View allAll Photos Tagged pattern.
A sandy area near the Laguna Madre, with some patterns carved after a storm had dumped a substantial amount of water on it. This is near sunset, and I was struck by the resemblance to an areal view of a desert.
Wild patterns, swimming in the light
Swirls of bubbles dressed in white
Log does turn, one revolution
Floating through the wild pollution
That covers the wood in bubbles of white
As wild patterns swim in the Winter light
Sealed air wrap over a fabric covered book, with some lovely white flash highlight patterns from the actual shape of he bubble wrap. Probably a bit busy, but the pick of my photos for this round as you have no idea what it is upon first glance.
There are many things to see but sometimes the nicest things are the most basic. Simple rhythmic patterns and prints made by little creatures.
From my Tiny Worlds Collection. This is not an AI created image. The pattern is totally random and interpreted by me, the photographer, and are naturally occurring crystals derived from the dried urine of a Serval (an African wild cat). The crystals are colorless and do not develop until the urine starts to dry. When placed under a microscope and subjected to a special polarized light (Nomarski Illumination) the colors appear. Variations in the thickness of the crystals varies the color. These crystals suggest to me purple mountains and amber waves of grain under a partly cloudy sky. Perhaps you have a different interpretation.
The crystals are microscopic and are composed of salts containing urates in the form of uric acid.
There is a lot to see in the unseen microscopic world. If one doesn't look, one won't find it.
It is a bit grainy but then it is sand. A very low viewpoint on a beach gave an almost 3D look to fairly flat sand pattern when I was out walking yesterday. Been a bit busy making websites for friends tonight and now close to midnight. Sorry for post and run but will see you tomorrow.
Sidewalk pattern in the Chinese Garden of the Huntington Botanical gardens in San Marino, California
I had spent a good deal of time looking for field patterns when I just about stopped looking. It was time to make my way back to the crossroads where I had started and make the long trek home. When I arrived at the crossroads, it was necessary to pull over and put my equipment away.
When I stepped out of the car, this is the image that lay in front of me and the very shot I had been looking. The sun had set and subtle colors stood on the horizon. The organized and straight lines in the field lay in perfect contrast to the sweeping blue cloud above them. And the color on the horizon separated the two.
Sometimes it is patience that pays off in photography, sometimes it is just plane luck. But now and then I find persistence in both life and photography pays off in dividends. I have been searching for this shot for many months to deliver on a challenge from a flickr friend named Frank Gadarowski. To "find a Prairie field that just seems to go on forever", like this one.
Leca M6. Voigtländer Nokton 50mm. Fomapan 200 Creative. Fomadon R09 10 min. GIMP, NIK. Kristiaansand in Norway.
Taken for Macro Mondays "Unusual Patterns" theme. I'm still new to this and only have my phone to take pictures, but I'm giving it a go!
This shallow stream pool was covered by a thin clear sheet of ice resulting in the rippled ice creating a shadow pattern on the stream bed beneath.