View allAll Photos Tagged depth

Dam of lake Heilenbecker Talsperre, near Ennepetal, Germany

 

Press [L] for full-size view | Thanks for your views, favs and comments

Profondeur de bar...

Parce qu'il faut prendre le temps de lire l'avenir dans le marc de café et se plonger dans les profondeurs houblonnées en terrasse...

Thanks for the visit.

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Music SNOWY WHITE PLAYLIST 2022 | SNOWY WHITE BEST SONG OF ALL TIME

www.youtube.com/watch?v=pZ1IYwtK5OQ

 

Pescadero Point Beach, CA

Three pendant lights in a row with the middle one in focus. Shot in color but processed in black-and-white.

#3 - 100 x challenge - Lensbaby

 

I bought this tiny vintage (1940s) dainty tin from Etsy. Since I can't get out for a rummage for photo props...and let's face it we all need new props from time to time...I've had to resort to looking online. I may have accidentally ordered a new lens today as well. Ooops!

 

This was taken using my Lensbaby Velvet 56 and Omni filter. The hearts are from my craft stash.

 

© K.Yemenjian Photography, All Rights Reserved.

Depth is a photograph of a bromeliad.

JOIN ME on my Ten Day New Zealand Workshop 4th - 13th May 2019 £3295

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READ my in-depth blog on trip to New Zealand back in September 2018

melvinnicholsonphotography.co.uk/blog/new-zealand/new-zea...

 

WATCH my three minute YouTube video of footage I captured in New Zealand September 2018

www.youtube.com/watch?v=9GivMMKV4S8

  

WOW, WOW, WOW, what a place this is. I arrived here with a friend of mine Ed a couple of hours before sunset and a short fifteen minute walk from the car park had us standing on the shoreline of this utterly remarkable iceberg mountain lake.

 

Oh my word, this is where New Zealand seriously impresses you. As the sun slowly sunk down the mountains behind us and the last throws of light that lit up the peaks of these incredible mountains finally disappeared to be replaced by a billion stars that shone like precious and priceless diamonds, all that remains is you standing there feeling a little emotional and so thankful to be alive witnessing this quite incredible view.

 

New Zealand for those of you who have yet to visit and experience the breathtaking views for yourself, is quite rightly at the top of the list of countries to visit with a camera. I have had the very good fortune to have visited the country three times now and I honestly cannot wait to return at the start of May 2019 to run a ten day workshop.

 

All I will say is that if you have ever had a strong desire to fly to the other side of the world and be transported to fairy tale locations, go and DO IT!!! Either with me on a workshop or by yourself. The most important thing is that you experience it. Wait no longer, book the flight and be amazed by what you will see and experience.

 

Canon 5D MK4

Canon 24-70mm f4 @ 28mm

f8

30 secs

ISO1600

Eight portrait images stitched together in Photoshop CC

 

Benro TMA48CXL Mach 3 Tripod

Benro GD3WH Geared Head

3 Legged Thing QR11-LC L Bracket

Mindshift Backlight 26L Bag

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UK & International Landscape Photography Workshops, 1-2-1 Private Tuition and Camera Club Lectures available

 

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© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved

 

Street photography from Glasgow, Scotland.

 

Captured in September 2019 during an exercise I gave to my Street Photography Workshop for them to look for different angles and perspectives as we walked around. Of course I ensured that the person begging in the shot was suitably anonymised so that the image is for narrative and is not in any way exploitative.

 

I'm thinking of the millions of people currently displaced across Ukraine. Over 2 million displaced out of the country but countless millions more ran out of their homes to another part of the country, all while being under artillery and rocket fire. I cannot begin to imagine the depths of pain, despair and loss that they are feeling.

 

I'm also thinking of those displaced and homeless throughout the United Kingdom as a result of poverty driven by the cost of living crisis and Government policy over the past decade. My own energy prices have risen 129% overnight.

 

I'm also thinking of those displaced out of their homes, steadings and traditional nomadic routes in Ethiopia right now. Years and years of lower than average rainfall are now leading to a famine of the levels not seen since 1985. The building humanitarian disaster is expected to be worse than that thanks, in no small part, to the climate emergency.

 

We all need water, food and shelter - these basics that are essential for life should be a given in our modern world.

Today I am thinking of those who have been or are being displaced from their homes. I wish I could help more.

This Female Wheatear was standing on the old power station Fence until at last curiosity got the better of her and she hopped from one post to the next to have a closer look at me .

In a landscape closed in by layers of mist, the fir woods create strange horizon lines.

 

Dans un paysage fermé par des couches de brumes les bois de sapins créent des lignes d’horizon étranges.

FROM THE INTERNET:

 

With a depth of 1,943 feet, Crater Lake in Oregon is the deepest lake in the United States - and one of the most beautiful.

 

The water's intense blue color is an indication of its great depth and purity. Surrounded by cliffs, the lake is fed entirely by rain and snow.

 

Scientists consider Crater Lake to be the cleanest and clearest large body of water in the world.

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Crater Lake rests in the belly of a dormant volcano. The volcano once stood 12,000 feet tall, but it collapsed after a major eruption 7,700 years ago.

 

Later eruptions formed Wizard Island, a cinder cone that rises from the water. The park has an abundance of fascinating volcanic features, including a second rocky island, the Phantom Ship.

  

On way to top of mountain. Sudety

I was laying on my belly for this one :)

Echinacia from my garden.

105 mm micro

Out trying to capture a proper image for the theme "perspective &depth". Found this road in the mist and grey weather that November is so happy to provide. The stretch over a couple of minor hills and then vanishing into the mist at least gives a certain depth to the image.

Taken BC (before coronavirus) In July 2019 at the National Gallery Victoria when I was attending a Meetup for the Walk and Shoot group. Our theme was composition.

Credits in Primfeed Henzel Huntsman

FUJIFILM X-T1, 18.0-55.0 mm f/2.8-4.0, SO 100, 55mm, 0 ev, ƒ/4, 1/60

Based on a pet shop aquarium shot of mine.

 

For:

New!! ~ Challenge 177.0 ~ Water ~ The Award Tree ~

www.flickr.com/groups/awardtree/discuss/72157697167295540/

The commandments of justice and mercy, indeed of love or the golden rule, have after all inspired historic resistance to lawless aggressions and to oppressive law. The Torah, the Jewish law, is not reducible to legalism or exclusivism, but supports the “struggle for justice and mercy.” 26 Perhaps it is a matter of infusing the commandments within the atmosphere of the Eros: “Arise my love, and come away” is also an imperative—a proposition in the sense suggested in our earlier discussion of truth-claims! After all, the ethics of “should and should not” may also encode, should also encode the divine lure. For without strong supportive structures of community, society, liturgy, theology, the chances are minute that we can individually or collectively even discern the initial aim...

 

...How does this unforcing force work? By sparking your desire: desire ignites desire. This sparking process takes place largely beneath and before our consciousness. Sometimes glimpsed in a dream, in a stranger’s face, in a flow of grief, a comforting embrace, a surge of music, a private illumination, a public act of truth. In conscience, shame, guilt, awe at a random sunset. The spark is what we hope for in prayer, meditation, worship. We infer it—and cannot in truth make any certain claims about it, as in “God told me this or that; God wills this or that for me.” For it comes already coated in our experience, in our own subjectivity, in the aims of our own socialized desire.

--On the Mystery, DISCERNING DIVINITY IN PROCESS, Catherine Keller

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