View allAll Photos Tagged hyper,

My shoot with model Jamie-Lyn and Hyper Tension Hotrod, this Hotrod was previously photographed by Roy Varga

"If you have been unsuring and very hesitant if M. Erviansen Graphics Design can have helped your solution to promote, grow and excel your company, so your income increases dramatically, then you don't order graphic design to M. Erviansen Graphics Design!"

  

Contact:

Telephone, Whatsapp, Line: 0857 0280 3075

Email: merviansengraphicsdesign@gmail.com

  

-M. Erviansen Graphics Design (Professional Graphic Designer Hyper Power Artist from Indonesian), Pekalongan, Central Java, Indonesia, 2018-

  

flic.kr/p/24XLqPq

Just went to pick up a few QUICK things at the market....

  

7 Likes on Instagram

 

2 Comments on Instagram:

 

soundnest_: This one is for you @kate_land_fiddly you cloud fiend.

 

kate_land_fiddly: So awesome! 🌈🐙💨

  

A dream @ a two-speed engine....

 

***

"Hyper-Modorrez"

Un sueño a motor de dos tiempos...

 

"Rave the Planet"

Berlin Tiergarten, Straße des 17. Juni

Ferrari LaFerrari Aperta - Laguna Seca - Salinas, CA

I didnt like a certain photo, so heres the gold version by itself.

this wonderful mask was made by Forge of the Mask Makers at shapeways.

and the eyes were custom made by DriftingFarandWide at Etsy

Hyper Focal Distance: Both the distant windmill and sign near by (right hand side) is sharp. Full frame camera @ 28mm f/16. Focused at a distance of appr. 2-3 yards (Hyperfocal Distance).

Processed by: mavenimagery Lab, Universal Studio, Californa.

 

Hyper-Realistic HDR image PROCESSED with IRET (Iris Range Enhancement Technology)

IRET (Iris Range Enhancement Technology and MavenFilters are products of mavenimagery Labs Innovation.

Copyright 2012 by mavenimagery Labs Inc. All rights reserved.

This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. For private, editorial or commercial use contact mavenimagery.

 

Brief On HDR: This image has been intentionally produced as Hyper-real HDR for a being a survey conducted by mavenimagery in association with Photomatix Pro 4 Beta. The result of the survey and gathered data will be published in UK's and US's major Photography magazines. We believe HDRI Technology has become a trend (HDR almost became synonymous with with particular style of tone mapping which is mostly used to produce images with a candy-like garrish colors and 'cartoonish' or more like impressionistic paintings), rather than what it initially was meant to be...it was meant to capture, at least, 14 EVs (Exposure Values) as opposed to the conventional high-end cameras' capability of capturing only a miserable 5-9EV's. Hello? The eye sees, on any given day, 24EV's (1.000.000.000:1 contrast ratio). All the HDR images at mavenimagery are not really HDR images. So are yours, my Flickr-HDR Groups-on-a-High Saturated-horse, sometimes with missing an ear or a tree yonder assailed by "Enemy Photons" that strike your sensor without you being aware...not that would matter if you were aware. You'd still be enslaved to your ignorance (not to be ashamed of) of tone mapping provided you by numerous HDR softwares who themselves are students of HDRI, learning, ripping you off along the way as they're trying to fund their experiments with your money. Think! Harry Potter and George Lucas' Star Trek were the only ones to be produced in HDRI Technology....Now! Do you see any resemblance to the "tone mapping" by current HDR imagine soft wares? I know you don’t! If I only point out excessive obliterated pixels and candy-like saturated colors, I'd make my points. Now, there's nothing with trends or fashion and that 'gritty, garrish HDR look' can be very appealing since we're so accustomed to the glossy images in the media. But they're here for limited time only...Just like break-dance. Fact: as of today, there is no market for HDR images (OK, mavenimagery sold a few for commercial use, but a few doesn't count)...you can't view it, you can print. HDR technology is still in its infancy and may take 10-15 years to be supported by all formats, conventional prints and displays etc. Remember. We're still in transition from DVD to Blu-Ray. It’s been more than 7 seven years and it will take perhaps another 5 years or more to acquire Blu-Ray supported devices. Yes, the current Blu-Ray technology is not real HD either, but this not a concern of this subject, although relatively connected to each other via display devices.

