View allAll Photos Tagged geometry
我們的生活被幾何牢牢環抱,受幾何的擺弄。有些情感是難解的三角關係,也有人天天被困在方框的螢幕前。
幾何是要有點鋒芒的界線,是非分明,你在你的草原,我在我的荒野,井水不犯河水,各自想念。
#taipei #taiwan #geometry #dogwood52 #dogwood2019 #dogwoodweek26 #week26 #doityourself #blackandwhite #applestore
[This photo is for C. London's 52 Weeks of Photography Challenge - www.clondon.me/blog/52weeks0]
Challenge of the week is an open interpretation of "Geometry". Shelter in place wields its heavy weight again on this one as I stared at the ceiling in the basement while doing my quarantine workouts.
Unscientific but illustrative comparison of three French bicycle geometries: Motoconfort "Cyclotouriste", Castelot/Mareze "Campeur", and Gitane "Coureur"
Sham Shui Po Police Station, Hong Kong
Leica M3 Summaron 35mm f/3.5 Goggles
Kodak Tmax 400 (Hand Rolled)
Epson V700
TGC4, one of the Subway's two Track Geometry Cars, rumbles across the diamonds at the junction of the Myrtle Avenue and Jamaica Lines. It's returning from a run on the Canarsie Line and is not taking measurements, which can be known because the array of lights on the front are not lit.
TGC4
Myrtle Ave Station
Jamaica Line - BMT
Olympus OM-D E-M5 & M.Zuiko 17mm 1:1.8
A straight, non-HDR photo with a bit of a retro look to it, plenty of strong lines, shapes and textures. I'm actually wondering what groups might be appropriate for this work, could it be construed as artistic? or not?.
Track Geometry train W001-16 was making a northbound trip up the Toledo Sub on a partly sunny Tuesday evening. Fortunately, the sun had perfect timing and lit up the scene nicely. They were testing all of the siding tracks on this trip. The previous day's southbound run was all on the main track.
The CSX Geometry Train (W003) flies by the Main Street Crossing on the West Shore branch of the CSX Rochester Subdivision.
365/2021 - Expanding Horizons ~ 100/365
Taken for Flickr Lounge ~ Plastic
Thank you to everyone who pauses long enough to look at my photo. All comments and Faves are very much appreciated
Urban Geometry. © Copyright 2019 G Dan Mitchell - all rights reserved.
A woman walks past a building with a display under construction.
One element of the urban/street world that fascinates me is the juxtaposition of "perfect" structures — geometric patterns, shiny metal, highly designed forms — with the imperfect and always-deteriorating nature of this world — peeling paint, dirty sidewalks, constant construction and reconstruction, accumulated dirt, and so forth. Long ago the fact that urban structures fell short of the theoretical perfection offered in architectural drawings bothered me, but now I find it fascinating.
This is an example of one of those little scenes that always seem to catch my eye. The facade fo this building is, from one perspective, quite boring, even though its patterned wall and metal lights depart from typical (and often rather plain) urban surfaces. But notice some interesting things about it. For example, because the sidewalk and street are inclined, the designer was faced with a question: align the metal form beneath the windows with the sidewalk or align them with one another? And if you align with the sidewalk — as is done here — what do you do about the size of the windows and about their alignment? (The sizes were kept the same, leaving the lower bank out of alignment... but they are "corrected" in the second level!) Beyond that, the contrast with the op-art nature of the under-construction window dressing is fascinating. I waited for a passer-by to enter the scene before making the exposure.
G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, "California's Fall Color: A Photographer's Guide to Autumn in the Sierra" is available from Heyday Books and Amazon.
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