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اسم انها هه يعني محآوله صح !
:D
شوفوآ عناد النفس مشكلة عويصه من مشآكل الحياة
خآصه الناس اللي مثلي وحطوآ شيء في بالهم لازم يضبط يعني يضبط ..,
ياللا علشان مايروح تعبي خساره حبيتكم تشآركوني التجربه وأتمنى تنآل ولو شيء بسيط من إعجآبكم ^^
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ايه صح بغيت أقول شيء ..,
شوفوآ بس الحركات بوكيه سحري جآ
هههههههههههههه
والله القطرات سوت بوكيه من نفسها
الموهم بغيت امسحها بالفوتو بس قلت لا عادي بخليها تسوي جو شوي :D
A composite of 900 frames w/o meteors captured with D500, 35mm f2.8 set to f5.6, 13 sec exposures, 1 sec interval, between 3:28 AM and 7am on Dec 14, 2021. Merge in StarStaX.
BTW, if you look a ¾ of the frame above the "35mm" text 9boxed), you will note a green streak going from top right to lower left for about an inch (on a large screen). This is not a meteor, it is a mystery...The streak formed progressively during the build up of the star trail, suggesting a man-made object in a geo-synchronous object above Cincinnati. You can see it in this image from which i deleted all the meteor-containing frames. Spooky....
I made this tutorial for my contacts who requested it after seeing Radiant. I didn't have the time to blur the sunset image in exactly the same way...but you get the idea. I used GIMP to edit this.
Okay, so if you don't want lightness lift, if your background is already a solid color (such as a clear blue sky), and if your image is already dark enough and you don't need to make it more bold, then you can start at STEP 5.
1. Original image
2. How to Add a Gradient
---a) Make a "new from visible" layer: Go to your "channels, undo, layers" box, and right-click your image thumbnail. At the top of the bar that pops up, should be "New From Visible". Select this. A new layer should appear above the old thumbnail.
---b) Add lightness lift:
*In your toolbox (which is the box on the left of your screen), there should be a tool called "Blend Tool". When you click the blend tool, the bottom of your toolbox will change. You must make the settings say:
Mode: Overlay
Opacity: 100%
Gradient: FB to BG (RGB) ***and make sure the box beside the gradient has a check mark in it
Shape: Radial
ALSO make note of the colored boxes just above the half-way mark in your toolbox. Black should be the front color, white should be the rectangle of color behind it.
THEN, click the middle of your image, and hold down the mouse while you drag your cursor to any outside corner of the image. Your gradient should appear.
3. Make another "New From Visible" layer. If your image has clouds in it, blur them in using the "Smudge Tool" in your toolbox.
4. IF YOUR IMAGE IS OVEREXPOSED (like mine is):
Make another "New From Visible" layer. Just above your thumbnails in the "Channels, Undo, Layers" toolbox, should be a grey square with a downwards arrow in it. (Between Mode and Opacity) Click it, and select multiply. This darkens your image.
5. Open up your sunset picture. Go under File --> Open as Layers--> and select your image to open it.
6. Your image should appear as a layer on top of the others. Just above your thumbnails in the "Channels, Undo, Layers" toolbox, should be a grey square with a downwards arrow in it. (Between Mode and Opacity) Click it, and select EITHER "Hard Light (like I did) or "Soft Light" (if you want less of the sunset to show though).
7. Using the smudge tool, blur any parts of the sunset that are on top of your main subject, or are too sharp.
8. Make another "New From Visible" layer, and add some color curves
From different places and species they came here and waited for the water to rise and the next stage of the journey.
This stone buddha has sat in my garden for a long time. Now he looks as though he is merging with the elements, becoming time itself.
Two merging galaxies in the VV689 system — nicknamed the Angel Wing —feature in this image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. Unlike chance alignments of galaxies which only appear to overlap as seen from our vantage point on Earth, the two galaxies in VV689 are in the midst of a collision. The galactic interaction has left the VV689 system almost completely symmetrical, giving the impression of a vast set of galactic wings.
This angelic image comes from a set of Hubble observations inspecting the highlights of the Galaxy Zoo citizen science project. This crowdsourced astronomy project relied on hundreds of thousands of volunteers to classify galaxies and help astronomers wade through a deluge of data from robotic telescopes. In the process, volunteers discovered a rogues’ gallery of weird and wonderful galaxy types, some of which had not previously been studied. A similar, ongoing project called Radio Galaxy Zoo is using the same crowdsourcing approach to locate supermassive black holes in distant galaxies.
Noteworthy objects from both projects were chosen for detailed follow-up observations with Hubble’s Advanced Camera for Surveys. In keeping with the crowdsourced nature of the Galaxy Zoo project, the targets for follow-up observations with Hubble were chosen via roughly 18 000 votes cast by the public. The selected targets include ring-shaped galaxies, unusual spirals, and a striking selection of galaxy mergers such as VV689.
Credits: ESA/Hubble & NASA, W. Keel.; CC BY 4.0
Acknowledgement: J. Schmidt
Place: Long Exposure shot of Enoshima
Enoshima (江ノ島) is both a small island and a small seaside town next to the island in Kanagawa prefecture, to the south of Tokyo
Nikon D700+70-200mm f/2.8 @ f/16, 70mm, 19 sec., ISO 200
Lightroom CC, Silverefexpro 2, Photoshop CC
Press "L".
Pentax 67, SMC 200mm f4, Lee GND 0.6 HE, Adox CHS 100 Art developed in Kodak Xtol 1+0, wet-mounted drumscan.
Parque Arvi, Santa Elena, Colombia; 2500 meters above sea level.
Hypoestes phyllostachya (Polka dot plant / Hoja de sangre)
Hypoestes phyllostachya, the polka dot plant, is native to South Africa, Madagascar, and south east Asia. The spots often merge into larger areas of colour.
Growing to 30 cm (12 in) tall and broad, it is an evergreen shrub with leaves heavily-spotted pink or white, as if sprayed with paint. This small shrub with green foliage stained with pink-purple dots forms bushy and compact tufts.
The most common type has green leaves with pink spots, although it can range from white to any shade of pink to red.
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Oil and water malarkey for a wet afternoon.
Does anyone have any tips on how to stop the oil merging so quickly? I wanted smaller blobs but they weren't playing ball!
A spectacular sunset just south of Boise. I was on my way home from work and the clouds looked promising. I like to use Google Maps to save locations that I can come back to when there is promise of good light.
D800
16mm
1/8 sec
f/8
ISO100
6 images merged into Pano in LRCC.
© 2015 Chris Ross Photography. All Rights Reserved. Do not copy, share, link, or use this image in any form, digital or otherwise, on blogs, personal or professional websites or any other media form without my direct written permission.
I recently got the Wildflower Bouquet set, so building a small Japanese landscape was a great opportunity to try out some of the new parts.
This is also my submission to the Far East Elegance category of Brickscalibur 2023!
A random screenshot from Google Maps of the Anton Anderson Memorial Tunnel which is where the Alaska Railroad track and the Portage Glacier Road merge to pass under a mountain near Whittier, Alaska.
This is the longest road and rail combined tunnel in North America with a length of 2.50 miles long, the traffic however is being governed by a system of traffic light signals on both ends and it is under a schedule so there will be no collisions between the cars, trucks, and the trains. It is essentially a 2.50-mile long two-way single-laned railroad grade crossing.
I've always processed in Lightroom. So trying to learn PS. This is a merge of 13 separate captures from a lightning storm in Hvar Croatia. Not perfect, but I thought it wasn't bad for a first effort. Pointers (especially on adjustment layers) welcome.