View allAll Photos Tagged extrapolated

Apologies if you had commented or even faved this earlier! Have no clue how it got lost.

 

The Macro Monday theme for 7/24 is buckle. (The admin said we could use a toggle and I extrapolated that to include a clasp, also.) We have a dearth of typical belts, so I went hunting for stand-ins. There are a few possibilities so I’ll dither, naturally. There are 8 possibilities and they’re in the front of the photostream .

 

This, the worn toggle, and the watch may be my favorites. Am partial to others for various reasons and not necessarily for the MM theme. Will add the size verification shots to the first comment box of each picture in a bit!

 

…….💙 HMM 💙

All My Links

 

These flowers are booming in my garden, a bit like Ireland after the 90s before Europe happened in the 21st century. I love the darker purple hues that are very much set aside from the rest that are pink and white. by the way, I do not weed my garden, I have this mindset that all things can live there, the assumption of what is and is not beautiful is not subject to my own determination of what can or cannot live there.

 

Many "weeds" have flowers and flowers are aesthetic, these people who have uber neatly cut lawns, weeded areas and only grow what they determine is beautiful in my view extrapolate from a narrow minded judgmental personality of the sort of person I would never wish to share a moment with.

 

But with that said I love all you guys! So I hope everyone is well and as always, thank you!

Close up of a stainless steel sculpture by Liliane Lijn.

 

Originally created in 1982 for the Norwich Central Library, the multiple plates are suggestive of book leaves. The construction provokes other interpretations depending on the viewing angle.

 

It is now located outside another library, that of the University of East Anglia, although the new location does it little justice. However, the move was fortuitous because the original library was later destroyed by fire.

 

Lijn has pioneered kinetic art and experiments with light, movement, words, film, liquids and industrial materials.

 

"Sliders" have enhanced colours but without hue changes. Steel textures are strengthened. I believe this is consistent with the spirit of Lijn's work.

 

Stainless steel sculpture by Liliane Lijn.

 

Originally created in 1982 for the Norwich Central Library, the multiple plates are suggestive of book leaves. The construction provokes other interpretations depending on the viewing angle.

 

It is now located outside another library, that of the University of East Anglia whose brutalist architecture forms its backdrop.

 

Lijn has pioneered kinetic art and experiments with light, movement, words, film, liquids and industrial materials.

  

Je te propose une photo.

 

Tu Vois, Tu Interprètes, Tu Déduis, Tu Extrapoles.

 

Et c'est le vide.

 

LACPIXEL - 2023

  

Please don't use this image without my explicit permission.

© All rights reserved

 

All My Links

 

My love of night time, LE, Urban Environments and the 80's congregates together in photography when walking around the city in the dark. This is one of my favourite spots under the main ring road around Berlin, graffiti, vehicles, bright artificial lights and asphalt construction. The next challenge was trying to get a still image to look like something fast happened, at first I was annoyed at the reflection of light from the passing cars windows, but then when I reviewed it on the bigger screen, the sense of... "rushing"... "speed"... "fast"... I think can be extrapolated from it. Anyway that's just my two cents.

 

I hope everyone is well and so as always, thank you! :)

Clearly physical

Complicated interaction

Generalized extrapolation

. technique notes .

// raw 4500x600 px,

// second life, firestorm, calwl, lumipro,

// and ps 2020 signature only.

 

dedication

This picture is dedicated to the millions of vulnerable seniors (and others at heightened risk) throughout the US and world that, according to early research reports, suffer an estimated death rate as high as seven (7) to ten (10) times the overall death rate from COVID-19 (7.8%), which has an overall global case fatality rate for the pandemic of 0.069%.†‡

 

Please, please take public health warnings seriously--if not for yourself, then for your friends, family, the elderly, poor, disabled, healthcare workers, and essential workers. They need us all to follow public health recommends to stop the spread and reduce the strain on an already heavily burdened human ecosystem.

 

keep the faith and be safe.

 

- j. k.

dayton, ohio

 

I calculated a crude case fatality rate (cfr) for my estimate using the simple formula of Confirmed deaths over Confirmed cases using WHO figures reported as of 25 April 2020, 20:00 GMT-4. (See also COVID-19 Coronavirus Pandemic data, COVID-19 Dashboard by the CSSE at Johns Hopkins University data)

 

‡ Although crude, my CFR estimate is sufficiently correlated (+/-.001%) to more in-depth analysis of empirical data metrics such as the COVID-19 projections [1] collaboration at The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME), an independent global health research center at the University of Washington.[2] as well as model-based extrapolations like those published by The Lancet Infectious Diseases [3] (See, for example "Estimates of the severity of coronavirus disease 2019: a model-based analysis."[4]) that my remarks represent an accurate picture of the best available scientific data at the time I wrote this.

