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Indulge me if you will.........
I don't normally go in for that HDR malarkey........,most of the shots I've seen look way overcooked.....but
I took this with my phone cam,put it in Snapseed and pressed the HDR-a-like button and this came out.I have to admit I like it.....lol ;)
Thanks for looking,
Chris.
Danger / Google It / Warning sign. Colossal Media, working on another outdoor advertsing mural in Bushwick, Brooklyn, NYC.
Photo taken with the Fujifilm X100F.
Justin
Photographer/Illustrator: Fred H. Politinsky
Subject: Outside the Box Photography
*This photo-composite is based on my photograph of Peter Bernstein in performance.
View my photographs on the following websites:
www.flickriver.com/photos/jackpot999
www.fluidr.com/photos/jackpot999
www.flickr.com/photos/jackpot999
GOOGLE at NPR JAZZ PHOTOGRAPHY POOL - FLICKRIVER (Look for photographs by Bebop18.)
ALL OF MY PHOTOGRAPHS ARE COPYRIGHTED. ALL RIGHTS ARE RESERVED. DO NOT USE, EDIT OR COPY ANY OF MY PHOTOGRAPHS WITHOUT MY PERMISSION.
Pixel 6a
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Хвала на посети, коментару / омиљеној fotografiji!
Merci pour une visite, commentaire / fave!
Gracias por una visita, comentar / fave!
Grazie per una visita, commento / fave!
Thank you for a visit, comment / fave!
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Please do not use this image without permission!
Thanks for all the positive comments on the Google Street View series, and special thanks to Ming-chun who suggested trying HDR, which I've done with this set of images.
The background graffiti blows away a nearby photographer. Riga, Latvia. Original image from Google Street View.
These flowers changes colors depending on on your facial expression. Our son brought us to take your Parents to Work Day at Google and these flowers were in one of the buildings. The black dot in the pink flower was the camera.
Libelloides coccajus - Ascafalo bianco
www.facebook.com/WashiInPuntadiPiedi
La Vallée d'Aoste à ma guise - La Valle d'Aosta a modo mio - Aosta Valley in my own way
Vivre en Montagne, au quotidien, pour satisfaire la Curiosité de la Photographie de la Nature...
Valle d'Aosta - Vallée d'Aoste
(Une Montagne d'émotions...)
Clickalps Photography - Troise Carmine - Washi
I miei Video amatoriali su:
www.youtube.com/user/Washi59/videos
Canon EOS 7D Mark ll
www.linkedin.com/in/troisecarminewashi?trk=nav_responsive...
Taken in the Kazimierz district, Krakow, Poland.
My Portfolio : My Twitter : My Google+ profile : 500px : Tumblr
From a recent visit to the famous "GooglePlex" in Mountain View.
I think the name really comes from the number of Google bikes one can find there...alot.
two shots of tonight's sundown,,,,6.42pm
using a Cokin Filter ...but with different setting
You have been sent 1 picture.
IMG_0081.JPG
These pictures were sent with Picasa, from Google.
Try it out here: picasa.google.com/
Our gift for Google Plus on one year anniversary. See the BTS video, it is cool: www.photigy.com/the-making-of-google-happy-birthday-googl...
We’ve crossed the border into Mexico on my Pan-American Trek using Google Street View. The border town of Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, is very different from its cousin town of Laredo, Texas, but the cultural crossovers are still very evident. Nuevo Laredo is a key logistics hub in Mexico.
It’s been 8800 km from Dead Horse, Alaska, to Laredo, Texas, and it will be about 2400 km from Nuevo Loredo to Tapachula, at the Mexico-Guatemala border. Unfortunately, Google Street View isn’t available in the rest of Central America, so we’ll be doing a virtual flight from Mexico to Columbia, South America.
Some initial thoughts about the trip from Alaska to Texas:
* Google Street View is one of the most important photographic endeavors of history, and Street View drivers are photography pioneers. Really.
* A drive in Alaska can be the most boring imaginable or the most glorious.
* Alberta Highway 93, otherwise known as the Icefields Parkway, or Promenade des Glaciers, is heavenly.
* Towns really do have archetypal layouts; the “other side of tracks” is literally true.
* Decaying brick, wood, and metal are sustainable art.
* The US is a visibly Christian country.
* Grain and livestock businesses still exist in Grain Belt, but fewer people are needed for labor, so almost everyone has migrated, leaving modern ghost towns.
* Signage is often purposefully quirky, an artistic brand expression.
* No one is outside in the US, they’re only visible getting into, inside, or getting out of cars.
* Wall art falls into three categories – gang or random graffiti, “endorsed” wall art (by a town or business), and “unendorsed” wall art, the latter being typically the most intense and artistic.
* More old buildings exist as you go south, probably because of increased density and less harsh weather.
* The Texas Panhandle looks like it’s been standing up to a strong wind for a long time.
* Texans use trees purposefully to frame their houses.
* Mexican-Hispanic influence increases nonlinearly as a function of closeness to the Mexican border.
* Abandoned buildings are a luxury of a rich society; the US can afford to build structures that last and afford to leave them to decay without stealing their materials or re-using them in some intelligent way.
* Is it possible that there’s a “Law of Conservation of Interestingness”? In awesome landscapes the buildings are boring and aren’t made to last; in boring landscapes (dry landscapes?) the buildings are made to be more interesting and last a long time, which in turn makes them even more interesting.
* Is virtual photography a new field?