View allAll Photos Tagged mobius
Ran up to the Alabama Hills this morning with Steve and Roger.
Cold morning. Ground was frozen. Temperature was 25F or so... with the wind chill it was more like 15F.
This was my first visit to the arch. I'm sure there are plenty of images that look like this.
Met a Swiss guy here. He was shooting black and white film with some high end gear. Right about the time I shot this, I heard Steve exclaim, "Watch it!" and looked around to see the guy's tripod and HASSELBLAD take a tumble after the breeze kicked up and knocked it over.
Mobius Arch in the Alabama Hills outside of Lone Pine, California is apparently visited by many photographers attempting to capture Mount Whitney through the opening of the arch.
Giant polymer clay mobius bead as a Christmas ornament. More on how (not) to make these on my blog :)
fulgorine.wordpress.com/2013/11/29/how-to-make-mobius-chr...
Alabama Hills - Lone Pine, California
We took a trip out to the Alabama Hills, wanted to hunt down Mobius Arch and take the famous "mountain through the hole" shot. well, the lighting was just dead wrong by the time we got out there - so i reached for the Hoya R72 and decided to take some IR shots of it from various angles. this one i think came out okay.
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Buy my landscape photography book here
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This is definitely a classic, non-original shot, but I love it. It actually took me 3 tries to get the light how I wanted. It also took me a number of edits to get the orange glow on the rock right. Thanks for looking.
- nothing better than staring at the unknown -
A couple of photographers waiting for sunrise. They are about 20 feet above ground level, and despite its rounded contours, these rocks are hard to climb, since they offer no easy access handles to grab, and also, their surface is VERY rough, enough to scrap out a layer of skin if you scratch your hand on it.
Lone Pine, California
D3AM-7R309401
My third visit to Lone Pine and I've still not been able to coodinate my schedule to capture a sunrise or sunset. I'm blaming it on all the other cool stuff that the Owens Valley has to offer.
Mobius Arch in the moonlight looking north.
© 2013
Canon EOS 5D Mark II
EF16-35mm
f/2.8L USM
ƒ/5.0
16.0 mm
25 Sec
640 ISO
Gray day in Seattle (for the photographers out there - it is an "18% gray" day) - so I am sitting at the computer looking at some older photos.
Here is a shot of Lone Pine peak taken through Mobius Arch last October. I spent much of the night out here shooting some timelapse video, and also took a few starry sky photos. Much of the night I was shooing away mice that kept coming up to check out my backpack (with no flashlight and only the moon for illumination - the mice looked like big black blobs running over the rocks!). It was cold, and I had on my down gear and frumpy REI Expedition hat (great hat they no longer make :-( ).
Technical details for this shot: Canon EOS 7D, Sigma 20mm f/1.8 at f/8.0, 30 sec at ISO 3200. (I shot this with my 7D while my 5D was shooting time-lapse).
This is my first, and currently only, Flickr photo with more than 5,000 views. Photographically, it’s nothing to write home about, but after sitting on Flickr largely unviewed for months, it one day happened to catch the attention of New York Times food writer Mark Bittman, who tweeted it.
Postings followed at Neatorama, Blogs.ScienceForums.net, theDailyWh.at (part of the Cheezburger network), and the German site NerdCore (at crackajack.de). On one day alone there were more than 2,000 views.
As far as I can tell, I'm the first person to have made and posted photographs of Möbius strip-shaped pasta. Geeks, scientists, and nerdy foodies around the world are enjoying the idea. (Only I enjoyed the meal, however.)
Our Daily Challenge ... infinite.
The unique symbol for infinity ... the lemniscate ... is based on a real-world mathematical shape ... the Mobius strip! Like an infinite number, a mobius strip (or band) is never ending.
The Mobius strip is named after mathematician and astronomer August Ferdinand Möbius, who came up with the idea in September 1858. It is is famous because it has only one side and one edge and is never ending.
This hand-pulled photogravure print is made with Charbonnel Black 55981, Bistre, and a dash of Sanguine inks on Hahnemühle copperplate paper.
