View allAll Photos Tagged ghosting
I was playing with a flashlight the last time I was out shooting aurora along the Red Deer River north of Sundre, Alberta, creating a bit of a ghosting effect. The forecast for aurora is really strong tonight - unfortunately so is the forecast for cloud. Let's hope for some holes in the sky!
SIDE NOTE: I just noticed that my photo stream cracked 4 million visits in the last day or so. Thanks for all your views and comments.
There are two ghosts. They're the same man.
This scene is only a bit over a minute. He just couldn't wait and kept throwing the fishing line here and there. And eventually disappeared onto the jetty. I don't think he caught any fish.
When the room is quiet,
The daylight almost gone,
It seems there's something I should know...
Well, I ought to leave
But the rain it never stops
And I've no particular place to go
Just when I think I'm winning
When I've broken every door
The ghosts of my life
Blow wilder than before
Just when I thought I could not be stopped
When my chance came to be king
The ghosts of my life
Blew wilder than the wind
Well, I'm feeling nervous,
Now I find myself alone,
The simple life's no longer there
Once I was so sure
Now the doubt inside my mind
Comes and goes, but leads nowhere...
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Winchester%20Harbor/208/11...
"The ghost ship moves on the horizon
No one knows from whence she came
And no one knows whence she goes"
Yvonne Mason
After I set up the black backdrop studio kit & turned off lights. I fired the flash speedlight inside a light stencil & then shook the EL wire. I thought it was easy to do. It wasn't. After many tries, I finally figured out to do it right. Need to practice more before I go outside making ghosts. :)
Jæren, western coast of Norway. June 2010.
While the sand flew fast and low in the morning wind, the subtle dawn light revelead the sensual shapes of coastal sand dunes.
Today I published my last blog post this year; Favorite Photographs From 2010
with ten of my favorite photographs from 2010!
- Website: Fine Art Landscape Photography of Seung Kye Lee
- Blog: Seung Kye Lee Photography Blog
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Copyright © Seung Kye Lee.
The photograph must not be used without permission.
Bark detail from a gum tree.
In Australia, the common name "Ghost Gum" refers to a particular species of Eucalypt with white bark.
This image was captured for the Macro Mondays theme: "pareidolia".
Never let her kiss you..........
Yuki-onna
www.youtube.com/watch?v=LMQEn49tGHk
Wearing:
EMO-tions.. *SURI* - black-white
Tamayura *" junihitoe-Kouchiki Shiroshozoku (Heian-style)
Japanese clothing.Heian period (794-1185)
Urbex Session : Abandoned ghost tunnel
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Thanks ;)
My website : www.spiritofdecay.com
The area of Pescadero Point known as Ghost Tree derives its name from the white and gnarly local cypress trees in the area which call to mind ghosts or witches. Foresters predict that the few still living cypress trees will soon join their ghostly brethren due to a blight of beetles that will kill much of the cypress and pine in California over the next 20 years.
Legend tells of a particular spooky tree in the bunches that graces the coastline of swanky Pebble Beach. Supposedly the image of a “Lady in Lace” has often been spotted on dark foggy nights near the famed Ghost Tree, upsetting the motorists who are said to have seen her walking down the center of the 17 Mile Drive.
Ghost Ranch, Abiquiu, New Mexico, was originally the summer home of the artist Georgia O'Keefe but she eventually moved there permanently. These hills and rock formations were a continuing inspiration to her and are often represented in her paintings.
This view is from the Ghost Ranch Visitor Centre
You can see some of her paintings here
If you are familiar with the work of Ansel Adams you may recognise this photo of Georgia O'Keefe
The Bogeyman (or Boogeyman) Nebula is a dark cloud of dust and hydrogen that stalks the constellation Orion. In this orientation I reveal that is in fact Elmo who has been doing the stalking!
Happy Halloween!
See on Fluidr
OTA: PlaneWave CDK14
MOUNT: Software Bisque Paramount ME-II (no AOE)
CAMERA: SBIG STX-16803
GUIDER: Astrodon Mega MOAG
GUIDE CAMERA: Starlight Xpress UltraStar
REDUCER: na
SOFTWARE: The SkyX, SGP, PhD2, Pixinsight, Photoshop
FILTERS: Astrodon LRGBHα
ACCESSORIES: na
LOCATION: SRO
To see more of my work and to buy prints visit www.jklovelacephotography.com/pages/space
After a long time without shooting, I tryed yesterday some old experiments, in my original test, over than 20 years ago, I used my 35mm Canon, but HP don't provide yet the W7 drivers for my scanner (@#$%) and with one old aquarium and some milk and red watercolour.
Some settings, saturation, contrast, light and black was added.
Funny.
Sony Alpha700 w/ 18~70mm
Jan. 2010
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!
I photo'd the Sweden metal band Ghost at Pinnacle Bank Arena in Lincoln, Nebraska last night. Awesome! The show was great! It was great to be back and photo'd the concert.
Another from the ghost town of Sparks, OK. Looks to have been an old gas station and or convenience store.
This photo sparked a little debate among photographer friends: if everything is out of focus, is it still photography? And if that's not photography, what is it? Some liked it very much, others not at all.
But for me that is part of photography: breaking the rules intentionally and questioning them. For me the eye still has got a fixed point despite the blurring. This blurring leaves a lot room for interpretation. It reminds me a little bit of a magician walking towards the light with his cloak blowing. I don't know why, it was just my first thought.
What do you think about? Is it still photography?
Old projection lens: Meopta Meostigmat 50mm 1.3
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Dieses Foto hat unter befreundeten Fotografen eine kleine Debatte ausgelöst: Wenn alles unscharf ist, ist das dann überhaupt noch Fotografie? Und wenn das keine Fotografie ist, was ist es dann? Einigen hat es sehr gut gefallen, andere konnten damit überhaupt nichts anfangen.
Aber für mich gehört das zur Fotografie dazu: Auch mal absichtlich die anerkannten Regeln zu brechen und diese zu hinterfragen. Zumal das Auge für mich trotz der Unschärfe einen Fixpunkt hat und grade diese Unschärfe doch viel Spielraum für Interpretationen lässt. Mich erinnert das ein wenig an einen Magier der mit wehendem Umhang in Richtung Licht läuft. Wie ich darauf gekommen bin, weiß ich nicht, das war einfach mein erster Gedanke.
Wie seht ihr das? Ist das noch Fotografie?
Altes Projektionsobjektiv: Meopta Meostigmat 50mm 1.3