View allAll Photos Tagged lowangle

An abandoned train car in upstate New York. As seen here.

J and Me @ Fishguard on a fresh and very windy morning.

 

Gaz

Today, two cars for the price of one.

In the old penitentiary.

 

Nikon D800 & Nikkor 24-70mm f/2.8 @ f/4.5

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

I do have to say, that this is one of my absolute faves from today. The barn, the remaining wheat, the sunrise, but most of all that I really look for when I go out on these drives, the sky. The cloud formations just really bring it all together, I think.

 

This school yard is dated 1913-1950 on the plaque alongside the road. I need to do more research on it to get some additional historical facts for you.

 

I hope you enjoy this shot of the main barn on the property!

Low-angle afternoon sun shining through a red daylily that mysteriously appeared in my garden. (I knew it was there, just didn't know it was such a spectacular red.) The purple shadings are from a translucent purple clipboard I used to block some of the glare so I could see to capture the image. It did add to the ember-like look of the flower's interior.

This is our storage room, I do not understand why, but it is very difficult to keep it tidy. Every two or three months I spend a few hours organizing and selecting the things we accumulate, then many of them end up in a clean point or donated to organizations to reuse them.

I would like to be able not to accumulate unnecessary things.

 

This week I decided to pay tribute to one of the teammates of the Face-down Tuesday group: Oliver. He lives in ¿Germany? and loves wide-angle photography. Normally he uses a fisheye lens to obtain images enclosed in a circle, but also rectangular panoramas.

 

I searched in the streets of my city for maintenance work or new road construction, but it was impossible to enter them during work hours. I think Oliver works in a construction company.

 

Finally I have remembered that another of his favorite subjects is to photograph a room from a very high point of view and to pose quite hidden or camouflaged inside it, so I have decided to make this photo although I am not really happy, because his house is always very tidy.

 

You still don't know this group who make photos face down every Tuesday? www.flickr.com/groups/fdt/pool/

 

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Este es nuestro trastero, no entiendo por qué, pero es muy dificil mantenerlo ordenado. Cada dos o tres meses paso unas cuantas horas organizando y seleccionando las cosas que acumulamos, despues muchas de ellas acaban en un punto limpio o donadas a organizaciones que las reutilicen.

Me gustaría ser capaz de no acumular cosas innecesarias.

 

Esta semana he decidido rendir tributo a uno de los compañeros del grupo Face-down Tuesday, él es Oliver. Él vive en ¿Alemania? y ama la fotografía gran angular. Normalmente usa una lente ojo de pez para obtener imágenes encerradas en un círculo, pero también panorámicas rectangulares.

 

He buscado por las calles de mi ciudad alguna obra de mantenimiento o nueva construcción de carreteras, pero era imposible entrar durante las horas de trabajo. Creo que Oliver trabaja en una empresa de construcción.

 

Finalmente he recordado que otro de sus temas favoritos es fotografiar una habitación desde un punto de vista muy alto y posar bastante escondido o camuflado dentro de ella, así que he decidido hacer esta foto auque en realidad no estoy muy contento, porque su casa siempre está muy ordenada.

 

¿Conoces este divertido grupo de locos fotógrafos que cada martes posa boca-abajo? :) www.flickr.com/groups/fdt/pool/

 

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Si quieres conocer algo más sobre nuestro estilo de vida, visita desnudizate.blogspot.com

 

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Nikon D500

Fisheye-Nikkor 10.5mm Æ’/2.8G ED

 

© Todos los derechos reservados. Por favor, no use esta imagen en su web, blogs u otros medios sin mi permiso explícito.

 

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

 

© Tous droits réservés. S.V.P ne pas utiliser cette photo sur un site web, blog ou tout autre média sans ma permission explicite.

Managed to crawl up on this Monkjack as it fed on the lush green grass

Break Time MFA gas station in Columbia in Boone County Missouri.

 

Please check out my photos at: notleyhawkins.imagekind.com/

 

©Notley Hawkins

Kinda surprised how much snow we got after dinner tonight.

I love columbines, particularly the pale pink and white with their "dancing fairy" shapes.

Ok..I'll be the first to admit it. I have been super moody lately. People have really been getting under my skin!

Close up of a set of stepping stones crossing a small pond in a Japanese Garden.

 

tottenham court road, london

 

www.maybemaq.eu

A view of the TV Tower Mannheim with its sky restaurant. Seen from an meadow inside the Luisenpark.

 

This is my take on the #LowAngle #FlickrFriday challenge

 

As usual: please share fair critic, I want to improve and input helps to do so.

...hanging from the Suleymaniye Mosque's dome... Shot with the lowest angle possible :)

 

Süleymaniye, Fatih - İstanbul

A reward of yard work. We had some unwanted grape vines. I was passionate at getting rid of them. Cutting them down may have disturbed the beetles. The shining golden wings caught my attention. It was at the size of my small finger nail. Like the beetle, I was on my four. Now you know why I never got my yard work done:-)

 

Thanks to Skeletal Mess for the vintage look!

The path through the Otley Chevin Forest Park.

A house by the bridge.

still-gelegter Bahntunnel bei Eppstein

My favourite from the Muker wildflower meadows that day. The light was just beginning to get more "interesting" ie, contrasty, after having been very "flat", but it proved to be the last of the day as rain clouds gathered and stopped my play.

Swaledale.

A fleeting silhouette crosses the frame as the fairground glows behind — ferris wheel, windmill, and stalls blazing against the night.

Shot from a low perspective, the figure becomes anonymous, almost timeless, reduced to motion and shape rather than identity.

 

The contrast between still, illuminated structures and the blurred human presence speaks to the rhythm of city life: places endure, people pass through. A quiet moment of urban transience captured in black and white.

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