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Prompts for the community film-making workshop, with Ed Webb-Ingall, part of Open Cinema at Open School East. April 2015.
Strawberry Bokeh. Terri's gorgeous photo of her grapefruit bokeh made me want to try for some fruit bokeh of my own.
Picture Summer prompt - A tall drink of water.
People often think my love of water is strange. I've never tasted coffee or a cup of tea. Milk is not a friend of mine. I very rarely drink juices or soft drink. And as for wine, no thanks. I've been this way ever since I can remember. I was the kid at the birthday party asking for some water in my plastic cup. I'm sure I often seem weird or anti social but water is really all I want to drink. I was playing around dropping hibiscus flowers into a glass of water, since I doubt I'll be using them in a glass of champagne anytime soon.
PS some water facts:
It ranks only second to oxygen as essential for life.
You can survive for thirty days without food but no more than three days without drinking water?
70% of your body is made up of water and without it you would be poisoned to death by your own waste products.
Drinking water aids digestion and absorption of food, regulates body temperature, carries nutrients and oxygen to cells and removes toxins and other wastes.
The body's water also cushions joints and protects tissues and organs including the spinal cord from shock.
The brain is made up of 85% water. When dehydrated or deprived of even a small amount of its fluid requirements, thought processes and emotional stability are the first to be affected.
Drinking a sufficient amount of water -
Improves concentration
Maintains healthy skin condition
Flushes toxic waste from your system
Aids weight loss
Prevents fatigue and headaches
Protects against colds and flu
The average adult body needs about 2.5 litres of water per day to match the amount of fluid it will lose.
I struggled a bit with this one as I had no clear idea of what I'd do. In fact, I nearly started all over again but with a few additions, I think it looks okay now. Unfortunately, though, the tear drop does look rather like a onion! Lol! They make you cry though, don't they!
I used acrylic paints, pitt pens, white gel pens, gesso, chalk inks and stamps. I also cut out out the tear shape and stuck it on.
This prompt was a good reminder to take my focus off the ground or my phone when I walk, and look up. I get to see some amazing architectural feats when I’m downtown Louisville, and I tend to pass them off. This building is where I have my day job. The street right outside is covered by a glass ceiling – making it nice to enjoy the outdoors without getting rained on. Most times when I take a moment to look up, I’m pleasantly surprised. You should, too.
Saturday, June 10th, 2017
Favorite Quote
This week's prompt is "Favorite Quote" for the Instagram project #portraitsofme. On a retreat years ago, I pulled a quote out of a jar. This particular quote has reappeared several times in my life, most recently in a self-help book on ridding myself of shame.
The quote is:
And the day came when the risk to remain tight in a bud was more painful than the risk it took to blossom. ~Anais Nin
That's how I feel about my journey around the planet this year. I've been working on accepting myself the way I am right now, not 25 pounds thinner or in better shape. Right now. In 2015, I let my hair go natural which I felt very conflicted about. We took a Thompson family photo around Easter that shocked me. My hair wasn't just gray; it was gray, silver, and white... mostly white. I looked in my mid-50s and I am just not ready for that. So I talked with my hairdresser about slowly introducing color back into my hair. The first time she added very subtle lowlights and highlights, and it was so subtle that no one even noticed. So this time, she went a little bolder. I love it.
I am blossoming.
It's a beautifully natural yet dramatic change. I think I look much younger and I'm much happier with my superficial appearance. And that's what this is about. I did it for me.
Thanks for looking! (And I'm sorry to those ladies who loved my gray!!! Maybe I will let it go again someday... maybe.)
The prompt was "vices." I took a photo of a shot of whisky. Actually, not real whisky. Martinelli's sparkling apple cider. The model is my 14-year-old daughter. Settle down.
Prompt: A 24 year old Pakistani woman is sitting in a home office, she is wearing a pink hoodie with darker pink sleeves, she is wearing pink headphones, she has short black hair, 1girl, solo, closeup
Negative Prompt: EasyNegative, extra hands, extra arms, extra legs, extra limbs, missing hands, missing arms, missing legs, missing limbs, bad hands, underwear, bra, panties, ((modesty)), out of frame, tattoo, tattoos
Seed: 3647701
Stable Diffusion model: blueberrymix_10
Clip Skip: True
ControlNet model: None
VAE model: vae-ft-mse-840000-ema-pruned
Sampler: dpmpp_2m_sde
Width: 1024
Height: 1024
Steps: 50
Guidance Scale: 7.5
Prompt Strength: 0.7
LoRA model: None
Embedding models: None
Seamless Tiling: None
Use Face Correction: codeformer
Use Upscaling: None
Prompt: A plus size mature drag queen in an 80s Theirry Mugler inspired wedding dress walking down the aisle. Smiling, heavy makeup, extremely long eyelashes, long fingernails. She is being walked down the aisle by her early 20s son
Got bored... it was raining on our way home from the Mt. Fuji climb.
When we passed into a tunnel, I took my camera and clicked.
I forgot to turn the autofocus "ON" and these tiny bokehs from the droplets were formed.
