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Story behind: My boyfriend and I have always been in a long distance relationship, writing letters, sending postcards is our thing. But recently due to the global pandemic, our letters never arrive. This inspires me to the glitch art technique used.
Intoxicated by the sight of you, eager to be with you, savouring every moment. So much to say and experience. Anxious to see how it develops further!
Object Details
Title: Erotic Print
Artist: Kitagawa Utamaro (Japanese, ca. 1754–1806)
Period: Edo period (1615–1868)
Culture: Japan
Medium: Woodblock print; ink and color on paper
I like the object. This is an ordinary frame with shorter exposure. No geostationary satellites encroached in the southern hemisphere.
Equipment: Takahashi FSQ-106ED, F3 Reducer 0.6x, and EOS 5Dmk3-SP3, modified by Seo San on ZWO AM5 Equatorial Mount, autoguided with Fujinon 1:2.8/75mm C-Mount Lens, Pentax x2 Extender, ZWO ASI 120MM-mini, and PHD2 Guiding
Exposure: 6 times x 900 seconds, 4 x 240 sec, 5 x 60 sec, 5 x 15 sec, and 5 x 4 seconds at ISO 1,500, and 4 seconds at iso 400 and f/3.0, focal length 320mm
site: 2,434m above sea level at lat. 24 39 52 south and long. 70 16 11 west near Cerro Armazones in Sierra Vicuña Mackenna in Coast Range of Chile
Ambient temperature was 11 degrees Celsius or 52 degrees Fahrenheit. Wind was mild. Sky was dark, and SQML was 21.65 at the night.
The Trifid Nebula (also known as Messier 20 or M20) is an H II region located in Sagittarius and is approximately 5000 light years from Earth. It was discovered by Charles Messier on June 5, 1764. Its name means 'divided into three lobes'. The object is an unusual combination of an open cluster of stars; an emission nebula (the lower, red portion), a reflection nebula (the upper, blue portion) and a dark nebula (the apparent 'gaps' within the emission nebula that cause the trifurcated appearance; these are also designated Barnard 85. This image is the result of 10 x 180s exposures, captured using a QHY8L attached to a Sky-Watcher Explorer 190MN Pro.
A nearly perfect ring of hot, blue stars pinwheels about the yellow nucleus of an unusual galaxy known as Hoag's Object in this image by Hubble's Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2.
The blue ring, which is dominated by clusters of young, massive stars, contrasts sharply with the yellow nucleus of mostly older stars. What appears to be a "gap" separating the two stellar populations may actually contain some star clusters that are almost too faint to see. Curiously, an object that bears an uncanny resemblance to Hoag's Object can be seen in the gap at the one o'clock position. The object is probably a background ring galaxy.
Ring-shaped galaxies can form in several different ways. One possible scenario is through a collision with another galaxy. The blue ring of stars may be the shredded remains of a galaxy that passed nearby. Some astronomers estimate that the encounter occurred about 2 to 3 billion years ago.
For more information, please visit: hubblesite.org/image/1241/news_release/2002-21
Credit: NASA and the Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA);
Acknowledgment: Ray A. Lucas (STScI/AURA)
Repeating a semi-failed experiment from 2019 (with hoped-for improvements), another round of pinhole cameras were laid on the perimeter fence of the Nike Missle site at the Headlands to be left for a year. Spanning the time between two Hiroshima anniversaries, recording every passage of the sun from August 6 to the next August 6, these photographs are my exploration of the Bay Area’s infrastructure of nuclear war. These photo paper negatives were made in film canister pinholes using a piece of old Soviet photo paper, producing an image known as a lumen print which appears without using developer...
Low but intense winter sunshine falling on objects in our house. GX7_1080080.RW2. Many thanks for views, comments and favourites.
ID: 003655
This picture is (c) Copyright Frank Titze, all rights reserved.
It may NOT be reproduced, copied, edited, published, transmitted or uploaded in any way without my permission.
See more pictures on frank-titze.art.
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Exposure: Digital
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Processing: Digital
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Exposure: 06/2015
Processing: 06/2015
Published: 10/2015
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Flickr "taken" date set as actual publish date.
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An unknown object buzzes the ISRO PSLV rocket Carrying Aditya L1 into space, 02.09.2023. It's extremely fast. Watch closely in this video, bottom right of the rocket it appears as a dot and grows in size as it comes closer to the rocket
Here is my analysis of this event astronomymagic.wordpress.com/about/ufo-inspects-rocket/
Oil on canvas
11" x 14"
June 2015
None of This Was Real is a series of oil paintings that portrays fictional scenes of objects randomly generated by a computer program. These objects are a product of code written by the artist and rendered using a global illumination ray tracing engine. They are effectively subjects for still life. But there was never any life – any reality – in the subjects. Everything was virtual and simulated.
The software for creating the reference images was written in Processing (processing.org), with the additional help of toxiclibs (toxiclibs.org) for geometry creation and Sunflow (sunflow.sourceforge.net) for the global illumination rendering engine.