View allAll Photos Tagged ghost
I don't know the history behind this and other sculptures as you enter the ghost town of Rhyolite, NV, but this one caught my eye. I grunged it up for Sliders Sunday. HSS!
Beelitz Heilstätten - a stunning 'lost' place near Berlin
With Panasonic Lumix GX8 + Olympus Zuiko M. 9-18mm
The spirit of a dead person, especially one that is believed to appear to the living in bodily form or to haunt specific locations.
Hello guys this is my release for man cave i hope you like it <3 thank you so much for all the support !!
this gloves are fitted for Belleza and Legacy
Hey!
Dicky Beach, Qld, Australia.
I call this one **Ghost Ship 2**
I shot this image of the SS Dicky (R.I.P) with the Milky Way above it last May.
It's one of my fav shots so I gave it a re-edit and a nice cooler tone, the previous one was a warmer orange colour compared to the cooler blues in this one.
I've been going through old images and re-editing them since my style has changed a lot over the last year.
I hope you like this one, Thanks for looking!
You say that you're no good for me
'Cause I'm always tugging at your sleeve
And I swear I hate you when you leave
I like it anyway
My ghost
Where'd you go?
I can't find you in the body sleeping next to me
My ghost
Where'd you go?
What happened to the soul you used to be?
Custom pose found here: marketplace.secondlife.com/p/BD-Poses-Ghost/12545943
Taken @ maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Elvenshire/153/107/23
A slender ghost like tree in the middle of a cemetery on a darkish night. The lights from a distant village provided illumination for the wispy clouds overhead.
NGC 3242, is a planetary nebula located in the constellation Hydra, around 1400 to 2500 light years away. It is also known as the Ghost of Jupiter, or Jupiter's Ghost as its apparent size is similar to the Planet Jupiter. William Herschel discovered the nebula on February 7, 1785 from the Cape of Good Hope, in South Africa.
The nebula measures around two light years long from end to end, and contains a central white dwarf with an apparent magnitude of eleven. The inner layers of the nebula were formed some 1,500 years ago.
I have been collecting data on this for a few years now, from multiple cameras, and locations. So, now it was time to put it all together. It may not look like it, but this may be one of the toughest images I have attempted to process to date. The dynamic range is incredible. The red and blue gas regions to the left of the nebula are very dim, and the nebula itself very bright. There is also a lot of very dim dust throughout the full frame I wanted to keep. It gives an uneven Smokey red brown look throughout background. Both broad-band (Lum, Red Green Blue) and narrow-band (Ha, OIII) data were used to create the image to try and highlight different areas
The planetary has what looks like waves of matter blown away. This was very strong in OIII, and not present in the Ha data. Many galaxies are spread throughout the background.
Thanks for looking.
Exposure Details:
Lum 75X900
Red 27X450
Green 37X450
Blue 24X450
Ha 45X1200
OIII 38X1200
Total time 58 hours
Instruments Used:
10 Inch RCOS fl 9.1
Astro Physics AP-900 Mount
SBIG STL 11000m
FLI Filter Wheel
Astrodon Lum, Red, Green, Blue Filters
Baader Planetarium H-alpha 7nm Narrowband-Filter
Baader Planetarium O-III 8.5 Narrowband-Filter
Canon EOS 5D Mark II © 2016 Klaus Ficker. Photos are copyrighted. All rights reserved. Pictures can not be used without explicit permission by the creator
Cámara Nikon D800
Sigma 15mm f/2.8
Exposición 10
Aperture f/10
Lente 15 mm
Velocidad ISO800
BW 2950ºK
Linterna Xenon Luz Cálida
Polaroid SX-70 Alpha1 SE, Polaroid Originals Color SX-70 film.
Polaroid Week | Spring 2019 | Day 2 | 2/2
The Wreck Of The Demetrios II.
The wreck is the Demetrios II, a cargo ship built in 1964 by J J Sietas KG at their shipbuilding yard in Hamburg-Neuenfelder, Germany.
The ship is60 metres in length and weighing more than 900 tonnes.
The Honduran-flagged M/V Demetrios II ran aground off Paphos Lighthouse on 23 March 1998 in heavy seas during a voyage from Greece to Syria with a cargo of timber.
The crew were rescued and airlifted to the safety of Paphos by a British Military Helicopter.
The wreck remains on the rocks today, gradually rusting away. The story goes it’d cost more to salvage it than it’s worth, so it’s likely to stay there for a long time to come.
The ship meanwhile, was left stranded on the rocks, and has become a tourist attraction and local landmark.
