View allAll Photos Tagged lightdesign
Light design outdoor in nature, long exposure, 2 candle lanterns.
Ref. S.Mart3 038 No retouching nor editing,only watermarked
©WhiteAngel Photography. All rights reserved.
Islamorada, Florida ~ #130 in Explore 8/14/14
Summer Sunset 2014 ~ Florida Keys U.S.A.
(four more photos in the comments)
I prepared the MagiLight tool with glass fiber, took the tool into the water and painted the flames on the water. The motif was already illuminated by the neighboring property. I had to live with that and couldn't add anything to it.
For the detailed description see my post on: ecency.com/hive-194913/@candelart/swimming-pool-light-pai...
resta nel buio
il ricordo intenso
di brevi luci
Nicola e Caterina, 2021
Sony a7iii con Cosinon 55mm f1.4 - iso 200, 1/100" - pannello led e fondale nero.
Simone Pelatti 2021
#coppia #amore #tramonto #romantico #insieme #bacio #abbraccio #fine #solitudine #solo #indicare #buio #a7iii #sony #lightdesign #couple #love #sunset #romantic #together #kiss #hug #end #loneliness #lonely #indicate #dark
Light design outdoor in nature, long exposure, some candles & lanterns.
Ref. S.Mart3 029. No retouching nor editing,only watermarked
©WhiteAngel Photography. All rights reserved.
16.01.2021:This work is dedicated to Mr. Gianni Sacchetti Gonz@k "The crazy cat" , an amazing artist but, most of all, a great earthling. With all my respects & deep esteem. White Angel
Light design, long exposure, no retouching.
The entire shooting has been obtained with the sole help of 1 camera (Canon EOS 250D), my body & two hands movements and a variety of lanterns, from 1 to 24, accordingly to the pose.
Image copyrighted ©WhiteANGEL Photography.All rights reserved
A high-contrast black and white photograph of one of the stairs in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, UK. The staircase features and the light filtering in through the window form an interesting geometric arrangement.
Title: "The world is colourful, and it is good that way". The exhibition consists of 7 thematic series, each showing the diversity of the world's cultures.
Reviewed in this article in Süddeutsche Zeitung: www.sueddeutsche.de/muenchen/wolfratshausen/pipapo-festiv...
More details at www.ralfsteinberger.com/post/photo-exhibition-vernissage-... .
Here's what the artist has to say on his web page, about this sculpture:
"Aluminum Yucca was made from salvaged hollow aluminum fuel tanks from F-16 military aircraft. The hollow forms were sliced vertically to resemble the scooped shape of the Datil Yucca leaf, which is native to the area. At night, the sculpture is illuminated by a slow-moving, solar-powered color wheel that recreates the hues of the Albuquerque desert landscape.
The exaggerated scale celebrates the romance and nostalgia of western Road Culture in the 20th century – evident all along Route 66 in wigwam-shaped hotels, five-foot Mexican sombreros and giant cowboy boots."
The color wheel for the lights (not on, in this Detail} seems to be no longer working – the lighting later came on green and stayed green the whole time I was there.
Funded by Albuquerque's Public Art Urban Enhancement Division, the city considers this piece the "Route 66 Gateway to Albuquerque" from the East Mountains. The Division has posted an image of it themselves here, but you'd never know from it that this yucca is 22 feet high and 15 feet wide (6.7 x 4.6 meters).
Location: rocky hillside, Tijeras Canyon NE, I-40 West/Route 66 just east of exit 167; Albuquerque, New 7:55pm
That's the Manzano foothills on the horizon, south.
My pic of the entire sculpture (and a person, for scale) is here.
Light design outdoor in nature, long exposure, some candles & lanterns.