Finally, the image you and I can display or print is not a 32-bit HDR image, but a 32-bit image converted (tone mapped) to 16-bit TIFF (MDR, Medium Dynamic Range)...Aha! (Houston We've got Problem. We can’t post you the Heavenly Colors of the moon in 16-bit TIFF’s either, BUT ONLY in 8-bit jpeg’s. More data loss. We apologize for the inconvenience), and then to 8-bit jpeg for display and prints...an image has to always end in a print. Tip: Save your HDR Images as hdr.<Radiance RGBE until the day comes...and, mean while, enjoy trending and funking, but do not insult our intelligence. Get off your miserable Pony horses, smell the stimulus of coffee and label your work like "Unrealistic HDR. This is not how I saw this image, sorry. This is my interpretation of an artistic image" or "This is sur-realistic....” Whatever the Devil's Horn, it may be!" do not call it HDRI! I cannot stop you from kidding yourself...but the genuine quality and the naked truth will stop you! As it did stop all the trends and fashions...

 

SpecialThanks

●AutoPlazaDank www.ap-dank.com

●Pro Composite  www.pro-composite.jp

●Powercraft    www.power-craft.jp

This is one of my favorite 3-D pictures of my oldest son. It was taken during the summer of 2013. I ran across it in my archive tonight and remembered how much I enjoyed it. I usually don't post what I consider to be 'chaos' photos... in other words; shots that look like run-of-the-mill vacation photos with tons of people milling through them. But, I clearly remember sitting on a bench under an umbrella and surveying this scene and thinking about how good it would look in hyper stereo, so I told my boy to get in the shot. These few years later, it still holds up for the visual feast that it is. Of course, it's better to view interlaced, but this is Flickr, so there you have it. Enjoy Toontown; and area of Disneyland that never appeared in "Disneyland by Night" because they close this area of the park before dark.

 

To see this picture in 3-D, sit 2-3 feet from the monitor and gently cross your eyes so that the two images become three. The one in the middle will be in 3-D. If you are finding this difficult, you may be trying too hard. Viewing full screen is best.

"Rave the Planet"

Berlin Tiergarten, Straße des 17. Juni

Samsung digital camera

Kodak Retina IIIc

Rodinal

EpsonF3200

Expired Ilford HP4Plus

Some time I fee life in Hong Kong happens at a hyper pace. Hopping across the street in a down pour while dialing your cell phone. Not a second wasted.

Hyper Tension, Karachi

de tres belles BAUDOU HYPER MAJOR

Dunes. Namib Naukluft Conservation Area, Namibia. Nov/2015

 

The Namib-Naukluft National Park is a national park of Namibia encompassing part of the Namib Desert (considered the world's oldest desert) and the Naukluft mountain range. With an overall area of 49,768 km2 (19,216 sq mi), the Namib-Naukluft is the largest game park in Africa and the fourth largest in the world.[1] The most well-known area of the park is Sossusvlei, which is the main visitor attraction in Namibia.

 

A surprising collection of creatures survives in the hyper-arid region, including snakes, geckos, unusual insects, hyenas, gemsboks and jackals. More moisture comes in as a fog off the Atlantic Ocean than falls as rain, with the average 106 millimeters of rainfall per year concentrated in the months of February and April.

The winds that bring in the fog are also responsible for creating the park’s towering sand dunes, whose burnt orange color is a sign of their age. The orange color develops over time as iron in the sand is oxidized, like rusty metal; the older the dune, the brighter the color.

 

These dunes are the tallest in the world, in places rising more than 300 meters (almost 1000 feet) above the desert floor. The dunes taper off near the coast, and lagoons, wetlands, and mudflats located along the shore attract hundreds of thousands of birds.

 

‘Namib’ means open space and the Namib Desert gave its name to form Namibia – “land of open spaces”. The park was established in 1907 when the German Colonial Administration proclaimed the area between the Swakop River and the Kuiseb River a game reserve. The park's present boundaries were established in 1978 by the merging of the Namib Desert Park, the Naukluft Mountain Zebra Park and parts of Diamond Area 1 and some other bits of surrounding government land.

1 2 ••• 9 10 12 14 15 ••• 79 80