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© Copyright 2013 by Neall Calvert. . . . During a rain shower, driver's side mirror 'splits the atom' of a tall parking-lot lamp, creating a hundred or more circles of light. Taken through rain-spattered driver's-side window of a Ford Aerostar van, Walmart parking lot, Campbell River, BC, Canada.

© Web-Betty: digital heart, analog soul

Just a street light. Playing with the camera again!

Light & Darkness

 

A Fisherman is cooking on boat.

 

Location : At Millenium Park , Opposite of Howrah Station And Howrah Bridge in Kolkata < West Bengal < India

The light trail of a pleasure boat passing by in front of "Anniversaire Minato Mirai"(Wedding Hall) in Naka-ku, Yokohama-shi.

"All the darkness in the world cannot extinguish the light of a single candle."

 

― St. Francis Of Assisi, The Little Flowers of St. Francis of Assisi

Niño malo, luz bonita // Julio '22

The setting sun bursts through the forest in Snoqualmie, WA.

First attempt at capturing light beams filtering down through foliage! This is one of my absolute favorite moments in nature. #imperfect365

The day begins.

Light on.

The cultural centre bus stops, a very busy and chaotic looking sort of a place. What can I say, I like a light trail.

Aprovechando el Carnaval nos propusieron de realizar alguna fotografías rápidas de light Paintg y este fue el resultado.

Escenas creadas por Herramienta casera fabricada por Noches Manchegas.

Rolleiflex T, Carl Zeiss Tessar 75/3.5, Kodak TRI-X400, Kyoto, Japan.

© 2013 Saraia

Pear-shaped, round or star-shaped, the pendant lights explore a charming, meticulously hand-made pendant light design

 

Taken @Cairo, Egypt

Warm candle light. Directly out from the camera.

Since I live in the Northeast, there are a couple of options as far as shooting lighthouses are concerned. I had already shot the beavertail lighthouse in RI a few weeks ago, but wasn't too ecstatic with the results. I blamed in on the location of the lighthouses, the Nikon D70 and the Nikkor 18-70 lens. Living on the East Coast, you can get great sunrise shots behind lighthouses, but not a lot of sunsets. There's one in Acadia, but thats app. 6 hours drive away. Cape Elizabeth happens to be at app. 3 hours. Originally was debating whether to go to “Nubble light” or “Portland head” (Nubble was a bit closer); In my pursuit, sent an email out to Moe Chen, who happens to be an expert in shooting lights in the Maine area. Received immediate and good feedback from him, almost seemed like Nubble was going to be a good choice, because of the sunset glow, and that park officials don’t kick you out at sunset. Never the less, due to the fact there are more composition options at Portland, decided to make the 3 hour drive with my family (camouflaged my rendezvous as a family trip). As soon as I hit the road at 4:00 pm ish, could see there were lightning and dark clouds everywhere. Weather.com predicted scattered showers around 10:00 pm, so I thought to myself; “they’ll kick us out by 8:00 pm, so we should be good”. As we entered New Hampshire, a dark, gigantic, menacing cloud appeared to our left, it followed us all the way to Maine. We parked and my family settled in a vacant tent, while I took my new D7000 and 16-85 out for a weather resistant test. It started raining as I walked up the slope toward the lighthouse. Kept shooting in the drizzle, but had to take shelter in the museum as it started to pour down hard. After waiting for a few minutes, I figured, don’t have much time and the camera is weather resistant (presumably), so let’s do what we came here for. In the hour I had, it kept raining light to medium, but I kept shooting. Took app. 350 shots. A lot of them ended up having water droplets showing and blurring the image (note to self, keep the lens clean no matter what). I was trying to wipe the rain off with my t-shirt, but not having a lens cover made it hard.

Only was able to shoot from limited locations around the lighthouse in the hour or so I had. Wanted to go down to the rocks and shoot up, but was out of time and the security guy in his gold cart like police car kept on calling me.

By the way, the clouds acted as reflectors for the sun, which were on the opposite side, giving me a bit of orange glow towards East. No complaints there. By and large a good quick shoot. But need to go back for a sunrise shot and need to figure out how to sneak in to get a milky way shot with the light. Anyone has ideas about that?

Cheers,

Saqib

 

Walt Disney World

 

Animal Kingdom

 

Exotic Bird

 

Africa

 

Gorilla Falls Exploration Trail

It's a garden light. there is a little light around so it looks like the only thing in the world.

 

Camera: SONY SLT-a65V with 18-55 F3.5-5.6 kit lens

Processed using Darktable and GIMP on Ubuntu

Colour self portrait. It is the colour version of Day 35: www.flickr.com/photos/brady93/6858345308/in/photostream I saved a copy from the RAW file, which is saved in colour, no matter the camera setting.

SOOC

 

Actually this is a Noah's Ark light, but feels like Christmas to me!

Light rays catching the trees

This was a lighting experiment with an objective to show the inside colors of this otherwise plain-looking seashell. Sun light was shining from behind the shell, with a diffused flash light from the upper side.

 

Do you see the colors of sunset?

Do you see the colors of the sea?

Camera Canon PowerShot S5 IS

Exposure 0.4

Aperture f/3.5

Focal Length 23.8 mm

ISO Speed 80

Exposure Bias 0 EV

 

Got this old light meter from my grandfather last year and decided to go take some photos of it at sunset.

 

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