View allAll Photos Tagged evolution.
I'm in a very creative and inspired 'state' of mind at the moment, tee hee.
I really had fun with these in Studio Indigo.
LYSIANTHUS , unfurling in front of your eyes.
Originating in the West Indies, Mexico, and Central and South America, the flower is known botanically as Eustoma grandiflorum.
The common name comes from the Greek words lysis, meaning 'dissolution' and anthos, meaning 'flower'.
Colours include white, light and dark pink, lavender and deep purple. Double and single-flower varieties exist.
THANK YOU, M, (*_*)
For more: www.indigo2photography.com
IT IS STRICTLY FORBIDDEN (BY LAW!!!) TO USE ANY OF MY image or TEXT on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
Eustoma-grandiflorum, Lysianthus, lisianthus, bloom, buds, frills, studio, flower, white, colour, elegance, black-background, design , square, NikonD7000, MAGDA indigo
Transhumanism, the next evolution
Take the Mark, the Beast revolution
Embrace the cloud, the hive mind
A human hybrid, a Frankenstein
Enslaved in thought, I’m in dispair
Cannot escape this nightmare
Living in dystopia, nowhere to go
Fear everywhere, it’s all I know
Confined to this prison, it’s all I see
Walls closing in, can’t break free
Can’t disconnect, it’s hard to cope
I’ve given up, I’ve lost all hope
© Photo by Tasos Tsoukalas...this photo was suspended in Basement Art Gallery in the year of 2007 and is sold out now...
www.facebook.com/pages/Tasos-Tsoukalas-Photography-/29358...
e-mail : t.tsoukalas1978@yahoo.com
Pensive guy in front of a stuffed owl at the Grand Gallery of Evolution (Grande galerie de l'évolution) in the National Museum of Natural History, in Paris.
PENTAX K-5 II s • 80 ISO • Sigma 150-500mm f:5-6.3 APO DG HSM
Baader AstroSolar film (ND5.0 / ND10000)
Made of 10 photos from 9:39 to 11:40 CET+1 20/03/2015
Walferdange • Luxembourg
~ San Diego...year 3999999 ...fashion comes back full circle...however humans have evolved into something more amphibian ( due to the ice melting...more water around )
Kaka’ako neighborhood. Honolulu, Hawaii.
Murals: Bottom - Kamea Hadar and Rone. Created during POW WOW Mural Fest in 2013. Top - “Golden Future?” by Shepard Fairey. Created during POW WOW Mural Fest in 2019.
Onlookers gaze at a workman suspended within a hollow 45-foot wire-mesh statue of an unclothed female figure. The statue, titled "R-Evolution", was conceived by American artist Marco Cochrane (1962- ) who is best known for his large-scale steel sculptures of nude women. It currently stands in front of the Ferry Building at Embarcadero Plaza in San Francisco California, a gateway to the busy downtown area. The statue is scheduled to stay at its present location for the next six months with a possible six month extension.
Evolution has seen the humble coffee seed, commonly called the coffee bean, being presented today in a pod with a bar code that even tells the machine how much steaming water to add to the cup. Happy Macro Mondays everyone.
Yann Mingard: A juvenile Allosaurus, Evolution auction, Billingshurst, UK, 25th November 2015.
www.valokuvataiteenmuseo.fi/en/exhibitions/everything-air...
Between 2003 and 2004, @NASAHubble spent more than 11 days taking what would become known as the Hubble Ultra Deep Field, a view of nearly 10,000 galaxies. In 2022, Webb took less than 24 hours to observe that same target in high-resolution.
Why are we revisiting this field? We don’t exactly know how galaxies became how they are today. With its sensitivity, Webb is helping astronomers hunt for the first galaxies and better understand star formation and other galactic properties in the early universe.
In addition, the Hubble Ultra Deep Field has long been studied by a variety of telescopes. Webb’s new data complements previous data sets by providing detailed information for just about all of the galaxies in this field, allowing scientists to piece together the bigger picture.
Read more: blogs.nasa.gov/webb/2023/04/12/webb-shows-areas-of-new-st...
