View allAll Photos Tagged katrina...
Model: Katrina (blooming variation)
Designer: Xander Perrott
Made from 30 rectangles 2:sqrt(3) proportion
CandyDoll Katrina Dress at Collabor88
LEXA Cosmetics- Grace Coffin Nails at Dubai Event
Stealthic - Riot Hair at The Fifty Event
Katrina riding in local transport called a jeepney in Philippines.
Those eyes say many things. One that comes to my mind is, "I wonder if there's anyplace for me in the world."
I don't think she's looking at anything: it seems to me she's just looking away, wanting to detach herself from life.
Katrina Santillan
Original Photo
Katrina is wearing a crocheted dress made by me from a pattern from Watbetty Designs. I really like this shade of pink on her.
PLEASE, READ THIS!
Friends,
there is a new Humanitarian Pool to help our friends in the Gulf Coast in this horrible moment they are in.
Please join and help in this auction.
I'll print this image and sent it anywhere in the Globe to the best bidder.
www.flickr.com/groups/katrina_auction/
Together we can make a difference. Again."
"Amigos,
Há um novo Grupo de carater humanitário para ajudar nossos amigos que estão sofrendo com a passagem do furacão Katrina.
Trata-se de um leilão de fotos cuja arrecadação será doada a OGNs que trabalham nesta emergência.
Eu vou imprimir esta imagem e mandar para quem der o lance maior, mesmo que ele more do outro lado do planeta.
www.flickr.com/groups/katrina_auction/
Juntos podemos fazer a diferença.
De novo."
"Liebe Freunde, es gibt eine neue Gruppe, die das Ziel hat, unseren von Katrina betroffenen Freunden an der amerikanischen Golfküste in dieser schweren Zeit zu helfen. Bitte tretet der Gruppe bei und macht bei der Auktion mit. - Ich werde dieses Bild drucken und es an jeden Platz der Erde schicken.
www.flickr.com/groups/katrina_auction/
Zusammen können wir etwas bewirken. Immer wieder."
"Vrienden,
Er is een nieuwe humanitaire groep opgericht ,om onze vrienden die getroffen zijn door de orkaan Katrina bij te staan in deze vreselijke tijd..
Meld je aan bij deze groep , om door middel van een veiling hulp te bieden.
Stuur je foto op, zodat er op geboden kan worden, het geld wordt dan gestort bij het rode kruis, en komt zo op plaats van bestemming.
www.flickr.com/groups/katrina_auction/
Samen kunnen we alweer een verandering maken.
bedankt"
"Amigos,
Hay un nuevo Grupo de carácter humanitario para ayudar nuestros amigos que están sufriendo con el pasaje del terrible huracán Katarina.
Se trata de una subasta de fotos cuya recaudación será donada a OGNs que trabajan en esta emergencia.
Imprimiré y enviaré esta imagen al mejor postor, aunque viva en el otro lado del globo
www.flickr.com/groups/katrina_auction/
¡Una vez más, juntos podemos hacer la diferencia!"
Please bid in here: www.flickr.com/groups/katrina_auction/
My daughter-in-law, Katrina, is a gifted portrait photographer. One day she excitedly told me about an exposure technique she had found using backlighting to cause a high key glow on her subjects. On Tuesday morning I was at Ding Darling NWR on Sanibel Island, Florida. I drove through the entire park and all was very quiet. It seems migration is very early this year. After the official park exit there is still one spot that I was hopeful I might find a bird hunting in the water. Instead I found this Great Egret perched on a snag on the bad side of the sun. But I positioned myself so that the sun would hit the bird at about a 66 degree angle from behind and noticed when its wings were up the feathers glowed. Still it was very backlit. And then I thought about Katrina's technique. I exposed as she had explained and am very pleased with the result. So thank you to Katrina for helping me to shed light on this beautiful Egret. February 28, 2017
Let me know what's wrong with above image and how to make it better? If you are the one who photograph this, how differently are you going to do it?
Pls. no notes on above image or group icons/invites/awards on comments. Thank you.
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Model: Katrina MM#1040109
Wardrobe: Me
Photography: Myself and Quan
Alviso, California
May 2009
img005_E8_1_s
By Ahlure
Complete outfit
Includes Bra, panties, skirt, and top.
(in a size that will fit you)
Hud allows you to wear what you want how your want with an assortment of color options.
4 Flashes and one reflector as follows:
Main light 45 degrees above the model with a beauty dish
2 Kick lights strips 30 degrees from the back of the model
1 flash to the background
1 reflector from below the model.
I like the light in this set of pics. An early shot from 2020 (my 4th ever shoot).
Just like a favorite album. The time from when it was released seems to go so quick. Years pass before you know it.
By Ahlure
Complete outfit
Includes Bra, panties, skirt, and top.
(in a size that will fit you)
Hud allows you to wear what you want how your want with an assortment of color options.
Hurricane Katrina moved ashore over southeast Louisiana and southern Mississippi early on August 29, 2005, as an extremely dangerous Category 4 storm. With winds of 135 miles per hour (217 kilometers per hour), a powerful storm surge, and heavy rains, Katrina pounded the U.S. Gulf Coast, triggering extensive life-threatening flooding. This GOES image shows the storm as it moved over southern Mississippi at 9:02 a.m. The eye of the storm was due east of New Orleans, Louisiana. Katrina moved north into Mississippi, and was expected to track quickly northeast across the United States into Eastern Canada over the first part of the week.
By mid-afternoon on August 29, Katrina had weakened into a Category 1 hurricane with winds of 95 mph (153 km/hr). A mere 24 hours earlier, Katrina had been one of the most powerful storms ever observed in the Atlantic Basin. The above animation tracks the stormâs degradation from a Category 5 storm on August 28, to a Category 1 storm on August 29 as the storm spent its fury on Louisiana and Mississippi.
The first image in the animation was taken at 7:15 p.m. CDT on August 28. At this time, Katrina was well-organized, with a large eye. The storm had winds of 160 mph (258 km/hr) with stronger gusts and a central pressure of 902 millibars. The lower the air pressure associated with a hurricane, the more powerful the storm tends to be. Since records began, only three storms have ever had lower air pressures. Katrina was a very powerful and extremely dangerous Category 5 storm.
As the storm moved north through the night, it weakened slightly into a Category 4 storm before slamming ashore over southeastern Louisiana around 6 a.m. As the storm moved ashore during the day, it gradually lost its distinctive eye and weakened to the Category 1 storm seen in the final frame, taken at 2:45 p.m. on August 29.
For more images of Hurricane Katrina, please visit the Natural Hazards section of the Earth Observatory. For more information about Katrina, see the National Hurricane Center web site.
Images courtesy GOES Project Science Office