View allAll Photos Tagged multipleexposure
*O tempora o mores is a famous sentence by Cicero and it translates as Oh what times! Oh what customs!. The title is completely out of place and inappropriate! Thus it has a perfect reason to be in Pensive’s mind!
Understandably he is unable to read, without his glasses, what he wrote! Please help him to locate his glasses by specifying the correct number of pairs available…
- O tempora o mores!* Où sont mes lunettes?
*O tempora o mores est une célèbre phrase de Cicéron, qui se traduit par Oh quels moments! Oh quelles coutumes!. Le titre est complètement hors de propos et inapproprié! Ainsi, il a une excellente raison d'être dans l'esprit de Regard songeur!
Naturellement, il est incapable de lire ce qu'il a écrit sans ses lunettes! S'il vous plaît aidez-le à trouver ses lunettes en spécifiant le nombre correct de paires disponibles...
I used the Snapseed app on my phone to do a double exposure: Bath Passage in Brum and a woodland scene in south Shropshire.
I have been growing Chrysanthemums in open ground for the last 2 years with some surprising (to me) success. This year's hopes were dashed by the recent exceptionally high winds when a few of my growing plants were snapped off. I gathered in the wilted stems and treated them as if they were new cuttings. Some leaves died but many new leaves grew.
I have nothing to lose and there is a good chance that I could increase my plant stocks.
A bit of fun. Multiple exposure (4) in the bluebell woods, rotating the camera 90 degrees for each shot.
Flower is beautiful, water is romantic, then what happened if flower is falling into the water? Everyone could have different answers, and here is my representation how the it could be look like, the focus is about the expression of streamline beauty.
After feeling a bit uninspired for some time, I went into London and had a play with multiple exposures :)
If unsure, expose a second time. Nothing worse than a blank film fished out of the development tank. Warszawa, 2013