Inside a kitchen of an old late 1800's home in Bodie, California. The entire town is a protected ghost town now that folks can visit for the sake of historicity. Photos are abundant.
A church, no longer in use. Located in the "ghost town" of Bradshaw, Texas, USA. For more on the history of Bradshaw, see: texasescapes.com/TexasTowns/Bradshaw-Texas.htm
Camera: Ansco Panda 620 toy camera, circa 1946. Definitely a "cute" camera! 60mm fixed-focus meniscus lens, plenty soft around the edges. I used a trimmed-down 120 roll and it was murder advancing the film; it even wrinkled the film itself slightly. In future, I'll respool the 120 onto an old 620 spool!
Film: Ilford FP4+ 120 film, ISO 125.
Developing: HC-110, Dilution B, 8 minutes.
Ghosts are Real - Leucistic/dilute plumage Bald Eagle (not sure about the exact technical term). A couple friends found and documented this bird around the bay from 2016-2019. Eventually this bird, "Lucky" as we called him, settled down with a normal plumage female in south Santa Clara County and successfully raised offspring. The bird hasn't been seen since 2019, and presumably moved on or passed. Nevertheless, it's most impressive that he beat the odds and survived to adulthood and passed on his genes. Nature is truly inspiring and I'm not sure I'll ever get a chance to see a bird like this up close!
If you'd like to see more of my work, feel free to checkout my IG: @sswildlife
Species: Bald Eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus)
Location: Los Gatos, CA, USA
Date Taken: February 2017
Equipment: Canon EOS 7D Mark II + EF 400mm f5.6L + 1.4x III Extender
Settings: 1/1000s, ISO: 1600, f/8 @560mm, Handheld
I seldom can capture planes in flight with much detail when they are very high up and traveling fast. This little propeller plane was low enough for me to get a mediocre image out of it, so I started playing with some textures for effect. I liked the moon, but it still wasn't quite what I wanted. That's when I thought of putting the uncropped image over the cropped one, and got this pair of planes, with one looking somewhat like a ghost plane! It was rather fun, even if not the best image out there, so I might try similar effects in the future with crisper images and see how they turn out.
The reason I wanted the moon in it was because years ago my brother and I went for a night flight in a plane that was a lot like this one, with a friend who was going for his pilot's license. When we left the runway, it was daytime, but we continued flying north until the sun set and the moon came up. It was really quite a sight to see! It was a lot like flying in a VW Bug! There were windows in the one we were in, and a backseat, which was where I was. the full moon that night was spectacular from up in the sky like that, and we flew right over the ocean.
The pilot, Bill, turned south to head home, and began flying over A-1-A, the beachside highway that runs pretty much the length of the state, with breaks here and there. When he did so, he cut the engine! Let me tell you, I know it's part of their training, but there's nothing quite as scary as being up in the sky in a little tin can, and suddenly the engine cuts out! that little thing that sounded like a lawn mower is a comforting sound, lol! He told us not to worry, since he had lined up the highway below just in case the engine wouldn't come back on, and would just glide down and land if necessary! I was quite relieved when the noisy little motor started back up!
I will never forget our night flight in the little plane under a full moon! (No ghosts, though!)
Poznan, Poland
Summer
An afternoon tram ride.
Reflections....
I rather enjoy the feeling of having seen something before but not entirely sure where, how or why. I enjoy the feeling as it teases my mind trying to recall the exact place, but instead it dredges up all kinds of interesting, dusty memories with it. Images like this one here, are kind of like that for me. They happen, I see it and I am immediately drawn into a feeling of having seen it before...somewhere...in my life and conjures up dusty ghosts of the past. There is something appealing yet at the same time a bit disturbing...haunting. And when the dust settles again, it will be forgotten. Kind of anyway. Luckily I have my camera with me more often than not these days so when the ghost appears I can easily catch it. Kind of.
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Bodie is a ghost town in the Bodie Hills east of the Sierra Nevada mountain range in Mono County, California, United States, about 75 miles (121 km) southeast of Lake Tahoe. It is located 12 mi (19 km) east-southeast of Bridgeport,at an elevation of 8379 feet (2554 m). As Bodie Historic District, the U.S. Department of the Interior recognizes it as a National Historic Landmark. Also registered as a California Historical Landmark,the ghost town officially became Bodie State Historic Park in 1962, and receives about 200,000 visitors yearly. Starting in 2012, Bodie is administered by the Bodie Foundation, which uses the tagline Protecting Bodie's Future by Preserving Its Past.
Quelle: Wikipedia