View allAll Photos Tagged inverting
Inverted colour on the disc.
4 panes for the disc and proms.
Lunt L60pressure tuner, DMK21. Stacked in AS2!, post processed in Photoshop.
didn't they know it was supposed to go inside?
(this photo was featured on new york real estate blog curbed.com: ny.curbed.com/archives/2010/09/10/dumbos_priciest_listing... )
This is a long exposure night shot. Using a small flashlight to illuminate the crashing waves against the shore (very dark scenery, cloudy, wet slippery rocks). Basically, everything in the foreground was illuminated by the flashlight and would have turned out unexposed otherwise. There was a strong wind in my face. I post processed towards black and white negative and did some other tricks to get the winter looks. South of Sweden has lacked snow for most of this winter so this is my contribution. ;-)
Located in Wawa, Nasugbo Batangas
The sun itself plus its own reflection portrays an inverted exclamation point in which it attracted my attention to capture the whole scene.
Exposure 25
Aperture f/16.0
Focal Length 17 mm
ISO Speed 50
Exposure Bias 0 EV
2014 July - Dyxum challenge: Think outside the box.
Queenscliff lighthouse.
I have been going back through my photos now that I have upgraded from LR3 to LR5.5 and all the added goodness that entails.
Many of the shots I took that looked so-so can now really pop, and I have been doing some extreme processing to turn them into art rather than just a photo.
There were a few relfection shots I took and despite my increase in PP skill, I could not for the life of me get this one to really sizzle.
Not to say that it does now sizzle, but inverting it changed it, for me, in a way I find very interesting.
I find my eye drawn to the lighthouse, then it explores the picture, only to be drawn back around again to the lighthouse as my eye follows the natural flow of the rock pool. I am also intrigued by how it looks like the shot was taken from under water, in the rock pool. A bit of an optical illusion going on there.
I rarely invert my shots in PP - um never, in fact, so I am posting this as an Out of the box PP example.
Roaming around Iron County on the very warm day before the fishing opener, I stopped at Black River Harbor and was mesmerized by a Fata Morgana mirage, caused by a cold layer of air above the water. I've seen them on Lake Michigan in Manitowoc in spring, but this one was particularly strong and spanned the entire horizon. This shot shows multiple upright and inverted views of Michigan Island, the easternmost Apostle, normally barely visible on the horizon about 20 miles away. The white line at the center is the Michigan Island Light Tower. This light, very similar to the Rawley Point Lighthouse near Two Rivers, has a unique history - it was originally built in 1880 at Schooner's Ledge on the Delaware River near Philadelphia, and was dismantled and transported to Michigan Island in 1919 but sat on the beach for ten years before it was reassembled.
I've inverted this image to produce this more abstract image, I've also increased the contrast to make it two colour.
This nasty guy has an abdomen about the size of a thimble.
© David Koiter - All Rights Reserved. No usage allowed including copying or sharing without written permission.
This is the corner of my power inverter in my truck, it just turned ot funky while I was playing around.
Edited Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter image of inverted polygonal terrain in Schoner Crater on Mars. Processing variant.
Taken at the Heart of Scotland airshow at Perth airport on Saturday the 5th June 2010. This shows the glider of the swift aerobatic display team in inverted flight while under tow.
This is an inverted image of a halogen bulb. The original was shot with my G11 set to its minimum exposure, f8, 1/4000s.
Fun rudder work while inverted ... trying to do a coordinated turn... note the parachute strap hanging to the right of the frame..
Canon point and shoot camera.