View allAll Photos Tagged palmbay
There is a small exhibition of kinetic sculpture at one of our local colleges this weekend, and, since the campus is very close to home, i made a quick trip there yesterday afternoon. This large piece, by Jeff Kahn, and titled 'Transcending Tides', was particularly beautiful, moving with the wind, responding to the movements of its own centers of gravity.
I waited for this particular alignment, watching it develop over the course of five minutes or so. At times, I find that I am anxious to press the shutter when I am out shooting, but I've learned that there is great value in patience, in waiting for the right moment, the moment when the lines and lighting and perspective are all just so. Five minutes is certainly not a very long wait, and I know that many photographers wait for hours, days, weeks, months for conditions to be perfect, depending on their subjects. Or they prepare their scenes, their subjects so meticulously in order to get it right. Five minutes, in the grand scheme of things, is not very long to wait. Just five minutes …
littletinperson
p.s. If you're interested in seeing more of Jeff's work, check out his website at www.jeffkahnsculpture.com.
Polaroid SX-70
Impossible PX680 "COOL" test film
ND pack filter
Palm Bay, Florida
intentionally poorly shielded upon ejecting
This is the Indian River Lagoon from Melbourne Beach, FL looking back over towards mainland Florida (Palm Bay and Melbourne).
SONY DSC
Palm Bay
Another golden oldie from my Sony days reprocessed using superior software.
I suspect if I had found it I would have chalked it up as a redstart and not noticed the black extending too far down the chest for one of them.
Atlas V rocket launch 6:19am as seen from Palm Bay Florida approx. 45 miles south of Cape Canaveral. 30 second tripod exposure.
As the Sun set tonight, the 99.2% illuminated Moon rose, seen here from Palm Bay, Florida against a bluish/pink sky.
I had gone out to try and catch the late afternoon Delta IV launch but it was really too cloudy between the Cape and here to really see any of the launch. But the low cloud deck did make for a nice sunset.
To celebrate I would like to invite you all to the opening party! It will be starting at 1PM SLT on Saturday 2nd January, everybody is welcome and I hope to see you all and some of your friends there!
I have also switched over to the Blogotex system and applications are open for new bloggers, please visit the mainstore and click the access point for an application.
(If you blog for my store already and still need to switch to Blogotex, no worries you will automatically be accepted.) maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Ardis%20Isle/86/113/1502
Cooler & drier air over the Space Coast made for good views of stars and the Milky Way Friday night, seen here from west Palm Bay, or technically, Melbourne.
Guest appearance by the waxing crescent Moon, left, under the clouds.
Bonus: The world-famous and always-epic John Kraus of John Kraus Photos, right, under the trees. Go check out his post from last night, a really great shot captured with his iPhone (!).
Details: 10-frame vertical panorama captured with a Canon R5 + Sigma 14mm @ ISO2500, 13-secs & f1.8; merged and processed in Lightroom; horizon flattened in Photoshop.
Indian River Lagoon, Florida
Large Format Film (4x5) using Fuji Velvia 100F. Ebony SV45-ti, Rodenstock 150mm S, 3-stop-GND. 6-minute exposure.
421-Velvia100F-V001-VSP-spot-faw.jpg
Abandoned mattress at the Copound in Palm Bay, Florida on March 10, 2019. Shot with Kodak Portra 400 and processed at Colonial Photo and Hobby in Orlando, Florida.
Warning sign at the Compound in Palm Bay, Florida - March 10, 2019. Shot with Kodak Portra 400 and processed at Colonial Photo and Hobby in Orlando, Florida.
Stagecoach 17529 (LX51 FON) is seen along Cliff Terrace, Margate, on route 37 between Palm Bay, and Margate Railway station.
27th August 2017.