View allAll Photos Tagged light

Taken, Stanford Warren. Thurrock. Essex.

I'm lighting a candle and thinking about all the people affected by the bombing in Oslo and the massacre on Utøya. This is unreal and we're all in shock.

 

Read about it here: www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-14259356

 

(Photo from my archives)

Looked alot lighter on my pc - what happens when you upload to flickr? The specks of orange light I left cos I though they fitted - they are like sparks from a fire..and it is the sun shining through..

Working with diffrent light pattens and slow speed shutter on camera

BETKA,BIKRAMPUR,Bangladesh

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All rights reserved worldwide. DO NOT use this image in any commercial, non-commercial or blogging purpose without my explicit permission. Otherwise, you'll face legal action for violating national or international copyright law.

For permission, mail me at:

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taef06@gmail.com

visit : taefphoto.wordpress.com/

Place I Rishikesh, Uttarakand

 

I realize that every picture isn't a work of art.

Camden.London.England

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"There's always light after the dark. You have to go through that dark place to get to it, but it's there, waiting for you. It's like riding on a train through a dark tunnel. If you get so scared you jump off in the middle of the ride, then you're there, in the tunnel, stuck in the dark. You have to ride the train all the way to the end of the ride."

— Han Nolan

4/100 The light and the shadow

 

Un homenaje a esta red social de fotografía que a todos nos gusta tanto.

 

Strobist info

 

- Nikon SB600 a mi derecha, con snoot de 25cm, disparado directamente sobre mi cara a 1/32 de potencia y un zoom de 50mm.

- Yongnuo Speedlite YN460 disparado a 1/128 de potencia a través de un snoot de 25 cm y una gelatina Rosco azul, disparado hacia la pared.

- Yongnuo Speedlite YN460 disparado a 1/128 de potencia a través de un snoot de 25 cm y una gelatina Rosco roja, disparado hacia la pared.

 

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.

Model: Laura

Camera: Nikon D80 + Nikon f1.8 50mm

Light: Una estufa XD

 

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Amsterdam Light Festival 2017-2018

 

Wir haben jetzt einen Regenbogen zu Hause. Errät jemand, was das ist?

 

Can you guess what this is?

"By the 17th century, some prominent European scientists began to think differently about light. One key figure was the Dutch mathematician-astronomer Christiaan Huygens. In 1690, Huygens published his "Treatise on Light," in which he described the undulatory theory. In this theory, he speculated on the existence of some invisible medium -- an ether -- filling all empty space between objects. He further speculated that light forms when a luminous body causes a series of waves or vibrations in this ether. Those waves then advance forward until they encounter an object. If that object is an eye, the waves stimulate vision.

This stood as one of the earliest, and most eloquent, wave theories of light. Not everyone embraced it. Isaac Newton was one of those people. In 1704, Newton proposed a different take -- one describing light as corpuscles, or particles. After all, light travels in straight lines and bounces off a mirror much like a ball bouncing off a wall. No one had actually seen particles of light, but even now, it's easy to explain why that might be. The particles could be too small, or moving too fast, to be seen, or perhaps our eyes see right through them."

 

Christ is Risen!

Хрїстóсъ воскрéсе!

Χριστός ἀνέστη!

ქრისტე აღსდგა!

!المسيح قام

Tá Críost éirithe!

¡Cristo ha resucitado!

Chrystus zmartwychwstał!

 

The Ceiling Fan!

Light from candles ...

when the light blanketed itself across everything just right?

 

I do.

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test shot with Hassy :)

i love and admire my dad beyond words. he just had heart surgery and i was by his side at mayo clinic. the surgery went well. he's healing beautifully. it's all good news. yet here i sit: raw, tired, and vulnerable. long days, hospital rooms, intense emotions. i held his hand, soothed his discomfort, and watched him become himself again.

 

the return home was strange. i felt disconnected from the real world. but now i wonder: what is the "real world"? being with my dad--when he most needed me--is as real as it gets.

 

i think real life is exactly where i am in the moment, staying present and open to everything.

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