 

🎧 bread  →  if (with lyrics)

 

C R E D I T S

 

. anatomy, makeup and hair .

  lelutka   »   orgin line bento head-andrea 3.4

  ~tableau vivant~   »   lelutka bento applier andrea 002

  cdc   »   eyebrow 13 black (omega, tintable)

  [ conviction ]   »   lucent eyes (omega)

  [twc]   »   men do cry (omega) [tears only]

  [mandala]   »   stretched_ears_season2 gold

  stealthic   »   male hairbase (omega, faded)

 

  volkstone   »   monier facial hair [#1/pack i]

  [signature]   »   gianni body v5.0

  ~tableau vivant~   »   signature body applier [tone 2]

 

. clothing .

  :🇬🇧:  »  spring cardigan (gianni) [white] @tmd¹ //new//

 

. accessories .

  toksik  »  anti-pollution mask [size 2]

  [mandala]  »  okaki necklace (unisex)

 

. setup .

  le poppycock   »   nothing more [pose]

  lumipro   »   lumipro 18

  adobe   »   ps cc 2020

 

. endnotes .

  ¹ the mens dept  → apr.5 ‐ apr.30, 2020teleport

 

copyright © 2020 truth wizardly. all rights reserved.

// sunday, april 26, 2020 1:15:30 am est

 

#properPPE

#stopthespread

#socialdistance

#physicaldistance

#shelterinplace

#staysafe

#playsafe

So today I went looking for a small ornament that I was going to add some Christmas light bokeh for the Macro Mondays, “Holiday Lights” theme submission. Most of the good ornaments remain packed up this year so my search was turning up nothing. Fortunately I found a cute little Christmas box the turned out to be Marybeth's Christmas jewelry. This little Santa earring practically jumped right out of the box and pushed the snowman off the table and onto the floor, so it goes I had my subject. I added a pine branch to hang and some lights and what really made my day was a bottle of Milagro Reserve Tequila with a cool glass agave in the bottle. That was just the trick to break up the bubbles (I have a few of those). The earring measures 1.375 x 0.625 inches and extrapolating out I came up with a FoV of 1.7 x 1.4 inches.

 

Happy Macro Monday - HMM

Theme - Holiday Lights

NIKKOR 55mm f/2.8 Micro

Texture by: Lenabem-Anna

 

All the best this Holiday Season, everyone stay safe, wear a mask, stay home and hope/pray for the best. Merry Christmas.

The SBB building in Bern Wankdorf. The exterior is surrounded by many colored glass bars: as experiment I have tried extrapolating these architectural elements in order to create several abstract images, where preserving and at the same time emphasizing the essence and beauty of the patterns these elements design.

Thanks for watching!

The SBB building in Bern Wankdorf. The exterior is surrounded by many colored glass bars: as experiment I have tried extrapolating these architectural elements in order to create several abstract images, where preserving and at the same time emphasizing the essence and beauty of the patterns these elements design.

Thanks for watching!

Seen in a bookstore on Istiklal Caddesi Street in Istanbul. Missing parts of image extrapolated.

 

www.flickr.com/photos/duanemoore/4857323820/

Sharing Friends

Wohnhochhäuser in München von Allmann Sattler Wappner

 

www.baunetz.de/meldungen/Meldungen-Wohnhochhaeuser_in_Mue...

All My Links

 

" Condemnation without investigation is the height of ignorance." -Albert Einstein,

 

"Here and no further" is a quote from David Icke in concerns to the so called Alternative Media, it is much toward the truth that we live in a world of information, that goes deeper and deeper and deeper, but so often, the likes of Paul Joseph Watson, Russel Brand, Joe Rogan, barely scratch the surface toward what's really going on in the world, what's behind it and why.

 

Now, before anyone says, oh my god you believe in all that conspiracy crazy shit and politely inquire as to the location of my tin foil hat, well, this is my reply to that...

 

When it comes to the question of "Belief", I have a simple philosophy, I believe nothing, absolutely none of it, at least not to the point of absolute certainty, you be 98.9% certain that you can have truck this information, this data, what have you; but from that 98.9% always retain a 1.1% seed of doubt, as that will germinate into further inquiry, which leads to further answers, from that, extrapolate furtherance of the Rabbit Hole that you go, to greater information, experience and above all else, wisdom.

