View allAll Photos Tagged layers
As if cut with a confectioners knife.
This photo was taken by a Hasselblad 500C medium format film camera with a Carl Zeiss Sonnar 1:4 f=150mm lens and a Zenza Bronica 67mm SO56•2C(YA3) filter using lford Delta 400 Pro film, the negative scanned by an Epson Perfection V600 and digitally rendered with Photoshop.
Originating in the West Indies, Mexico, and Central and South America, the flower is known botanically as Eustoma grandiflorum.
The common name comes from the Greek words lysis, meaning 'dissolution' and anthos, meaning 'flower'.
Colours include white, light and dark pink, lavender and deep purple. Double and single-flower varieties exist.
Many people do not know what it is, but everyone loves it!
For years I 'experimented' in the studio, to get that Flemish painter's light? Well, I was born in Flanders, it must be in my blood? LOL.
THANK you, M, (*_*)
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Eustoma-grandiflorum, Lysianthus, lisianthus, double, bloom, buds, petals, pink, studio, colour, flower, black-background, design, square, "NIKON D7000", "Magda indigo"
When flowing water is slowed down so that its texture becomes smooth and blurry it starts to resemble the texture of volcanic rock that formed deep under the earths surface and cooled slowly so that the crystals migrated through the fluid attracting like minerals creating layers. Blurred flowing water reveal how the surface reflects light in different patterns creating layers.
Nature often works in layers. Trees put on new rings each year, onions are often used as an example of how natural things are layered. Even the earth has layers of substances; core, mantel, and crust.
Man mimics this process. A group of houses becomes a village, expanding out to a town, streets with names, boulevards, expressways, followed by suburbs that are connected by a beltway that circles the city.
I totally abandoned this, I'm really sorry. I'm not taking photos at all, I never find the ideas or the moment to do it.
Sorry again, that's just some old photo, I know.
Looking due south from Crib Goch as the early morning cloud cleared to give a fantastic view
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2011 - Day 56. Feb. 25, 2011
Daily Shoot - Make a photograph featuring strong horizontal lines today.
More than any other season, I think of winter as being in layers. Each snowfall, freeze, and thaw adds another layer to the landscape.
"The three lava flows visible from this point are from the southwest rift of Mauna Loa. The darker or younger lava flow surrounding this point is from the 1907 eruption and the lighter colored lava down slope is believed to be 750-1,500 years old. The dark flow east of this location is from an 1887 eruption. These three flows are all the 'a'a (rough or clinker) and not pahoehoe (smooth or ropy) lava. The older lava flows are lighter in color and generally have larger 'ohi'a lehua trees.
If you look closely you will find few 'ohi'a lehua trees growing in the 1907 flow"
This is as dark as it gets in June.
Looking out over Lismore as the last colour in the sky fades behind the hills of Mull and the Arnamurchan peninsula.