View allAll Photos Tagged grayscale
This is a shoutout to Ansel Adams, I know that this would never live up to any of his standards, but it was inspired by his work.
Okefenokee Nature Photography Workshop 2009
My friend Suzy at the Meadowvale Conservation Area in Mississauga, ON., Canada. May 2006. Minolta SRT 102.
Along the same vein as my other multiple wear pieces, this necklace is made with keishe and round peacock pearls, labradorite and a large bostwana agate pendant.
The pendant piece (agate and circular frame), can be removed from the chain, allowing the chain to be worn by itself at its full 36" length, or doubled (with or without pendant) to its 18" length. The chain is also wearable, multi-wrapped as a bracelet, or strung through belt loops as a chic touch to any outfit.
The forest river, naturally grayscaled by the colors of winter (and digitally grayscaled by me).
20091229-109
What a great day! I was walking next me fiancée at esplanade in waterfront while the fog wrap the landscape when some mexican sailboats were passing through the scene. Apparently sailsboats were practicing because of competition. On the other hand, in land, people were fishing, diving and catching shells on the rocks due to low tide and calm water. I just try to align the sailboat and the fisher man. By the way, did you see the diver?
Brightinstar 50mm f1.4.
#brightinstar50mmf1.4
Peggy 2LE: a new, smaller open-source LED display project, based on Peggy 2.
Read more about this here.
Edited Hubble Space Telescope image of the galaxy NGC 5643 in which a recent supernova occurred (but is not visible here). There are several foreground stars visible as well - they are the ones with the spikes of light. Grayscale variant.
Original caption: This stunning image by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope features the spiral galaxy NGC 5643 in the constellation of Lupus (The Wolf). Looking this good isn’t easy; thirty different exposures, for a total of 9 hours observation time, together with the high resolution and clarity of Hubble, were needed to produce an image of such high level of detail and of beauty. NGC 5643 is about 60 million light-years away from Earth and has been the host of a recent supernova event (not visible in this latest image). This supernova (2017cbv) was a specific type in which a white dwarf steals so much mass from a companion star that it becomes unstable and explodes. The explosion releases significant amounts of energy and lights up that part of the galaxy. The observation was proposed by Adam Riess, who was awarded a Nobel Laureate in physics 2011 for his contributions to the discovery of the accelerating expansion of the Universe, alongside Saul Perlmutter and Brian Schmidt.
Edited New Horizons annotated PR image of Pluto's geology (so far as known), taken on 10 July 2015. Annotation from NASA.