 

With all that said, do the bloody research, a black out / Black Swan Event is coming, you need to be prepared. If you live in a capital city, well, try to get out of it, however, you need to store food, buy a means to cook food without electricity, buy weapons, store water, locate a means of sanitation, hygiene and defence.

 

I hope everyone is well and so as always, thank you! :)

Shimmer effect caused by extrapolation of spheroid complex ectomic stimulation. Re-entry into the neomaterialistic ontovertical metasimulation (commonly referred to as 'reality') causes these temporary aberrations to appear within the electromagnetic spectrum generally perceptible to organo-carbon actors. In case you were wondering...

 

composite/photomontage

God, no less than man, is a collective being, and the words for each are collective nouns. The divine community refracts itself in space and time as human community. We are God's finite extrapolation, as civitas hominum is the finite extrapolation of civitas Dei. When we walk in our city, therefore, we walk always on holy ground.

-Aidan Kavanagh, On Liturgical Theology

Earlier on Jan 20, 2023, this beach in Alameda, CA was a broad expanse of dry sand. by late morning, birds huddled on the only available place to stand, the rest having been engulfed by a high tide of 7.7 feet. The height of the tide has allowed huge logs to float freely in an area they would usually run aground.

 

King (aka Spring) Tides occur when the Sun, Earth and Moon are in a straight alignment (at perigee and perihelion) creating the highest and lowest tides of the year.

 

King Tides are one to two feet higher, and lower, than all other tides. With ocean levels predicted to rise an additional two feet in the next 20 years, this King Tide showed us what normal tides will be like in the future with King Tides reaching even further inland. Cities are already experiencing flooding during these tides. One can extrapolate how much worse it will be in the coming years.

 

An excellent webinar was given prior to this winter's first King Tide (Dec 2022) explaining what rising ocean's will mean for us and what some groups are doing to protect the area around SF Bay from future inundation.

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=QxiEL_OoD20

 

The next King Tides are due around Feb 20, 2023. Check the NOAA website for your area for exact dates, times and high/low measurements.

 

tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/

Jaz and Harry Cover aka «l'autre moi» expose "Extrapolation" at ArtCare Gallery, an in-depth collaboration of both artists.

 

This picture is a modest tribute inspired by their work.

 

Visit “EXTRAPOLATION” at Carelyna 's ARTCARE Gallery : maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Emotion/209/202/21

 

AND listen : “Two of a Mind”, feat. Paul Desmond & Gerry Mulligan

Snail Kites are very widespread in the American tropics, from Mexico and Cuba to Argentina, but in the United States they are restricted to freshwater marshes of peninsular Florida. For many years, birds of this population were known as Everglades Kites, and they have long been considered endangered. Their specialized prey, apple snails (genus Pomacea), are sensitive to changes in water levels, so the kites are nomadic within Florida, moving around in search of marshes where the snails are numerous. In years of drought, Snail Kites may not breed at all.

 

It’s very difficult to get an accurate count of Snail Kites, but direct census work since 1969 and extrapolated estimates since the late 1990s have given us rough ideas of population trends in Florida. Numbers have risen and fallen, with breeding success or failure driven partly by changing water levels and snail populations. The kite may have numbered fewer than 100 in the early 1970s, but by 1997 the estimate was above 3,000. A sharp decline occurred after 1999, and by 2009, the estimate had fallen below 800. Since then, the population has been growing again; in 2018, it was pegged at over 2,500.

 

And in a fascinating recent development, the kites have been "expanding their range northward". Historically, they were found almost entirely south of Orlando, mainly from Lake Okeechobee to the northern edge of Everglades National Park. Just within the last few years, they have been showing up all over northern Florida. In the Paynes Prairie area outside Gainesville, for example, numbers have been present continuously for the last couple of years, with sightings of a dozen or more at a time.

 

I found this one in Osceola County, Florida, near Lake Kissimmee.

Extrapolation

Artist: Liliane Lijn (b.1939)

Date: 1982

Material: Stainless steel

Location: Behind the UEA Central Library

Object number: L.08

On long loan from Norfolk County Council

 

Lijn compared these ascending steel plates to the pages of a book as the sculpture was created for the Norwich Central Library. Lijn often works with materials that reflect or refract light.

