View allAll Photos Tagged inverting
A series of icicles that seem to grow up from the ground.
Note: These are actually captures of what I saw!
I used Photoshop to give the images a little more "color/depth" but nothing else!
If you look at the rest of the series, you will see that these little gems are REAL!
(I'm still trying to figure out who they were formed!)
14мм | ƒ/3,5 | 1/500sec | ISO100
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This photo is really quite dull in its original colors ... but I think the inversion really allows it to take on a life of its own.
Macro Mondays, Strobist Sundays Sideways, Upside-down or Backwards themes.
Vivitar 285 shoot through umbrella right. Reflector left. Gridded blue gelled YN-460 at the back. Ebay triggers.
Mientras me invade mi alrededor, empapo el aire que me rodea, mi todo con un extra de explosión discontinua.
Más, menos, es igual, acción reacción en cadena.
Rumblemumbles is due soon and it is very hot.
I decided to take a photo of some small Proteas on the iPad while waiting, and used Photoshop Express to play with it.
Here the colours are inverted with a circular vignette in place.
If Mrs Mail sees what I did to her flowers, I could be in trouble.
My mother tells me that research shows children have better brain development when they occasionally do somersaults or stand on their heads.
Zeiss Ikon ZM
Voigtlander 35 mm f/1.4 Nokton Classic MC II
Reflx Lab Mini Flash
Cinestill 800T (@ 400)
Bellini 3-bath C-41 kit (+0, 38 °C)
Scanned with Fujifilm GFX100S
Inverted with Negative Lab Pro
Processed with Adobe Lightroom
A White-breasted Nuthatch (Sitta carolinensis), clinging to the underside of a tree trunk, at Kumeyaay Lake, in San Diego, CA.
20100720-141
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This image is free to use under an Attribution-NonCommercial-Sharealike Creative Commons license. Be sure to properly attribute the image, and please let me know if you use it.
So "Flight" was a very good movie, it reminded me I shot this earlier this year...SOOC except for a slight edit near the bottom, as this is really part of a giant statue consisting of 3 real T-38 jet planes at the Owatonna Airport.
A map of the world where the elevations have been negated, so land swaps places with the sea.
Generated using QGIS. The raster calculator was used to invert the elevations around sea level, using the expression
-1.0 * "layername@1"
and subsequently clipped so only the land remains, again using the Raster calculator and the expression
("layername@1">0.0) * "layername@1"
That removed everything below sea level (which used to be land) so that the hillshade could be applied (using Multiply blending mode, 50% opacity)
Used ETOPO1 elevation and bathymetry data (via NOAA). I'm using the bedrock rather than surface elevations, which explains why Greenland and Antartica have some patches of 'land' - these land masses have areas beneath the ice that are below sea level.
Was surprised to find a little island emerging in what was China - this corresponds to the small Turfan Basin.
Interesting to see how the textures of the sea bed differ to those on land.
P47D Thunderbolt, nicknamed "Jug" by the Allies and "Jabo" by the Germans - a general term for fighter bomber rather than specifically the P47.
Taken at Airwaves Portrush 2019.
Olympus EE1 dot finder
+0.33 EV
Trying some different things, like this inverted forest after seeing LED-Eddie's inversion shot, simple but effective.
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