View allAll Photos Tagged merge
Sandringham Marina on Saturday morning. I loved the reflections of the cloudy sky in the water.
Three exposure merge.
From different places and species they came here and waited for the water to rise and the next stage of the journey.
This panorama was made at sunrise when I stood at a viewpoint near to the wonderful Cadini di Misurina. Right behind we can see Monte Cristallo and Croda Rossa (Hohe Gaisel) already catching the full light of the morning sun.
I was working with the H6D-100 and the HC 3,5/50 II. The panorama was merged from 8 single shots taken from the tripod.
Eventually, all things merge into one, and a river runs through it. The river was cut by the world's great flood and runs over rocks from the basement of time. On some of the rocks are timeless raindrops. Under the rocks are the words, and some of the words are theirs.
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.
On view at the spur of the High Line “Brick House” is a 16-foot-tall bronze bust of a Black woman. Part of Simone Leigh’s “Anatomy of Architecture” series that merges architectural forms from different regions of the world with the human body, this bust is just as impressive to people driving up along Tenth Avenue and then underneath the sculpture.
Beautiful structure with this tornado producing supercell I intercepted yesterday afternoon outside of Odell, Texas. This storm had one of the most pronounced radar hooks I have seen in a while. This is a 12 image panoramic using the new pano merge feature in Adobe Lightroom, finished in Photoshop CC. Hope you enjoy.
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.
The main river of the Altai Mountains - Katun, shrouded in legends and love, merges with the Chuya mountain River
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!
Olympus OM-1 w M.Zuiko 40-150/2.8 Pro
ISO3200 f/10 150mm -2,-1 and 0ev
Three frames raw developed in DxO PhotoLab 8.7.2, HDR merged in Luminar Neo, colour graded in Nik 8 Color Efex and finished off back in PhotoLab.
Port Kembla, Wollongong, NSW
“Eventually, all things merge into one, and a river runs through it. The river was cut by the world's great flood and runs over rocks from the basement of time. On some of the rocks are timeless raindrops. Under the rocks are the words, and some of the words are theirs.”
― Norman Maclean, A River Runs Through It
Thanks for comments or critiques. This image is copyrighted. It may not be displayed, copied or reproduced without permission.
See my very best photos in album:
After 15 years as the best family cat (and photographer's muse), our Bert has merged with the infinite.
I thought I'd leave this recent image to remind everyone what a dude he was.
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.
This abandoned narrowboat on the Oxford canal near Cropredy, Oxfordshire seems to be merging with its surroundings.
What happens when you merge an image of hot red and orange tulips with one of a hot yellow and orange sunset? I like the way the tulips in the foreground fit perfectly into the hot spot of the sun.
Thanks for stopping by and for all of your support. Have a beautiful Friday!
Please respect my copyright and do not copy, modify or download this image to blogs or other websites without obtaining my explicit written permission.