It really looks like green DOS prompt (the usual thing i see when compiling BIOS codes, and i'll surely miss it!). Geeky? LOL!
HBW Flickr Friends!
The easy-to-use DTV Prompt digital shower system puts total control of your shower experience at your fingertips.
Writing Prompt Journal made with lots of Vintage Ephemera - each having a writing prompt for creative inspiration.
Check out my blog for more of what I make jennibelliestudio.blogspot.com
Journals available in my shop that is on profile page - www.flickr.com/people/39911180@N05/
Week 52 of my Nifty Fifty for 52 challenge
This week's prompt is: The End
I began this year's Nifty-Fifty for 52 challenge with a calendar shot, so I think it's only fitting that I end the year in a similar fashion. Happy New Year!
On a personal note: I've had a great deal of fun with my first 52 week challenge, it made me get out and take pictures of things I don't normally look at and it allowed me to get to know my Nifty-Fifty lens as it was brand new to me when I began this challenge. I'm quite proud that I've finished it too - I only fell behind posting twice in the span of the whole year due to not being home during the time periods, and I think that's pretty good.
CHATSWORTH - A prompt call to 9-1-1 from a passerby brought the Los Angeles City Fire Department and allied agencies to quickly conquer a small non-injury brush fire in the 11500 block of North Topanga Canyon Boulevard on September 29, 2020.
© Photo by Austin Gebhardt
LAFD Incident: 092920-0711
Connect with us: LAFD.ORG | News | Facebook | Instagram | Reddit | Twitter: @LAFD @LAFDtalk
PROMPT:
Capture the exquisite essence of a stunning 18 - year - old skinny girl as the photographer Evgeny Matveev will do it - in an award - winning, dramatic, and visually striking close - up photograph. She is a lovely nerdy girl with a cheeky sweet smile. Indoor scene - Another tent in the bedouin camp, showing two young touareg girls - girl talking. Donning a very worn blue second-hand mesh clothes with many holes and rather torn grunge-like style. I prefers using caramel, and also considers flint, pebble, white, corn and 'muted colors'. Please draw inspiration from the styles of Zdzisław Beksiński, as well as abstract expressionism. Each image should be of high quality and suitable for international art magazines.
The room at the Ritz was actually very nice. The staff was prompt and the lobby had themed drinks or snacks for the various DragonCon/Football/NASCAR groups staying the weekend.
The smoking area had fans so Jack was happy. And the walk to the hotel took no more time that the elevator lines to the host rooms. I'd stay here again for sure.
The easy-to-use DTV Prompt digital shower system puts total control of your shower experience at your fingertips. Select the number of sprays and temperature, all at the push of a button.
“One who knows the Mississippi, will promptly aver — not aloud, but to himself — that ten thousand River Commissions, with the mines of the world at their back cannot tame that lawless stream, cannot curb it or confine it, cannot say to it, Go here, or Go there, and make it obey; cannot save a shore which it has sentenced; cannot bar its path with an obstruction which it will not tear down, dance over, and laugh at.” —Mark Twain
I have driven the road along the Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and Tensas Parish more times than I can count. My mother is from the small farming town of Newellton on the banks of Lake Saint Joseph. The lake is a shallow, hyacinth choked ox-bow. Once it was part of the main channel of the Mississippi but now it is a silted-in curve of still water surrounded by fecund, deltaic soil. The river is the whole, full reason for that place. Its annual floods, over millennia, left rich ground that drew planters like my Swayze and Netterville forbearers who arrived there in the late 1700′s having picked the losing the side of the Revolutionary War.
They made their new home in the piney knolls south of Natchez and called it Kingston in a final act of reference to their lost political cause then got down to the business of turning the primeval delta into a farming paradise. But like the Biblical paradise that fired their dreams of torment and salvation, their new home contained within it the seeds of its own destruction. The river had made the land and the river would do what it wanted with its creation. Later generations, having been turned out by the river in extreme fashion during the 1927 flood, joined with the rest of the country in trying to tame the Mississippi. The levees were raised and, it was hoped, that the power of the river that had given them so much had finally been harnessed to the will of man. As we now sit and watch the brown murk rise again it is impossible to not consider that the mighty current of nature is close to throwing off that harness and taking back ownership of the delta it made.
I heard a national radio commentator say yesterday that the Corp of Engineers was considering opening the Morganza Spillway to “save the city of Baton Rouge.” Could a more horrifying statement be constructed? Has it come to that? Is it so bad that this first city of the bluffs is in danger of being washed away? Back in the time of the first European exploration of this area the Istrouma Indians placed a gore smeared stick in the first bits of high ground along the Mississippi to mark the edge of their hunting grounds. The Istrouma knew the power of the river and the value of the land that stayed above its lapping current. And now we are prepared to open the spillway, the final war machine in our battle with the Mississippi, to save the city. What calamitous times we live in, what vanity and struggle to think ourselves free from the hazards of creation.
Check out more at my blog, Lemons and Beans, for lots of photos, recipes, travel writing and other ramblings. I appreciate any feedback but, please do not post graphic awards or invitations in the comments, I'm just not crazy about them.