hills in the back, and some crazy clouds above.
_MG_3437_8_9_ enhancer_ cs5_ 8x12_ crop
Seaburn Recreation Ground, Sunderland, Tyne and Wear, England, UK.
NEBPT Seaburn Rally 2019 August Bank Holiday, the time when little children are given the day off from climbing chimneys to collect the harvest in the fields, or if they are in the city, go to the Historic Vehicle Display, arranged by the North East Bus Preservation Trust. Bright sunshine lit up the gleaming exhibits which included cars, vans trucks and buses.
It was an occasion for catching up with friends as well as spotting the newer or less displayed exhibits. I bring you a few here.
• 515 XUF Morris Isis Series I This car was built in 1956, named after the river that flows through Oxford, the home of the Morris Motor Company. With its 2639cc engine, this chunky car displays the latest British chic in 1950s car design. Owing much to pre-war American styling, this top of the range model was intended for captains of industry and upper middle-class motorists.
Against the competition from Ford and Vauxhall, as well as the Austin Westminster from the same BMC stable, this model did not fare well. They were a rare sight on the 1950s roads, as only 8,500 were ever made.
My uncle had one. He was a baker and confectioner in Barrow in Furness. We lived in Manchester without a car. It was a treat to ride in this plush motor, although I remember it causing me to be sick on one late night trip. Or was that my uncle's chain smoking?
Photographic Information
Taken on 26th August, 2019 at 1028hrs with a Canon EOS 650D digital still camera, through a Canon EF-S 18-55mm (29-88mm in 35mm terms) ƒ/3.5-5.6 zoom lens, post processed with Adobe Photoshop CS5.
© Timothy Pickford-Jones 2019
Canon EOS 550D with Tamron 17-50mm f:/2,8. Panorama merged in Photoshop CS5 from 7 frames (21 shots at f:/7,1 1/80s, 1/160s and 1/320s @17mm). Processed to HDR in Photomatix Pro.
En el Paseo de Recoletos se halla la Biblioteca Nacional de España. Curiosamente fue un rey de una dinastía recién llegada, Felipe V, quien aprobó la creación de una Real Biblioteca en 1711. Los primeros volúmenes provenían de las colecciones privadas del propio rey y su predecesor Felipe IV, más unos 6000 volúmenes traídos desde Francia. La Guerra de Sucesión aportó a los fondos de la biblioteca los libros de las colecciones de los austriacistas vencidos. En 1716 se estableció un precedente del Depósito Legal, que obligaba a depositar un ejemplar de cada obra publicada en España en la Biblioteca. El continuo crecimiento de la colección hacía que las sucesivas sedes quedaran pequeñas, de manera que se convocó un concurso de proyectos que fue ganado por Francisco Jareño. Isabel II colocó la primera piedra del edificio de la imagen en 1866, abriéndose la nueva sede al público 30 años más tarde… Tras 300 años de historia la Biblioteca Nacional de España custodia más de 28 millones de publicaciones producidas en territorio nacional desde comienzos del siglo XVIII: libros, revistas, mapas, grabados, dibujos, partituras, folletos, etc..
The Royal Library was founded by King Philip V in 1711. The first books came from the royal collections, some thousands were taken from France and lots of books were confiscated to the noble families which had supported the defeated Austrian candidate during the Spanish Sucession War. The Royal Letters Patent that he granted, the predescessor of the current legal deposit requirement, made it mandatory for printers to submit a copy of every book printed in Spain to the library. During the 19th century, confiscations, purchases and donations enabled the Biblioteca Nacional to acquire the majority of the antique and valuable books that it currently holds. On March 16, 1896, the Biblioteca Nacional opened to the public, after a construction period which lasted 30 years since the founding stone placed by Queen Elisabeth II. Nowadays, the BNE incorporates Spain's main bibliographic institutions holding more than 28 million books, sheets music, drawings, maps, comics,…
Midland Red 4777 (799GHA) was one of the first production batch of twenty-four BMMO C5 37 seat coaches delivered in 1958. It was upgraded for use as on motorway express services in 1963 (Type CS5) and was downgraded for bus work in 1969 (Type C5A) when it was painted overall red. It was photographed at Shrewsbury bus station in August 1970.
Same shot from yesterday, just processed a little diferently... I liked how the cintage processing came out here...