This image: The capabilities of NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope’s Near-Infrared Camera are on full display in this comparison between Hubble’s and Webb’s observation of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field. The left, which demonstrates Hubble’s observation with its Wide Field Camera 3, required an exposure time of 11.3 days, while the right only took 0.83 days. Several areas within the Webb image reveal previously invisible, red galaxies.Download the full resolution from the Space Telescope Science Institute.
Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, Joseph DePasquale (STScI)
Image description: A comparison between two images, one on the left and one on the right separated by a white line. The image on the left has a caption on the bottom that says, “Hubble UDF (exposure time: 11.3 days)”, while the image on the right has a caption on the bottom that says “Webb (exposure time: 0.83 days)”. The image on the left shows thousands of galaxies with many different colors. Most are orange and yellow while others are white and blue. Many of these galaxies appear as fuzzy ovals, but others look thin and long or have distinct spiral arms. Within the image is a yellow box, angled about 30 degrees off center, which contains a label on its bottom right that says “Webb’s field of view”. The image on the right shows a box with the same angle. Inside this box are many of the same galaxies seen in the box on the left in different colors. The orange galaxies on the left image are white or yellow on the right. There are a few galaxies spread throughout the right image that are clearer than those on the left.
Echoes Evolution Forgot
She wasn’t born a seeress; she became one the day she found the old camera, dusty and humming with secrets.
Each click peeled back the skin of time, ghosts in lace, wars half-forgotten, lovers touching hands they hadn't yet met.
Through the cracked viewfinder, she saw futures stumble,
pasts ache to be remembered.
The world spun slow when she looked;
history whispered through the lens, and tomorrow blinked at her like a shy star.
In her hands, memory and prophecy became photographs nobody else could see...
by Lis Xia
Self-portrait captured through of a 1937's Rolleicord II, etched onto the fading soul of Ilford Delta 3200 film. Developed and conjured into being by the alchemy of Luis Campillo–Nevermind, whose hands preserved the delicate dance between light and loss.
Evolution of my roof style, and part of the facade. The current design is composed by different types of tiles, slopes, placed in large plates in different angles, simulating the curved effect.
*Render
Overlooking Evolution Valley, wet, glacially polished granite at the top of Evolution Creek's cascade reflects the sunset colors in Kings Canyon National Park
EVOLUTION Class Tactical Artillery Vehicle
More pics when public www.brickshelf.com/cgi-bin/gallery.cgi?f=282273
Pics and some description www.mocpages.com/moc.php/39902
#AbFav_MONTH_of_DECEMBER_🎀
Hippeastrum, these plants are popularly but erroneously known as Amaryllis and are cultivars of bulbous plants in the family Amaryllidacea.
The botanical name Amaryllis is taken from a shepherdess in Virgil's pastoral "Eclogues"(An eclogue is a poem in a classical style on a pastoral subject.
Poems in the genre are sometimes also called bucolics. Virgilius wrote the Bucolica, consisting of 10 Eclogues).
As a flower symbol it has come to mean "Dramatic", which seems most fitting here!
Hippeastrum is a popular bulb flower for indoor growing, it is Greek for "horseman's star" (also known today as "knight's star").
Thank you for your visits and comments, M, (*_*)
For more: www.indigo2photography.com
Please do not use any of my images on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
RED, Amaryllis, close-up, texture, stamens, bloom, December, festive, design, studio, black-background, colour, square, "Magda indigo"
Buds. NikonD7000
Thanks everyone for all the kind Comments and Visits!
View On Black LARGE
Life is but a brief journey through time. The Awe of the Grand Canyon makes us pause and ponder the real scale of time. A true beast of nature, the climate, has had it up’s and Downs: Hot periods, Cold periods, Glaciers to Floods, Tropics to Mountains, and, Today, here sets one of the great testaments to those violent periods in the evolution of Earth.
Mans existence is but a blink in the vast time scale of Earth. And yet, from her violent past, she leaves us this great spectacle so we may glimpse her troubled past.
Topaz Detail
Nik CEP Bi-Color Filter
©2009 Ray Hanson All Rights Reserved