View allAll Photos Tagged heavenly...
Angel, the heavenly worker
Angel, el obrero celestial
Dom St. Jakob
St. Jacob's Cathedral
Catedral de Santiago
(Pfarrgasse - Innsbruck, Tirol - Österreich)
Vielen Dank für Ihre Kommentare und Favoriten
Thanks for your comments and faves
Gracias por vuestros comentarios y favoritos
I was on my flight back home from Vancouver. As the Boeing 777-300 jetliner took off from Vancouver International Airport and headed North West over the Pacific Ocean, I saw this magnificent view with some mist under the quickly diminishing late afternoon sunlight. The shades have a touch of what I would call "heaven's kind of blue"!
Explore #6 (Highest position 2013-05-29) - Thank you for stopping by and for your encouraging comments and faves!
Explore #123 Explore Takeover (2026-04-29) - Thank you for stopping by and for your encouraging comments and faves!
The purple emperor is very rare and does not feed from flowers but instead on the honeydew secreted by aphids, sap oozing from oak trees, and on dung, urine, and animal carcasses.
Grote weerschijnvlinder - Purple emperor (Apatura iris)
Explore #1, FP, & Interestingness :) Thanks so much everyone. Pretty excited about this but surprised that of all the shots this one made it there.
Enough cars and street lights, it's time for more St. Andrews Church indoor shots. This one was taken behind the altar. I would've made a vertorama but there was a back side of a wooden stand right below that wasn't very appealing. To create this shot I did do some symmetry flips but if you look hard enough there are key differences that make it look somewhat real. I'm off now, Thanks for stopping by, and I'll hit up your streams later today.
Tonemapped HDR made from 7 exposures. Brought it into CS3 and blended 3 exposures back onto it. A symmetry flip here and a symmetry there, a bit of masking and bit of blend, and Kapow!! Curves, contrast, slight cooling filter, saturation, unsharp mask.
Collective 52 Photo Project "2016"
Week 7 - H is for ...
Barú marshmallows in dark chocolate
with sea salt caramel
... Heavenly delicious !
edit based on Kim's preset 'chocolate'
Another view from the top of High Wheeldon, quite similar to the last shot i posted from this location but the dramatic light was too good to ignore. Sony A7II/16-35mm.
Press L for a larger view :-)
Und ausnahmsweise mal pünktlich zum Staircase Friday hier noch ein schickes Treppenhaus aus der Münchner Innenstadt.
Bearbeitung stark inspiriert von dem großartigen Karsten Gieselmann.
The original was a mural of an unknown musician on the side of a building in Hallowell Maine. Photoleap was used to make it "heavenly".
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Another shot of the beautiful St Patrick's Cathedral. This is my first attempt at doing a night-time HDR.
Details
Camera: Canon EOS 5D Mk II
Lens: Canon EF 16-35mm f/2.8L II USM
Exposure: 13 exposures (-2,-1.66.-1.33,-1,-.66,-.33,0,+.33,+.66,+1,+1.33,+1.66+2 EV)
Aperture: f/3.5
Focal Length: 16 mm
ISO Speed: 200
Accessories: Canon RC1 Wireless Remote, Expodisc,
Date and Time: 17 July 2009 7.06pm
Post Processing:
Imported into Lightroom
Exported 13 exposures to Photomatix
Tonemap generated HDR using detail enhancer option
Re-imported back into Lightroom
Exported HDR and 0 EV exposure to CS3 and layered HDR on top of 0 EV
Brush tool to even out the sky
Curves layer for contrast
Noise reduction layer
LucisArt 3 SE filter
Re-imported back into Lightroom
Slightly cropped in Lightroom
Vibrance adjustment in Lightroom
Sharpening in Lightroom
Added keyword metadata
Exported as 3000 x 2000 JPEG
View Original Size
Disclaimer these pics were taken by bestie Brenda Valmont. Please show her some love: www.flickr.com/photos/bvalmont/
I am told that true blue is a relatively rare color in flowers. But this poppy is also uncommon to see because it is very hard to grow. A native of the Himalayas, it requires cold temperatures all year (and the room with the poppies was indeed cooler than the other rooms). After all that, it blooms for about one week.
Light from stained glass windows on the West side of The Cathedral of the Good Shepherd, San Sebastián, Spain. I think you must be here at a certain time of day and the year to see this colourful effect.
Here’s my obligatory shot of Comet NEOWISE that graced our northern hemisphere skies about two months ago. I had been looking forward to seeing another great comet since my childhood days of seeing Hyakutake and Hale-Bopp. While NEOWISE did not quite become a great comet, it was still a worthy sight to see.
I did not fare too well on my first few tries at shooting the comet. Rusty astrophotography skills, smoky skies, and light pollution all factored into mediocre shots. Finally, Aaron and I headed up to the mountains where skies were much darker with less light pollution. There, the comet shone brightly to the naked eye and the ion tail was visible in my photos. The final image was 30 light frames stacked to reduce the high ISO noise.
Now that it has been almost two years since the world was inundated with Neowise comet photos, I feel it's now safe to post another of my captures of this celestial event. Here, I caught it over Sedona's Thunder Mountain, which was nicely lit by the lights of town.
My hellebores are in full bloom and the flowers are so big and beautiful this year! Hope they will brighten your day! If you don't have a few of these in your gardens you are really missing out on a wonderful plant!
60. Heavenly Souls - Poland - 3/04/2017...
Sony SLT A55V + Tamron 90.0 mm...
Cat: Close-up ...
© 2016 Zbigniew Walkiewicz...
“Sometimes I arrive just when God's ready to have somone click the shutter.” - Ansel Adams... [ 182 ]
a smooth surface, small ripples in the water are the only indication that this is a reflection and not the real sky.
“I will love the light for it shows me the way, yet I will endure the darkness because it shows me the stars.” ~Og Mandino
Tsuchinshan-ATLAS Comet
Crater Lake National Park, OR
Comet viewing was much better at Crater Lake with wide open views though there were some thin clouds. Choppy waters from the wind prevented capturing a reflection of the comet, but the nearly full moon lit up the crater walls to my advantage.
The fog season should soon come (my first Dubai fog shot ever was shot on October 10th 2012), in the meantime allow me to post an old shot from February this year (never posted yet).
Nikon D800 & Nikkor 14-24mm & LucrOit Filter System (ND 9 stops). ISO 100 f/22 40s.
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