CNR westbound #211 (Toronto-Calgary) @1408 with about half freight and half T/COFC behind two GP40-2W (9438-9470.) As long as we expended the effort to climb up here, we might as well enjoy the parade. It was busy, and Mike obtained a lineup somewhere. With a little extrapolation from the times shown at the Sioux Lookout division point, and the engine numbers shown, we could accurately predict the appearance of a train and know which one it was. A few years later, Mike told me that the schedule was useless. Too much "precision"?

North Melbourne.

 

Featuring: Faranga

 

View On Black

 

The Macro Monday theme for 7/24 is buckle. (The admin said we could use a toggle and I extrapolated that to include a clasp, also.) We have a dearth of typical belts, so I went hunting for stand-ins. There are a few possibilities so I’ll dither, naturally.

A no-name modest chapel in the middle of harvested fields, , under a summer sky.

With orange filter.

 

I couldn't find any pre-established guidelines for the FomaPan100 exposed at 200iso, so I extrapolated from others. This film seems to give more grain than the FP4+ with the same conditions. Not bad if you like...

 

Chapelle anonyme au milieu des champs moissonnés, entre Orbais et Tourinnes dans le Brabant Wallon.

Filtre orange.

 

FomaPan100 200iso R09 (Rodinal) 1+50 15'

 

The Family that swims together stays together...

The Macro Monday theme for 7/24 is buckle. (The admin said we could use a toggle and I extrapolated that to include a clasp, also.) We have a dearth of typical belts, so I went hunting for stand-ins. There are a few possibilities so I’ll dither, naturally.

 

This may be the clearest example of a “buckle” in the collection of possibilities bc without it, the watch wouldn’t stay on your wrist!

www.maxtutanoronha.com

 

Cabin fever will do that to you, and yes, you cannot go to the barbershop and get a haircut dude.

 

I recently read Aristotle saying that change is important if an individual is to evolve and expand their consciousness. I would extrapolate that to our methods in photographing.

Not just in terms of an eclectic portfolio, but in an entire new way of seeing and creating images.

I have witnessed this in myoldpostcards new works as well as other Flickr friends.

  

I find myself enthralled by the New Topographic movement and their scenic beak cerebral aesthetics. Moving away from the celebration of the pure beauty of nature I admire their method of interjecting space for thought and feelings to appreciate the prettiness in the banal.

 

Here I was draw by that 'brick' horizon, then I saw the giant diamond design of the entire scene. What I did not see until I had it up on the computer screen were the different types of bricks used to build this building.

The Macro Monday theme for 7/24 is buckle. (The admin said we could use a toggle and I extrapolated that to include a clasp, also.) We have a dearth of typical belts, so I went hunting for stand-ins. There are a few possibilities so I’ll dither, naturally.

The quiet man separates fact from fiction. This task, he realizes, might take more than a day or two, but he is nothing if not patient. Steadfast in contemplation, he thoughtfully orders extrapolation for desert.

Regent's Estate, Hackney

This is a detail of a stainless steel sculpture called 'Extrapolation' by Lilane Lijn. Created in 1982 - it stands in the Sainsbury Centre Sculpture Part at the University of East Anglia. I think it stook in the original city library before it was razed to the ground in 1994. www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cv2g0e84pgno

I'm going to crawl out of my hole of darkness and despair and maybe try to see through a different light today despite the 4" of snow we received last night after a forecast of less than an inch.

 

We are fortunate as photographers and/or artists to have developed a way of seeing things differently and many of us have extrapolated that seeing into other aspects of our lives.

 

We may experience some very difficult times ahead, but right now we have the ability to share our ways of seeing - the world around us however restricted with those whose worlds have been totally upended and could use a view of a wide open landscape or spring flowers blooming, or whatever brightens your day.

 

I want to thank all of my photographer/artist friends who have helped me to develop my eye and keep incredible imagery in front of my face on Facebook, Instagram and Flikr on a daily basis.

 

And here is a shout out to those who are keeping us connected. Thanks to my grandson who despite yesterday's earthquake in SLC goes to work to climb cell phone towers to keep us all connected.

.

I had gone looking for rust in some overcast, flat light.

Found some, which led to an extreme slide.

Original in first comment box below.