Processed using Adobe Photoshop CS5...
1/8s f/27.0 iso160, Leica M8, Carl Zeiss 21mm f/4.5 ZM, Beacon Hill Park, Victoria, BC, Canada.
My first try at infrared (IR) photography. The Leica M8 is known for its weak IR blocking filter but this is an advantage when using screw mount IR lens filters, such as the B+W 092 IR filter, used here, that will produce the "false colour" IR effect. Images are not that sharp as I'm still trying to figure out the lens IR focus adjustment technique. Image processed in LR4 and CS5 channel mixer and then converted to monochrome in NIK SEP2.
Paysage frais ce matin !
Fresh landscape this morning !
My shot :
Location : Sinard
Time & Date : Tuesday 27 of December
Camera : Nikon D300s
Lens : Sigma 10-20mm f/4-5,6 DC EX HSM
Exif : ƒ/11 | ISO 200 | 1/800s | @19mm
Flash/Strobist info : —
Tripod : —
Filter(s) : Cokin gradued ND8 : P121s
Postraitement : aperture / photoshop CS5 + Color EFex Pro : Levels, pro and tonal contrast and saturation of all
Toutes vos critiques, commentaires et fav sont les bienvenus !
All criticisms, comments, and fav are welcome !
Si vous souhaitez utiliser une de mes photos merci de me contacter.
If you plan to use one of my picture, thanks to contact me before.
Merci / Thanks
My facebook : Thibault Bevilacqua Photography
Castle Garth, Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne and Wear, England, UK.
German Cyclists descended on the castle en mass, all using regimented bikes, wearing regulation helmets, and being herded by a snap to it Field Marshal with DayGlo lycra and walkie-talkie.
In 1066 the Normans came to conquer, but since then Britain has been inviolate. Even the 1940s Luftwaffe failed to invade. The Wehrmacht decided that we were too formidable. But today the ancient cobbled lanes around the proud castle, standing sentinel for centuries, was finally taken over by the Fahrradkorps.
Here, in the instant he spots me, one of the number realises that I know their fiendish plot for domination. Thank goodness for Brexit so we can chuck them all out, parading our self satisfied xenophobia in the streets.
Zenit-E takes an outing. Since being given this 1972 USSR camera and lens I loaded it with AgfaPhoto APX 100 monochrome negative film, reminiscent of that used in the mid 20th century, took photos in the sunshine, then developed the film in the old fashioned soup called Rodinal. The result is a wide gamut, fine grain image with sumptuous mid tones. I delight in the combination of 1930s lens technology and late 19th century chemistry.
Photographic Information
Taken on 5th September, 2018 at 1320hrs with a Zenit-E through a Helios 44-2 58mm ƒ/2 lens on 35mm AgfaPhoto APX 100ASA monochrome negative film, developed in Rodinal 1:50, 10mins at 20°C with 3 inversions every minute. Negative scanned on an Epson 4490, digital processing in Adobe Photoshop CS5.
© Timothy Pickford-Jones 2018
"Canon EOS 5D"
"Canon EF 24-70MM F/2.8 L USM"
"Adobe Camera Raw 6.7 / Adobe Photoshop CS5 (Windows)"
"Toronto Downtown, Ontario, Canada"
Little talked about corner of the huge Cygnus gas and dust complex.
11 x 10 minute exposures in Ha with the Atik 314l / Orion ED80 triplet.
Pixinsight & CS5
Thanks to the glories of Photoshop CS5 (hey Adobe, can I get a discount on the upgrade price because of these product placements? Hello?) I can bring you this wonderful panorama showing what I believe to be room 418 which is up the hall and around the corner from Room 401. This is as you'd more or less see it if you were there. Unlike my camera which even with an 18mm lens has to go this shot in two exposures.
Both the bathroom on the left near our tour guide, and the closet on the right are said to be hot spots for sightings.
Some of the people you see standing here went into the closet and closed the door to see if anything would happen. Nothing.
Turns out the ghost was waiting on the other side of the room.
