View allAll Photos Tagged phosphene
Fuzzy and blue
That's me, I'm fuzzy and blue
It's just the way I grew
Love being fuzzy and blue
I do!
~ Grover (Sesame Street)
A gravitational lens refers to a distribution of matter (such as a cluster of galaxies) between a distant source and an observer, that is capable of bending the light from the source, as it travels towards the observer. This effect is known as gravitational lensing.
- Fritz Zwicky
www.youtube.com/watch?v=b7sJwiZhdvw
2534=071115
phosphene (my dreams)
Take away from man all that belongs to the land, and he is but a disembodied spirit.
- Henry George
This Polaroid is part of my newly started and ongoing series where I convert stills from music videos that I filmed for my band Chandeen and the side project Phosphenes into Polaroids. Filming these videos was something very intense for me and I want to give the images a further life by turning them into Polaroids. This is a still from the music video of the song "Vanish" by Chandeen.
As of late, I have been moving faster than I have been accustomed to. In a way, it is quite exhilarating; yet, vexing. Considering my ideal methods of redesigning and rebuilding other matters to conform to my particular style and patterns, I have been adopting unfamiliar entities and adapting to their intricacies. It leaves me embracing the diversity, yet I am frightened of the thought that even the simplest misstep can lead to the collapse of what was built upon. The thought can be quite straining, and this leads to a somber attitude that has been taxing on my rhythmic template. A soporific-wakefulness has become a prevailing manifestation to these mornings. I suppose that to most, unfamiliar territory can be distressing, especially when having to face the unknown unaccompanied. Conflating the penumbra of these waves would be my solution for now.
This Polaroid is part of my newly started and ongoing series where I convert stills from music videos that I filmed for my band Chandeen and the side project Phosphenes into Polaroids. Filming these videos was something very intense for me and I want to give the images a further life by turning them into Polaroids. This is a still from the music video of the song "Where Forever Is" by Phosphenes.
-one fine eventful day back in November ♥ after all I was wearing my fave most hideous shoes :))
tumblr
Más animales, más naturaleza y más luz en el mundo.
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Sony A7 + Helios 58mm f2.
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2020 Projects Group (15 palabras) www.flickr.com/groups/4333277@N24/: Phosphenes
This Polaroid is part of my ongoing series where I convert stills from music videos that I filmed for my band Chandeen and the side project Phosphenes into Polaroids. Filming these videos was something very intense for me and I want to give the images a further life by turning them into Polaroids. This is a still from the music video of the song "Light" by Chandeen. The editing/effects were done by my bandmate Harald Löwy with the help of Axel Schmidt-Rossi, so they deserve at least the same amount of credit for this image than me.
Proyecto 2020 (15 palabras):
PHOSPHENES:
Fenómeno caracterizado por la sensación de ver manchas luminosas
muhahahah!
It's my tumblr's birthday. should we celebrate? lmao.
Dudes and dudettes, pls link some music below... i'm bored of my playlists! any recommendations?
Q: What do you "see" when you close your eyes?
For many of us phosphene presents an impression of light that occurs without light actually entering the eye. According to the dictionary, it is usually caused by stimulation of the retina (as by pressure on the eyeball when the lid is closed) or by excitation of neurons in the visual system.
Since childhood, I believed my eyelids were just not thick enough to block all light.
Now, I'm excited to know that a private light show is available by just shutting my peepers.
Amazing!
Nora
PS: My MU and portrait by the incomparable Rachel Nyx.
abstract digital art created from a blank canvas
Today I went for a routine eye exam. As part of the exam, the doctor used bright lights to look at my eyes. When I closed my eyes as soon as she turned off the lights, on the inside of my eyelids I saw an abstract composition as a ghostly vision of the bright lights. I believe they are technically called "phosphenes."
In the composition above, I tried to reproduce what I saw with my eyes closed. It was actually just a part of the composition above, but the image kept leaping around, repeating and changing, so I tripled the image, changing it somewhat each time, to reproduce the effect of the image I saw.
Whilst watching a Phosphenes gig, in Surrey Hills Victoria, I noticed this old piece of machinery in the foreground.