Hand-pulled print by Yoshio Inoue
Limited edition of 5
4x5 inches on a 19 x 19 cm sheet.
Signed numbered and dated by the artist on the lower front.
This work was printed on 11/28/2023
This hand-pulled photogravure print used for Haruzo Etching Ink Black, Charbonnel Bistre, Red Ochre on Awagami, Kitakata-Select paper.
Hand-pulled print by Yoshio Inoue.
Limited edition of 5
5.46x3.9 inches on 22 x 18 cm sheet.
Signed numbered and dated by the artist on the lower front.
*This work was filmed on April 23, ’24, and printed it on June 3, ’24.
study Andrea Russo's model.
similiar ones by Dasa Severova:
www.flickr.com/photos/dasssa/15756396493/in/photolist-ej9...
and
www.flickr.com/photos/dasssa/17065277482/in/photolist-ej9...
The Alabama Hills are a range of hills and rock formations near the eastern slope of the Sierra Nevada in the Owens Valley, west of Lone Pine. Mobius Arch is one of the notable rock formations in this area, and the view can be framed with Mount Whitney beyond. I would love to come back during prime Milky Way season for some light painting and astrophotography!
Alabama Hills, near Lone Pine, CA
4x5 Arca-Swiss, 90mm Schneider lens, Fuji Astia 100.
Yes, that's right... Astia not Vlevia. I enjoy this scene, but it is often photographed and some times it can be damn near impossible to photograph when there are 10 other people trying to do the same. I tried once in October to make this picture but it didn't happen because there were so many people there. This shot was taken on New Years morning, and my sister and I were the first ones to set up our tripods, so we didn't have any problems the second time around. I'd like to come out again after a nice winter storm and make another go at this scene at sunrise, I think it will be spectacular.
This is a tough shot to make for a view camera. It's very difficult to focus in twilight. I waited until just before the sun hit the mountains to attempt critical focus and try to calculate my focus spread and aperture. It's a bit tricky, but patience is key. I think a faster wide angle lens is in order, something like the 90mm f4.5 Nikkor-SW.
View Large: farm8.staticflickr.com/7008/6828237541_f469f30f20_o.jpg
Möbius est le réseau de bus du Grand Angoulême à la suite de sa réorganisation, desservant 33 des 38 communes de la communauté d'agglomération.
Every year at this time the Earth passes through a trail of space debris left in the wake of Halley's Comet's passage in 1986 and a shooting star display erupts in the night skies for a few weeks. Known as the Orionid meteor shower, it can sometimes be the most spectacular! On this night I caught not one but two meteors in a single frame over the Mobius Arch in the Alabama Hills, near Lone Pine, CA. There were not nearly as spectacular as the fireball we saw on Wednesday, October 17th. That one appeared to have landed somewhere north of Yosemite in back of Hetch Hetchy reservoir. Barb and I saw it from the south shore of Mono Lake.
This 30,000-acre area received its name from a Confederate warship responsible for wreaking havoc on northern shipping during the Civil War. Prospectors sympathetic to the Confederate cause named their mining claims after the C.S.S. Alabama, and eventually the name stuck to these unique hills. The rounded, weathered contours of the Alabamas form a sharp contrast with the crisply-sculpted ridges of the nearby Sierra Nevada Mountains. Unlike the Sierra peaks, the Alabama Hills’ granite rock has been etched by wind and water, creating rounded and soft-looking boulders and leaving desert varnish—a mottled black coating of iron and manganese compounds—on many of the rocks. The scenic rock formations have been the setting for many commercials and movies, including “The Shadow” and “How the West Was Won.” These geologic features also lure rock climbers, hikers, and mountain bikers, and several streams in the area attract anglers.
Photo by Jesse Pluim, BLM.
This hand-pulled photogravure print is made with Charbonnel Etching Ink Black, Bistre, Sanguine on Awagami Take-Washi paper.
Hand-pulled print by Yoshio Inoue,
Limited edition of 6, 4.97x3.9 inches on a 19 x 22 cm sheet.
Signed numbered and dated by the artist on the lower front.
This work was printed on 05/20/2024