Frozen Crossing Herbs
246th Day
Some macro of herbs
Canon EOS 7D & Canon EF 100mm f/2.8 L Macro IS USM
Post Production with Lightroom 3.3 & Photoshop CS5
©2012, Stefano Minella Photo
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Asked a group of young lads near Hinckley College if they'd mind having some photos taken and were really up for it, also this is my first attempt at a triptych.
omg photoshop cs5 rules! I love the content aware tool. I can take out toy graff and objects that are on the ground or walls and you would never know they were there.
this is a long exposure under moonlight. the only time its safe to go roof climbing
Scooter day at the Ace, I had no idea it was so easy to wheelie on a scooter. These young riders were on the road outiside . Putting their metaphorical fingers up to the more sedate and more expensive scooters on show.
This aircraft is a pre production version of Concorde and has the distinction of having flown the fastest of any Concorde during the flight trials in which it was involved.
Delta November first flew on 17th December 1971 at Filton aerodrome near Bristol. It was the third of the six aircraft used in the extensive six and a half year testing programs that preceded Concorde's entry into airline service. In April 1974, in the course of a test programme conducted from Tangier, 101 reached Mach 2.23 (1450 mph), and in November of the same year it flew from Fairford to Bangor, Maine, in 2 hrs 56 minutes, a record time for a commercial aircraft flying across the Atlantic in a Westerly direction.
On its retirement 101 was gifted to the Duxford Aviation Society by the Department of Transport in what must have been a truly unique gesture. It is the only Concorde donated to a volunteer group and serves to emphasise the importance of the Society's collection.
The offer of the aircraft was first made to the Society in 1975 and it was eventually flown to Duxford on August 20th 1977.
101 spent more than 20 years parked outside at Duxford, apart from when it was in Hangar 1 being repainted, and was visible from both the M11 motorway and the A505, becoming a familiar landmark for passing travellers. It was eventually moved under cover in Hangar 1 in 1999, and remained there until January 2005, when that building was closed to enable building work on the AirSpace Building to start. Concorde is now permanently displayed in AirSpace, and it is normally open to the public on every day the museum is open. It is estimated that more than 4 million visitors have walked through the aircraft since it was first opened to the public in March 1978 It provides a fascinating insight to the technical innovations which once enabled Concorde passengers to travel at just over twice the speed of sound.
This was shot hand held, autobracketed -1,0.+1 and processed through Photomatix, then Lightroom 3 and finished off in CS5, took 5-10mins in total to process...
More importantly I got to go in Concorde...How cool was that...!
PS...Typo on the name in the image.
Nossa um luxo blendar ela , incríveis posições ou quero dizer , poses ...
Modelo do céus , G ZUIS , loucura .
- Ela não é atriz de bobaginha , não . U.U
Shoots : miss-mosh.deviantart.com/
/BESOS ;*
Nos dias 30 e 31 de Outubro a Escola de Imagem tem a honra de receber Clicio Barroso, que ministrará o curso de Photoshop Lightroom Integrado ao CS5.
www.escoladeimagem.com.br/blog/cursos-e-workshops/aprenda...
Update new version 2011.
For a new style "Toon Manipulation"
Mah Flickr | Facebook | DeviantART
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Toon Ent © Copyright 2011
This is a 7 image HDR shot, the image was sharpened, cropped on CS5 . Taken at the Beamish open air museum in the North East of England at the power for the past exclusive night for photographers. Well worth the trip down from Motherwell.
5exp-F/16-ISO100-11-16mm tokina @15mm
edit: lightroom, photomatix,Cs5,nik
This was on the way from Stykkishólmur to Hyrningstaðir the wonderful summerhouse in the west in Berufjörður.
Well on the way driving through storms, sun and even some snow we drove passed the road that leads to Haukadal and Eríksstaðir where the one of first settlers Eirikur Rauði or Erik the Red, who was shot tempered and vengeful. He was outlowed from Haukadalur and again from the island of Öxney. In his exile he sailed west and explored the country he found there and gave the attractive name "Greenland" -one of the first PR exercises in recorded history. He returned to West Iceland to lead the first party of settlers there. Eirik remained a pagan all his live but his wife Þjóðhildur or Thjodhild became Christian and had the first church build in Greenland.
Eiríkur Rauði was also the son of Leifur Heppni who is said to have found the new world..a.k.a America.
The dale had thick clouds touching the floor and you couldn't see a thing as we were also running late we could´t go all the way and I got to take a few shots.
I did two versions of this one, with texture and a clean version.
It would be lovely to get to know which one you like better :)
Please press F to have.
To view large...highly recommended press L.
-THANKS-
info from: leif.is