View allAll Photos Tagged kobebryant
Tribute to Kobe Bryant RIP on the corner of Leeland and St. Emanuel Streets in Houston. A local sports figure was using the mural as a backdrop for a photo-shoot.
Legends Are Forever by Royyal Dog, one of many Kobe Bryant murals in Los Angeles, this one at Alameda & 4th Street in the Downtown Arts District.
Tribute to Kobe Bryant by Lush, Collingwood. This was locked behind a tall fence, and I'm too old to climb these days, but I quite liked this "through the fence" effect.
Photographed for CNN Travel
Chicago, IL
February 15th, 2020
All photos © Joshua Mellin per the guidelines listed under "Owner settings" to the right.
This was among the first photos I took at Pershing Square. I was getting myself re-familiar with the surroundings, plus looking for the most interesting signs.
I didn't notice until I got home and downloaded the pictures on my computer that the huge mural that shows Kobe Bryant had fit perfectly in the background.
Message from Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant imploring the PIAA Board of Directors to return the state championships to "where it belongs ... Chocolatetown, U.S.A.''
Bryant played on Lower Merion's 1996 PIAA Class AAAA championship and said it was a great experience.
PIAA bid submitted by Hershey Entertainment & Resorts in collaboration with Hershey Harrisburg Regional Visitor Bureau.
Check out Kobe Bryant's official website www.kb24.com
One of My Most Prized Possessions - My Basketball Card Collection
I thought it would be cool to snap a shot of some of my most valuable basketball cards. When I was younger, I collected basketball cards for a number of years. Looking at some these cards brings back memories of when I pulled them and I'll tell you it's a pretty amazing feeling pulling a card when you know there was only a few that were ever made.
second only to Magic, Kobe was the one player I could watch for days on end...
internet sourced image, converted into jpegs for HDR effect, finished in CS3
copyright SB ImageWorks
Watching the news tonight for the first time in a while. Why?! My young son and his friend just had a brief conversation about the Legend Kobe Bryant. RIP to a Legend who impacted so many people including those new to the game, like these two boys.
Suddenly Too Tall Bunny remembers what TWO on ONE really means... an embarrassment for Too Tall in front of all his PEEPS! A GAME of SHAME!
Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant are Enterbay Action Figures from their NBA collection. More photos from this shoot on Pinterest at www.pinterest.com/myfarrah/michael-jordan-chicago-bulls-33/. MJ is still available on Enterbay at; www.enterbay.com/web_2014/enterbay_shop/collection.php Too Tall Bunny is by Palmer: Making Candy Fun! www.rmpalmer.com.
Too Tall is a Hollow Crispy Easter Bunny Treat! FYI: He's delicious!
Before I continue to share the rest of my photos from my SOFLA trip I wanted to share this shot of a mural in LA memorializing Kobe Bryant and his daughter Gianna.
I was in Florida on the anniversary of Kobe and his daughters tragic death which was already two years ago, January 26th 2020.
Although I did not know Kobe personally, like many others I watched him play his heart out for his entire career and was hurt by his death. I cried a few times during that week, it was heartbreaking to say the least. It was during that moment, which felt like to me, the beginning of the end of the world as we knew it. Soon after his death the pandemic hit and changed the entire world's definition of "new normal"
Kobe was a student of the game, an assassin with a basketball, a stand-up man, a teacher on and off the court, a legend in the game and in his personal life. His daughter Gianna was young, beautiful and a super talent on the rise following in her father's basketball footsteps. Both gone too early.
Huge RIP to Kobe & Gianna
“In an Instant”
Judy Royal Glenn Photography
While at Radnor Lake State Park, another photographer and I found a chipmunk storing up acorns for the winter. He was surprised upon seeing us and immediately froze. It did not take long for him to continue carrying his treasures back to his burrow.
In an instant life can change and take us by surprise—sometimes tragically. Sunday, the world mourned the death of nine people in a helicopter crash including Kobe Bryant and his daughter. They boarded the craft not knowing it would be their last day alive.
James 4:14 states, “Why, you do not even know what will happen tomorrow. What is your life? You are a mist that appears for a little while then vanishes.”
If you were on that helicopter, do you know whether you would be with your maker in Heaven? You have the moment right now to seal your eternal destination.
It’s as simple as ABC. A — Admit that you are a sinner. (Romans 3:23)
B — Believe that Jesus, God’s only son, was born and died on the cross for your sins. (Acts 16:31)
C — Confess and repent of your sins and ask Him to be Lord of your life. (1 John 1:9)
"For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life." John 3:16
To purchase wildlife and nature fine art prints, please visit my website:
www.judyroyalglennphotography.com
Location: Nashille, Tennessee
10,000 Views -- December 7, 2008. Wow! and thanks to all my Flickr contacts and friends who have made this first year on Flickr such fun.
Even Ray Allen has to admire him when Kobe gets in the zone... which it has to be said he didn't REALLY do last night, but the man can shoot.
Far and away my most popular image on Flickr: Kobe fans are encouraged to go to Imagekind to buy a print.
After a number of requests, I have generated a brief processing tutorial on my photography blog, www.synopshots.com. I would really love to receive feedback on that here, there or by FlickrMail!
Thanks to all of you for your feedback and support on this fantastic journey in imagemaking!
Blake inquired about the processing:
I use LucisArt, www.lucisart.com, the "exposure" filter, on a background copy layer (usually) to get the effect. I also play with HDR, but only when I can get proper multiple exposures, for the reasons you rightly cite.
The Kobe photo is a lot more complicated (and not very well executed, as I look back on it now a few weeks later). In the original, you couldn't see Kobe without really looking hard -- he was lost against the background. (http://flickr.com/photos/ddwise/2058844301/in/photostream/)
So I created a selection of Perkins, Kobe, and Ray Allen -- and the Parquet Floor -- and reduced the brightness on everything else. It kind of looks like a strobe shot (it wasn't -- all available light and there was plenty of it) -- but you can at least see Kobe.
Thanks for asking!