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1000 Object Sky photos
I've been playing with krazydad / jbum's Coverpop Interactive Mosaic maker.
You can make your own by visiting flickr.coverpop.com/create/
object by Peter Hassenpflug, Orfèvre
sorry, i missed to note the title of this object.
any information would be welcome - thank you
also, the shot is blurry. i like it anyway
Wedding of Joe Wright and Amy McGlothlin at St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Bedford, Mass. Wednesday, November 23, 2016.
Photo by James M. Patterson © 2016
1) I composed this shot mainly because I wanted to get the main idea across- listening to music. The main focus here is the earphones. I chose those earphones specifically because the other objects I had in mind (a speaker and headphones) were too bulky for me to effectively take the shot. They got in the way of the music notes (which I scattered around to sorta “frame” the earphones).
2) This photograph is interesting to me because I like how the music notes frame the subject and really portrays the idea –music.
3) I guess the main emotion that I’m showing here is something akin to playfulness or whimsical atmosphere. The music notes scattered around gives me the impression of a type of joy.
4) For this shot, I chose to take it a bit darker to have the white earphones stands out a bit more, as a result, my shutter speed became faster. I didn’t really change the aperture too much as I mainly used the shutter speed to control the lighting of the photo. However, I had some difficulty to adjusting the lighting to the way shown in the picture so I up-ed the ISO to help with that.
Spotmatic II | Super Takumar 55mm | Arista Premium 100
Roll #67, Frame 22. 1/15; f/8.
Dev: Rodinal 1:50, 12 min @ 20°C, 1 agitation / :30.
'My Dil Goes Mmmm '
-Hearts will never be practical until they can be made unbreakable.
L. Frank Baum
Fashion and Styling : Gary Symor www.symor.com
Make up :Marjolein de Ruijter
Styling : Willem Marten
Styling assistance : Abbygale
Photography : Hendrik Callens www.hen3k.com
Anco van Hal – Models & Artists, www.ancovanhal.nl
Random objects at the Dongdaemun Design Plaza, Seoul
PERMISSION TO USE: Please check the licence for this photo on Flickr. If the photo is marked with the Creative Commons licence, you are welcome to use this photo free of charge for any purpose including commercial. I am not concerned with how attribution is provided - a link to my flickr page or my name is fine. If used in a context where attribution is impractical, that's fine too. I enjoy seeing where my photos have been used so please send me links, screenshots or photos where possible. If the photo is not marked with the Creative Commons licence, only my friends and family are permitted to use it.
Object labels for willow figures in the Eastbourne Ancestors temporary archaeology exhibition (Jan-Nov 2014). Redoubt Fortress and Military Museum, Jan 2014.
For more ways to improve your visitor experience and interpretation visit www.katemeasures.co.uk
I took this photograph the way it is composed because I wanted to shoot straight down at the object to best incorporate the doodle to carry out a bigger picture. What makes this photograph interesting is that the subject is trying to iron the wrinkled paper in the photograph. The emotion I am trying to convey in the photograph is hard-working. The settings I used to take this shot is of an aperture of f/10.0 because I wanted to capture every detail in the photograph. It was cloudy outside so I used a shutter speed of 1/20 to properly compensate the lighting. I also used an ISO of 100 to avoid any noise in the photograph.
My family collects stuff. Stuff travels with them. Poking around in my family's stuff unearths treasures. I am trying to photograph things and preserve them that way, as there is already too much stuff travelling with me, like tiny little lampreys.
For a class project we were given an object and we had to create a poster that taught the viewer something new about the object. I really had no idea how to do this. It was a super small object and a really big poster, and the object didn't even look like a real magnifying glass. Overall it was a difficult project, and the main part I liked was seeing that 100% cyan color being printed on glossy paper.
What first hit me as really strange was the notion of objects discussing when reading art critique. It took several years of study to appreciate the animism or animist metaphors embedded in those analyses of how an artwork is situated in the space and time and how it approaches, allures or rejects the one who is experiencing it.
After studying the animist phenomenology, it's hard to imagine a world without it. It'd seem so cold, mechanical and uninteresting. One could not hear the different ceramic objects discussing on the top of the poetry shelf.
My husband, a high school teacher, used the Dirt Ball stamp to show who had paid and could enter their Senior Breakfast.
Developed by: Goldstein and Scheerer
Year: Originally developed in 1941 but this version is a generic model used by the NIPR between 1961-1962
The Object Sorting Test assesses an individual’s capacity to use fine motor skills to effectively manipulate objects. The assessment was also used to evaluate the sorting behaviours of individuals and acted as a rudimentary assessment of psychopathology and intelligence.