Two nights ago I found a family of otters while looking for great gray owls. While I was watching the otters I was fairly sure that I heard one of the juvenile great grays across the river so last night I went back to put in a thorough search over there. They like the micro meadows surrounded by pine forest. They hang it out in low perches in the pine trees on the edges of the meadow to listen for voles. After an hour or so I had found signs of owls but no owls yet. I checked the satellite map view of my location to find the next small meadow. When I got to the edge I looked around to check the trees around the border and over on the far side there was something that looked a lot more like owl than tree. One of the keys to spotting owls is to train your brain to not see tree. This is a lot harder than it sounds as the brain seems to want to just extrapolate so it thinks "ok that's a tree. Let's move on." That's when I say "nice try brain. not so fast. that's an owl." A look through the camera confirmed that I found him. I spent the next half hour watching this adult great gray hunting in fading light in the pine forest of central Oregon. A rare and always awesome experience!

version 3

same photos

digitally extrapolated to 30 foot

series

The beautiful bristle-thighed curlew is indigenous, though uncommon, in Hawaii where it is known as kioea. This one keeps watch from the top of a headstone while several others rummage in the grass below. It has a distinctively long, decurved bill used to forage in tall grass, mud, sand, and reef flats exposed at low tide. The eponymous bristle-like feathers around the thighs are the field mark that differentiates it from the similar looking whimbrel. An annual trans-Pacific migrant summer nesting in western Alaska, it travels thousands of nonstop miles over the Pacific to spend the rest of the year on oceanic islands ranging from Hawaii to French Polynesian. Birds destined for the South Pacific overfly the Hawaiian archipelago making the kioea, along with the godwit; one of the longest nonstop migrants of any avian species. The entire worldwide population was estimated to be 10,000 individuals in 2003. Extrapolating recent counts in Tuamotu indicates the population may have declined to as little as 5,000 birds. Anecdotally, I saw more on Oahu last year (2024) than previous years.

The lighting and colors of these building near Edison Bridge on Caloosahatchee River demanded further exploration (Fort Myers, Florida)

same photo

digitally extrapolated

to 30 foot

series

No idea is hawklet is a proper extrapolation from owlet and eaglet but... The chicks are growing fast!! Moment of indecision

Lake Heron

New Zealand

 

Just so there's no misconception, this is a post process reflection. On the morning I was seeing this as I was driving in but by the time I arrived there was a slight breeze blowing across the lake which no longer had a reflection. This is an extrapolation of my imagination to what this could have looked like about 30 minutes before the actual shots were taken. an easy spot to get to as well - right at the south end of Lake Heron with a trailhead nearby.

 

[Instructional Video]

[Prints and Tutorials]

[Essential Field Guide Ebook]

Lincoln is the name of a huge giant sequoia located in Giant Forest in Sequoia National Park. It is currently considered by many to be the fourth largest tree in the world.

Lincoln features an irregular base with prominent burn scars on its northern, southern, and western faces. A small white burl can be seen on its northeastern face. The top of Lincoln appears bleached with many large branches pointing outward.

Wendell Flint, in his book To Find The Biggest Tree, Sequoia Natural History Association (2002) stated that the Lincoln Tree has a volume of 44,471 cubic feet. However, White and Pusateri, in Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, Stanford University Press (1949) indicated that the volume of the Lincoln Tree based on measurements made in the 1930s is 51,000 cubic feet, which would make the Lincoln Tree the second largest tree in the world, after the General Sherman Tree. Wendell Flint was somewhat critical of the earlier measurements and he stated that he thought that it was appropriate to exclude a portion of the irregular base of the tree from his volume calculations, which in addition to some extrapolation differences from the earlier measurements, explains the smaller volume of 44,471 cubic feet that he obtained compared to the earlier figure. Although he chose to exclude it, Flint stated that the excluded portion of the base could just as easily be included in the calculations, presumably leading to the alternative volume of 51,000 cubic feet. The Lincoln Tree has a maximum base diameter of 36.4 feet.

Two nights ago I found a family of otters while looking for great gray owls. While I was watching the otters I was fairly sure that I heard one of the juvenile great grays across the river so last night I went back to put in a thorough search over there. They like the micro meadows surrounded by pine forest. They hang it out in low perches in the pine trees on the edges of the meadow to listen for voles. After an hour or so I had found signs of owls but no owls yet. I checked the satellite map view of my location to find the next small meadow. When I got to the edge I looked around to check the trees around the border and over on the far side there was something that looked a lot more like owl than tree. One of the keys to spotting owls is to train your brain to not see tree. This is a lot harder than it sounds as the brain seems to want to just extrapolate so it thinks "ok that's a tree. Let's move on." That's when I say "nice try brain. not so fast. that's an owl." A look through the camera confirmed that I found him. I spent the next half hour watching this adult great gray hunting in fading light in the pine forest of central Oregon. A rare and always awesome experience!

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