Ref. S.Mart3 016. No retouching nor editing,only watermarked
©WhiteAngel Photography. All rights reserved
Light desing painting ©WhiteANGEL Photography
Ref. S.Mar 053-420 (not edited, only watermarked)
Fantastic night of Saint Martin, in Italy this week is also called the "Small Spring" or "the Summer in the Winter". It can be few days, one week or even more when the freezy weather disappears for a short pause, a respite, bringing back to the warmth & atmospheres of the early spring or the late summer. I've been exercizing with both gymnastics & camera for a new experimental shooting that I hope can lend a lil of the fantastic scenario of lanterns,lights, candels in the night, at the nature elements. A night without wind, still, amazingly warm, just perfect.
The entire shooting has been obtained with the sole help of 1 camera (Canon EOS 250D), my body & two hands movements and a variety of lanterns & candles, from 1 to 24,
accordingly to the photo exposure, displayed open-air in nature.
#OneAndOnly #flickrfriday
UV light confused the iphone sensor and led to those nice blotchy artefacts :-)
taken last night, on way home
image in gallery
smellinginternet.com/25-most-beautiful-examples-of-long-e...
Many thanks to Liane and Karsten for the patience and help with the implementation of the idea.
Idea and composition: Ralf Koplin
Model: Karsten Krebs
Light: Ralf Koplin / Liane Krebs
Camera: Ralf Koplin
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Vielen Dank Liane und Karsten für die Geduld und Hilfe bei der Umsetzung der Idee.
Idee und Komposition: Ralf Koplin
Modell: Karsten Krebs
Licht: Ralf Koplin / Liane Krebs
Kamera: Ralf Koplin
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
CANON 6D Mark II /148s / f16 / ISO100 / 17mm (SOOC)
My name light painted in the air, 5" exposure.
Light design outdoor in nature, long exposure, some candles & lanterns. Canon 250D reflex.
Ref. S.Mart3 046. No retouching nor editing, only watermarked.
©WhiteAngel Photography. All rights reserved
Glowing softly against a deep blue sky, the newly rebuilt St. Thomas’ Parish Episcopal Church in Washington, D.C. offers a striking example of contemporary sacred architecture. Located at the corner of 18th and Church Streets NW in the Dupont Circle neighborhood, this modernist structure is a bold departure from traditional ecclesiastical design—yet no less reverent. Clean lines, rhythmic textures, and a glowing vertical tower capped by a radiant cross define its facade, guiding the eye upward in quiet awe.
The building, completed in 2019, replaces a historic church destroyed by fire decades earlier. Rather than recreate the past, the parish chose to move forward—commissioning a design that reflects today’s values of openness, inclusivity, and light. A translucent glass tower bathes the entrance in gentle illumination, while the shimmering metal and ceramic cladding hints at warmth and resilience. The exterior pattern, evocative of stained glass or liturgical rhythm, invites interpretation and contemplation.
At ground level, the welcoming glass entryway and gentle lighting signal transparency—both literal and metaphorical. This is a place of gathering, healing, and forward movement. Around the corner, a preserved stone arch from the original church remains as a nod to legacy, but the message here is clear: faith can be contemporary, community-centered, and architecturally ambitious.
This photo captures the spiritual quiet and urban sophistication of a church confidently situated in both the present and the future.
Architectural Survey Appendix (Historic Documentation Format):
Name: St. Thomas’ Parish Episcopal Church
Address: 1517 18th Street NW, Washington, D.C.
Date of Construction: 2019 (Rebuilt)
Architect: Hickok Cole Architects
Style: Contemporary / Modernist Sacred Architecture
Architectural Features: Illuminated vertical glass tower, cross motif, geometric metal cladding, asymmetrical elevation, glass entry pavilion
Building Material: Metal panels, glass curtain wall, ceramic rainscreen
Number of Stories: 3
Historic Integrity: Contemporary reconstruction with preserved elements from prior structure
Current Use: Active Episcopal parish
Contributing Structure: No (modern rebuild outside original period of significance)
Light design outdoor in nature, long exposure, some candles & lanterns.
Ref. S.Mart3 034. No retouching nor editing,only watermarked
©WhiteAngel Photography. All rights reserved.
Lichtcampus, International congress of light design, HAWK (University of applied sciences), Hildesheim 2017