View allAll Photos Tagged sheets
Here's another look at the Chicago skyline and its icy shoreline along Lake Michigan at Monroe Harbor. One thing about Chicagoans, you can't say we don't know sheet :) Happy Friday!
Nikon D7500, Sigma 18-300, ISO 110, f/11.0, 20mm, 1/500s
Ibis Miami, Florida, USA.
No post-processing done to photo. Nikon NEF (RAW) files available. NPP Straight Photography at noPhotoShopping.com
Life is so beautiful!
The previous sheets of the Timmy Calendar 2022: www.flickr.com/photos/wolfgang-kynast/albums/721777202956...
Have you ever wondered why ghosts are depicted as looking like people with sheets draped over them? Perhaps because people sometimes do throw sheets over their heads and mock the dead by pretending to be ghosts. I don’t know that I believe in ghosts. I suspect that we are so tied to our bodies that when our bodies fail that whatever is left (if anything) is too fragile to make its self known. Perhaps the prototypic ghost shape represents some other phenomena.
A member of my immediate family is something of an amateur ghost hunter. He shared with me a video he took of phenomena that looks something like a traditional ghost. Less so a man with a sheet over his head than a source of glowing energy like an elongated jelly fish. If you wish to see the video and judge for yourself, you may watch it here:
For more AI-generated images with micro stories by me and other members of the Neural Narrative Collective: neural-narrative.blogspot.com/
Photo | Stable Diffusion | Photoshop
Abandoned factory for sheet and plumb goods, founded in 1857 and out of operation since 1976. Demolition began 2022.
Constructed on a fence at the Merced National Wildlife Refuge. These non-sticky webs are designed to entangle or stop flying prey in the upper portion, after which the prey often falls onto the lower "sheet" where the spider awaits. Notice the loose curved threads strung between the stiff vertical strands. This web was about 6" long. Quite a piece of engineering!
As the sheets danced on the clothesline, carried by a gentle breeze, and the fragrance of freshly laundered linen filled the air, I couldn't help but be transported back to a cherished memory. It was a magical spot nestled in the heart of the forest, where I spent blissful summers with my Great-Granny. In that quaint yet cozy haven, every corner held a piece of nostalgia, and every moment felt like a warm embrace. It was a place where I truly felt at home, where memories were woven into the very fabric of the landscape.
Story by Duchess
DRD - The Burrow – Building @ Wizarding fair
DRD - Salem - Laundry - clothesline
DRD - Boho Garden Party – Trees
:Fanatik Architecture: WATERFALL
HISA - Rocky heights – rocks
HISA - Aspen Trees Summer
Here's one you may not immediately recognize from Zion NP. This is The Subway with higher than normal water flow!
sitting the brass incense burning on the soap stone case incense burner and getting lights right presents a flow unique and pixel worthy.
Take one sheet of A4 paper, a few wisps of cotton wool, apply Sellotape and switch on LED torch!
Took quiet a few of these for the MM book theme, just thought I’d share another!
Over the past decade one of the common advices given to aspiring photographers is to explore various of photographic themes from which they may start developing their own style. Style, so I believe, is first and foremost the reflection of the photographer’s own personality combined with his/her favored theme/subject and her preferred technique(s) of execution. It’s good advise even though slightly inadequate.
I have realized this couple of months ago when my work was criticized as “mirroring the reality”. Indeed, simply just. Behind the bland words and the euphemistic praises the critique is not very pleasant to read, however it was probably one of the most insightful critique I ever received. It hallowed me to deepen the engagement with my subjects, not in order to capture photographs but to make pictures and even tableaux.
So let’s start with a ‘blank sheet’
Cotton bed linen in a lovely old French Armoire we found a few years ago. I was carried away by the need to photograph something for Macro Mondays, Cotton, but kind of forgot it needed to be less than 3" so now I am going to have to think again....
Patchwork Tin Roof ~ JingJai Market ~ Chiang Mai, Thailand
Nikon D7500, Sigma 18-300, ISO 100, f/14.0, 40mm, 1/800s
When I looked out the window early the morning after I saw the cloudburst over Mono Lake, I noticed that there were still some lingering clouds. We quickly headed out to the overlook just past the visitor center. I'm so glad we did. The falling sheets of rain were illuminated by the bright rays of the rising sun. Another magic moment.