View allAll Photos Tagged pattern.
Pattern. Observed in the table protector covering my dining table.
Canon Powershot SX150 IS, available light.
Created with fd's Flickr Toys.
1.The Sea Calls, 2. Green fields, 3. baseball, 4. Tegula, 5. Foot traffic, 6. Colorblind test kit (large), 7. Green shadow, 8. Robinia hout, 9. flowing steel I, 10. hat, 11. Dried Mud Pattern, 12. Ondas en el agua, 13. P, 14. A, 15. T, 16. Eclipsed, 17. A Real Corker, 18. Birchington Seafront, 19. Monoman ©Robert Jarvis, 20. Untitled, 21. T, 22. Eeee, 23. R, 24. N, 25. anabolismo..., 26. koi, 27. conflict, 28. kack-ibis-berlin, 29. Untitled, 30. Aloe polyphylla Schönland ex Pillans, 31. Untitled, 32. disciprine, 33. Doing lines, 34. IMGP0062, 35. Optical Illusion ;~), 36. Walking path at a temple
Detail of painted wall from the Islamic Centre Centre of England, Maida Vale Road, London. This place used to be a cinema and has been decorated quite tastefully in traditional Persian Islamic designs and patterns.
These Patterns spark some kind if satisfaction feel everybtime I look at them. Most of the times when I observer Patterns in the environment I always forger to bring a film camera. But once I had got it and the results turned out to be very 😌 satisfying.
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No doubt a tripod makes a hell lot of difference when shooting a film. Sharpness and less motion blur = more details. Absolutely love this tip.
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Camera: Nikkromat Ftn
Film Stock: Ilford HP5 ( pushed 1 stop )
Tileable Grungy Teal Patterns - Photoshop (.pat) version also available here: webtreats.mysitemyway.com/grungy-teal-tileable-patterns/A
pattern by Jenny Gordy of Wiksten-Made. found in Stitch magazine (holiday issue 2008) love it!
also, i was inspired by Jenny who was inspired by another seamstress (who was probably inspired by someone else) to make this in a printed fabric. i was so eager to get this made that i finished it up in one evening.
p.s. i also copied Jenny by wearing a v-neck knit top. but i also see it paired with some other tops i have (including another printed blouse i made...) oh so many possibilities. now i want to make another.
Patterns of the storm - Maori Bay taken from very high up - the small looking rocks are actually very large rocks! Maori Bay and Muriwai are volcanic black sand beaches, so the foam being pulled back to the sea stands out clearly on the black sand.......
This is a colour photograph!!
This one was inspired by pictures of the Chrysler Building in New York. I think shading is mandatory to get it to work and not look too busy. Keep your domes tall and their sides straight for best results. I wasn't careful with my zigzag lines if you were wondering...
This is one of my favorite photos from a project I worked on during my 2015 Fall course at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan, New York. The class I took there was one of the most amazing experiences that I could have asked for. I made so many new friends and learned so many new things that have improved my eye for photos and edits greatly. There isn't another experience in the world I would trade it for and I am so thankful for the skills I have learned and the awesome people I met while in the process. One of the most important things this class taught me is to not stay in a pattern in life. Changing things up is one of the best ways to keep yourself sane in our crazy world, for when the pattern begins, your life slowly ends.
“Rectangular Patterns (Horizontal)” — Patterns formed by light, paint, shadows, and structure on an urban building.
This is one of a pair of photographs of the same structure. I’ll bet you might not be surprised to hear that the companion photograph is called “Rectangular Pattern (Vertical).” Working on this pair got me to thinking about a series that I might call “Urban Geometries” featuring such photographs, both from my existing archives and from some new work. You can look at this as a photograph of a real scene or, if you work at it, you may be able to see it as an abstract composition of forms and colors.
The location is an area that was acquired by a (very) big company for a huge future corporate campus. Then came the pandemic. Now their plans appear to be on hold, though they still hold rights to the properties. I suspect, but do not know for certain, that they did some “sprucing up” of the area to avoid charges that they are allowing it to degrade. Right now it is largely a sort of urban dead zone… though it has nice paint.
My youngest daughter has shared a dress from her older sister and to make it feel a bit more “new” I embellished it with a crocheted flower.
More info and link to pattern here:
My personal reference for tangle patterns collected and documented with the help of my mom Jill, also a tangle-queen. Follow this LINK for more information and to DOWNLOAD your own copy! emilyhoutz.blogspot.com/2013/12/my-tangle-tool-box-and-re...
It's Free Patern Friday! Visit the Craftsy Blog for our weekly roundup of fun free patterns, including a pattern for these pretty crocheted dishcloths! #beCraftsy
Designed and folded by Arseniy K.
Made out of questionable quality paper
August 2019
Triangles on a square grid, might be tricky although it isn't
Flowers Pattern graphic available for download at http://dryicons.com/free-graphics/preview/flowers-pattern/ in EPS (vector) format.
View similar vector graphics at DryIcons Graphics.
The mountain are mostly bare rock and earth so when the wind blows, the snow is blown away leaving a regular criss cross pattern of white and grey.
Chop Chop pattern.
It doesn't really matter if the 'curves' and 'triangles' are not the same size. The only important thing is that they line up - row by row.
It reminds me of a choppy sea but then again I see a flock of seagulls :)
Thank you for looking - comments most welcome :)
Here are some examples:
Our Daily Challenge ... patterns.
The bark of the leopard tree forms abstract patterns and tones as it falls off and is replaced.
With Pattern Artist 3.1 - now available from the Apple App Store - it is possible to selectively combine multiple patterns into a single artwork.
Wallpaper pattern graphic available for download at http://dryicons.com/free-graphics/preview/wallpaper-pattern/ in EPS (vector) format.
View similar vector graphics at DryIcons Graphics.
On October 18th I attended a workshop put on by the photography club that I belong to in San Diego, Polyphoto Club. The purpose of the workshop was to teach us to take the time to really "look" at something in order to see the beauty in "everyday" and "ordinary" things. Perhaps as a result of this workshop, I took the time to look at the sunlight this afternoon streaming though a set of venetian blinds to cast these shadow patterns onto a piece of varnished wood. I've probably looked at this hundreds of times in the past without "seeing" it. I'm not saying that this is a beautiful photograph, but what I "saw" was beautiful enough to get my attention.
Pattern #24 in the "Schiffchen-Spitzen"
(by E.Endrucks) 1920 book.
(19Jan2022)Corrected and updated - please read drive.google.com/file/d/1ZpHou6AOWM3LZJVbEMNB_gurWqtjazRx...
Original: ‘Die Schiffchen-Spitszen’, 1920, by Frau Eleonore Endrucks Leichtenstern - www.georgiaseitz.com/public/publicindex.html
Modern 2020: "Endrucks 1920 Project" - docs.google.com/document/d/17LEVftXweztBIOWh4sL4BB7bX65ss...
blogged here: ninettacaruso.blogspot.com/2020/10/eleonore-thats-difficu...