View allAll Photos Tagged salsa

This picture shows off the best Salsa Roja in Los Angeles. Courtesy from El Taco Llama in Newhall, Ca.

Homemade fresh tomato salsa for nachos

My cat Salsa in ink.

Drawn with Pitt pens, brush and regular type, in large Moleskine sketchbook.

Blogged in Ea's Artlog

Islands brygge, Copenhagen

My Salsa Mukluk early in its life, hanging out at Manning Park, Hamilton Hill.

A bowl of homemade salsa fresca, a simple mixture of tomato, onion, green chile, garlic, and cilantro. For 2016: one photo each day (224/366)

 

From January 2013 shortly after moving to Florida I decided to take Salsa dance lessons at the famous G.C. Ballroom. It was very fun and a good way to meet people! I admit I was terrible dancing and felt everyone was light years ahead of but I got better as time went on! I even bought myself some gold dance shoes, here matching my gold shell blouse with my ruffled Salsa skirt! So fun !

Pianist for Orquesta MaCuba, performing during...

 

Inman Park Festival

Atlanta (Inman Park), Georgia, USA.

23 April 2022.

 

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▶ "Orquesta MaCuba has been on the scene in Atlanta, Georgia, since 2003. The Orchestra consists of full brass, percussion, and rhythm sections, with back-up vocalists, providing a Big Band experience."

 

▶ More images from the festival: here.

 

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▶ Photo by Yours For Good Fermentables.com.

▶ For a larger image, type 'L' (without the quotation marks).

— Follow on Facebook: YoursForGoodFermentables.

— Follow on Instagram: @tcizauskas.

▶ Camera: Olympus OM-D E-M10 II.

— Monochrome rendering via Nik Collection.

▶ Commercial use requires explicit permission, as per Creative Commons.

From a vendor at the Kelowna Farmers' Market

As I looked in to this image I was thinking of what guitar playing might look like if we could see colors as the music was playing. Some how I see Spanish Guitar sounds in this image. I just know I can see the dancing of the beautiful ruffles on a dress. The rainbow colors as a powerful woman dancer as she flies gracefully into her lovers arms. Every thing we see is in fast and slow motion at the same time. We can never really see who the dancers really are. But we do know they are really joy and love of the sounds that come from the great guitar players fingers. Strumming the strings sounds in to our very souls where the sounds becomes visible to our deepest emotions. So we can now let go of any thing holding us back from being free to just enjoy being in this moment.

 

Mike

 

Father and son collaboration

 

Our photographic art is a kinetic motion study, from the results of interacting with my son A.J and his toys.

 

He was born severely handicapped much like a quadriplegic. On December 17,1998. Our family’s goal has always been to help A.J. use his mind, even though he has minimal use of his body.

 

A.J. likes to watch lights and movement. One of the few things he can do for himself is to operate a switch that sets in motion lights and various shiny, colorful streamers and toys that swirl above his bed.

 

One day I took a picture of A.J. with his toys flying out from the big mobile near his bed like swings on a carnival ride. I liked the way the swirling objects and colors looked in the photo.

 

I wanted to study the motion more and photograph the whirling objects in an artful way, I wanted my son A.J. to be a part of it. After all, he’s the one who inspires me. When A.J. and I work together on our motion artwork, A.J. starts his streamers and objects twirling, I take the photographs.

 

Activating a tiny switch might not seem like much to some, but it’s all A.J. can do. He controls the direction the mobile will spin, as well as when it starts and stops. The shutter speeds are long, and sometimes, I move the camera and other times I hold it still.

 

I begin our creation with a Nikon digital camera. Then I use my computer with Photoshop to alter the images into what I feel might be an artistic way. Working with Photoshop, I find the best parts from several images and combine them into the final composite photograph. I consider the finished work to be fine art. The computer is just the vehicle that helps my expressions grow.

 

I take the photographs and A.J. adds the magic. It’s something this father and son do together. After I’ve taken a few shots, I show him the photos in the back of the camera. When the images are completed, I show him from a laptop. He just looks. He can’t tell me whether or not he likes the images, but he’s always ready to work with me again.

 

It offers me my only glance into A.J.’s secret world. We’ve built a large collection of images and I hope the motion and color move you as much as they do me.

 

A.J. inspires me to work harder to understand my life in the areas of art, photography, people, spirituality, and so much more. He truly sets my mind in motion and helps me find the beauty in everyday things.

 

Mike

 

Abstract Art set:

www.flickr.com/photos/patnode-rainbowman/sets/72157602269...

  

AJ Patnode - A Journey of Hope (documentary):

www.youtube.com/watch?v=OR7m8QFcmRM

 

This shows how I do the Camera work:

www.youtube.com/watch?v=fmjVVGraUVw

 

AJ'S blog:

www.ajpatnode.com

    

in Clärchens Ballhaus, Berlin-Mitte. The DJs had fun too.

Salsa

 

1 can (14.5 oz) Muir Glen® organic fire roasted or plain diced tomatoes, well drained

1/4 cup chopped onion

2 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro

1/4 teaspoon coarse (kosher or sea) salt

1 clove garlic, finely chopped

1 small fresh jalapeño chile, seeded, finely chopped

 

Guacamole

 

3 ripe large avocados (about 1 1/2 lb) pitted, peeled

2 tablespoons fresh lime juice

1/2 teaspoon coarse (kosher or sea) salt

1/2 teaspoon red pepper sauce

1 clove garlic, finely chopped

 

1. In medium bowl, mix salsa ingredients.

 

2. In another medium bowl, place avocados; coarsely mash. Stir in remaining guacamole ingredients.

 

3. Spoon guacamole into shallow serving bowl; top with salsa. Serve with tortilla chips as desired.

 

Find more recipes at www.bettycrocker.com.

Ines peels a roasted chile de agua to add to the bowl of roasted tomato to make a tasty salsa in the Zapotec village of Santo Tomas Jalieza, Oaxaca.

Ricoh GR Digital IV

Please take a moment to view more of my galleries here:

www.pbase.com/matrixone

At a CalMex restaurant. The eye viewfinder makes the camera so much steadier hand-held than shooting looking at the rear LCD display (as here).

 

XA500135

Without reds, especially blood reds, I might as well forget it.

Taken at the Salsa Congress in Bangalore.I kind of like the fact the foot is blurred since it conveys the speed and control with which they were moving

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