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Toujours dans la série "une belle journée en Suisse" ;-)
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I was wearing a new pair of polarized sunglasses and had never really noticed until now the beautiful rainbow colors contained in the clouds and invisible to the naked eye. So I grabbed my old fashioned rangefinder polarizing filter and took a few shots.
Polarized light.
Water timer, uses two penguins to indicate time lapse. . When the top one reaches the center, time is up. The water and oil effects the polarizing; results vary each time I shoot it.
You do what you can with what you got...
Thank you for looking and for your feedback. It's a pleasure sharing images with you!
The other day a friend was commenting on the clouds that appear along the Sunshine Coast vs those in Alberta. Ostensibly, those that take shape over the ocean vs those that develop in the prairies. We both came to the conclusion that although the topic of clouds was the same, the resulting forms were often different yet unique to the landscape. (so to speak)
In this image there are two distinct clouds forming in the distance, both over the ocean and developing over a distant island. Pender Island to be exact. One, filling the sky at a higher level, while the other stretching for miles at a specific height catapillaring along the ocean.
After photographing Prairie clouds for the last 26 years, I have noted in my photos they are often quite wispy, or perhaps appearing like giant whipped potatoes in a thunder cloud, or just plain leaden, covering the sky. They too come in many forms, but for the most part, look distinctively different. And, isn't it fun to just watch them as they move inexorably across the sky creating their beauty for us to photograph.
For Macro Mondays: screw
Project 365, 2022 Edition: Day 27/365
Thank you to everyone who visits, faves, and comments.
2 versions of the same place at the same time, the only difference was the difference in the twist of the polarizer, one case brought out the white clouds and their reflections, the other version shows more underwater detail in the tide pool in the foreground without cloud reflections.
2 versions of the same place at the same time, the only difference was the difference in the twist of the polarizer, one case brought out the white clouds and their reflections, the other version shows more underwater detail in the tide pool in the foreground without cloud reflections.
The Chapel in the Woods
7 shot exposure blending
Breakthrough Photography X4 circular polarizer
Callaway Gardens
Harris County Georgia USA
The Julio Prestes Station (opened in July 10, 1872 - currently 144 years) is a historic railway station of the city of São Paulo, is located in the Santa Cecilia district.
* I'm grateful for visit, favs and comments of my photo.
A glorious tree with stunning fall foliage in beautiful Mount Auburn Cemetery. A B+W circular polarizer was used.
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For Macro Mondays: Plastic theme
This image shows exactly 3" top to bottom of foreground fork (including that bit of empty space at top).
I had a good bit of fun with this "plastic project" using a polarizing filter. There are many tutorials online if you want to give it a try. All you need a polarizing filter, the white screen of your computer as a background and the right sort of plastic--not all plastics work.
A good tutorial for you to check out if interested:
digital-photography-school.com/make-funky-images-plastic-...