View allAll Photos Tagged foregrounding
My Twitter handle is @CIOPhoto and I tweet my daily photos, about photography and about technology. The #tech hashtag can often be found in my tweets and on my conference table. Today's photo prompt was "foreground". With the early morning sun casting a nice hard shadow from the metal letters in the foreground, it was the perfect subject. Canon G15, 1/1250 sec @ f/2.8, ISO 200. www.ciophoto.com/
All of these plants in the foreground are nice for softening walls and edges, and will quickly claim attention. The fine textured plants in the foreground contrast with the bold Musschia and Brugmansia foliage at the porch front entry.
Taken at the Piet Oudolf designed Millennium Garden at Pensthorpe Wildfowl Reserve, Norfolk, UK. - 15th September, 2008
More wandering randomly, this time with the Xpan and an old roll of Gold 400 purchased awhile ago on the east coast of the US which has gone through multiple TSA scanners. Still in social isolation.
In the foreground, Jet Lawler, the Park Interpreter, instructs a student on how to take a water sample.
Uploaded by PE
The south coast at Coalcliff, NSW, Sydney, Australia.
Thanks a lot everyone. May you have more and more grace and peace.
In this photo I am focusing on the Starbucks coffee in the foreground while blurring the background.
In the foreground are 6 & 3.5 meter telescopes from the decommissioned CARMA Interferometer. In the background, one of two 27 meter telescopes in the solar interferometer at OVRO.
Foreground, backwards: US Steel CEO John Surma, USW President Leo Gerard, Robert Borosage CAF, Toby Chaudry.
The foreground is shown in this image mainly focusing on the rocks, but letting the sea and sunset in the background go slightly blurry.
the sculpture in the foreground is also Sheoak sticks with the same fiber mix stretched between panels...more images of this in construction over the coming days...
A nice little stone/rock structure with a small bridge in the background. This was the first picture I took with the much loved 50mm lens.
Foreground feature projecting into river = Mortar Geyser
Background feature with hose-like eruption column = Fan Geyser
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Geysers are hot springs that episodically erupt columns of water. They occur in few places on Earth. The highest concentration of geysers anywhere is at the Yellowstone Hotspot Volcano (northwestern Wyoming, USA).
Fan Geyser is a major feature in the Morning Glory Group of Yellowstone’s Upper Geyser Basin. It is located on the northeastern bank of the Firehole River, just downstream from Mortar Geyser. Fan Geyser consists of a series of vents oriented along a northeast-southwest fracture zone that goes through nearby Spiteful Geyser. From southwest to northeast, the principal vents of Fan Geyser are: River Vent, High Vent, Gold Vent, Angle Vent, Main Vent, and East Vent.
Eruptive activity at Fan Geyser currently takes several forms: "garbage", regular cycles, event cycles, and (major) eruptions. "Garbage" refers to disorganized low spouting from Fan's various vents. Regular cycles involve organized low spouting and splashing that starts with River Vent, progresses to High Vent and Gold Vent, and continues to Angle Vent. Eventually, the low spouting ends. Event cycles are characterized by slightly more unusual activity, including one or more pauses and resumptions in River Vent’s erupting, more energetic and higher spouting from High Vent, Gold Vent, and Angle Vent, and small splashing in the Main Vent. Major eruptions of Fan Geyser are almost always in concert with nearby Mortar Geyser (there have been exceptions in the past). Eruptions occur after an energetic event cycle and involve high spouting from East Vent, Main Vent, and all other vents. Eruption columns extend in various directions, resulting in a fan-like spray. Spouting often reaches the trail or past the trail. Eruptions are about 30 to 40 minutes in duration, and include one or more relatively brief pauses.
STORE FRONT: The Disappearing Face Of New York: New York Times Home Section 06.07.12
www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2012/06/06/greathomesanddestina...
Thursday June 7th, 2012 Home Section D5