View allAll Photos Tagged layers

Dad brought this silk child's kimono home with him from WWII. I cleaned it up and hung it with a paper fan he got at the same time. It has seed pearls sewn in, and some damage from when we palyed in it when we were kids. That's a small part of the obi hanging on the left. That's a carp painted on it, they meant good luck.

Here is a card I made with my new flowers from Altenew.

thanks for looking,

snippets-karen.blogspot.ca/2017/03/layered-flowers.html

Layered vector designs cut out of cardstock as prototypes for designs to potentially cut in acrylic

Layered mountains and fjords from the mountain above KlaksvĂŹk, Faroe Islands

 

www.gettyimages.it/detail/foto/view-on-a-dark-fjord-at-du...

Terrace, MSD University of Melbourne

layer by leschick

I stamped the Windy Tree stamp on black and white card and embossed, I cut the tree in half on the black card and layered one half over the white tree lining up the branches, I then coloured in the centres of the tree stars with pink, blue and green added pearls to the bottom right corner and drew faux stitching around the edge. Mounted onto black card and then added brads to bottom corners of card. Stampeyelets and embossed Wising you laughter message on white card and faux stitched edge, mounted onto black card and added eyelets to top corners. Threaded silver thread through eyelets so that the greeting hung from the main image, mounted main image onto white card with foam pads, faux stitched arond edges and then mounted onto black card and then onto main white card blank.

In hindsight I could of improved this card by using the split negative technique on the greeting as well as on the main image.

Sony A7 Contax G35

I have layers. Like an onion. Or a southern California native forced to endure East Coast January.

Set up the form and play dress. :)

Repurposed one wall of an old birch drawer into a glued-up layered bowl.

Esto es un retoque hecho sobre una imagen de internet del afiche de la pelĂ­cula "Lo que el viento de llevĂł".

 

Trabajos Post:

WWW.FLICKR.COM/PHOTOS/POST_DIEGOPALMA

 

St. Patrick's Cathedral, NYC

Three-Layer Carrot Cake with Cream Cheese Frosting. Recipe by Martha Stewart.

 

For the recipe, visit my blog Paris Pastry:

parispastry.blogspot.com/2010/03/easter-layer-carrot-cake...

Nikon D7000 -- Nikon 80-200mm F2.8 ED

155mm

F8@1/40th

Polarizer

Retouched (Looks like I might have a scratched sensor)

 

(DSC_9284 - 2)

©Don Brown 2015

 

DSC_9284 - Version 2

Uhh yeah this is for my Fine Art project which was about layers and stuff.

 

Yoko-Dovyren layered massif (northern Transbaikalia, Russia)

Hope that complies with the theme. :-) I can see many kind of layers there.

Lizzie Clicks

 

Playing with layers for this photo of Bruno on the other side of the park bushes. The top three options are standard approaches for me including the source image, a processed version (using Nik software) and a quick black and white conversion. The bottom layer is playing with the colour version as a layer over the black and white photo. I tried two blending modes (colour and screen). Quite a different result, and I chose the 'screen' version because it is so different from my usual and almost dream-like. Thank you Stefanie for the processing project.

the cliffs often looked like different rock layers were stacked on top of one another

Each layer is unique and complex having the ability to tell a story of its own. Yet one cannot look at just one layer. It is but a tier of a whole...

This cuff was loomed in two layers to create this dimension.

firey texture for layers

Polish Easter Food: Herring Salad "layered"

www.minersoc.org/pages/Archive-MM/Volume_62/62-6-731.pdf)

 

I had this mountain in mind for this theme a while ago, however I just got around to taking this weeks photo. A very unique mountain and very interesting. The Pinnacle is in this photo, but it is hidden due to the angle from where I was standing. It was fun to do some extra research and I will be logging this geocache!

 

www.geocaching.com/geocache/GC1F5VM_layer-cake-hill?guid=...

 

Geocache Description:

 

Layer Cake Hill, sometimes called Layer Cake Mountain, is a volcanic land form composed primarily of Dacite [day-site] (volcanic rock with a high iron content). It shows unique layering that has not been seen anywhere else.

 

Layering is expressed as thin layers separated by thick layers exposed along a weathered fault scarp. The compositions of the thick and thin layers are geochemically very similar. The thin layers represent veins generated during crystallization of the lava. The thin layers formed when the molten material contracted (shrunk) while cooling. Material was allowed to flow into the cracks formed by cooling. The material in the cracks further fractured when it cooled, and liquid material was allowed to enter the veins. The resulting rock was formed with a slightly different composition. The altered thin layers weather faster, thus visually showing the small primary chemical differences between thick and thin layers.

 

Approximately 50 million years ago, volcanoes erupted in the Kelowna area and along the Okanagan Valley. Since that time, erosion by large streams removed much of the volcanic bedrock, carving a broad deep valley along where Mission Creek now flows. The Ice Age eroded and carved the land by several glaciers during different times in the last one to two million years.

 

The last of these glaciers started to advance about 25,000 years ago and filled the valley higher than any of the mountains of the Okanagan today. It began to melt away about 15,000 years ago and finally disappeared about 10,000 years ago.

 

As the Glacier melted in the Mission Creek Valley, the valley was blocked or dammed for some time by large blocks of ice and debris in Gallagher's Canyon. Material deposited from the ice served to partly infill the ancient valley. But lots of ice remained and the ice was still melting. This produced a lot of water. The water could not escape because of the ice dam in the canyon. Therefore, a large lake was formed along the upstream part of Mission Creek Valley. The flat topped terraces along the present valley sides were on the bottom of this ancient lake.

 

Water built up in the glacial lake behind the ice dam and finally the dam burst about 10,000 years ago, and a catastrophic flood occurred. All of this rushing and turbulent water was responsible for cutting a steep-sided gorge along the face of Layer Cake and eroding what we now call Gallagher's Canyon. One side (the north side) of this gorge was the steep face of Layer Cake Hill. The south side does not show this erosion effect because it was still covered with a thick layer of ice and debris.

 

During this time when the lake was being drained at a very high rate, high flows of melt water were also arriving here from the KLO Creek valley. The combination of these water flows must have created a huge whirlpool that swirled around carving out a portion of Layer Cake Hill and finally forming a pinnacle of rock that we call the "Pinnacle" today

 

Really quite interesting how the mirrored surface takes on the colours of the surroundings. Very sky blue today.

Layers upon layers of the Great Smoky Mountains. Viewed from Clingmans Dome.

For Beyond Layers with Kim Klassen

 

I went for simplicity in my edit here, with a square crop to the photo and two layers of Kim's Flourish texture at 37% hard light. I used a gradient overlay on the quote, which is a great one for those of us who like to play with photos and art, don't you think?

 

The font is "Loved by the King."

1 2 ‱‱‱ 56 57 59 61 62 ‱‱‱ 79 80