View allAll Photos Tagged slicer
Credit to sypix www.flickr.com/photos/sypix/421508503/ for the technique used to achieve this result.
Sliced cucumber on a cutting board.
I'm very curious about how people use these photos. Let me know in the comments!
I went to a Pampered Chef evening a few weeks back. I was pretty restrained with my purchases, and found the whole social-selling thing pretty uncomfortable to be honest.
But I'm so, so happy with my apple corer-slicer. Since I core and slice an apple or pear most days, it's genuinely useful and I get a little thrill of pleasure at the reliable and aesthetically pleasing result.
A little slice of my top most interesting photos from top to bottom. I don't know how flickr decides on that! The one thing in common with all of these are that they from going out and about!
Y10D272
Since January 1st 2010, I have been taking and uploading one square picture each day to:
square365.blogspot.com
This photo shows a close-up shot of someone eating a cheese pizza with colorful toppings. The pizza appears to have melted mozzarella cheese that's creating a stretchy, stringy effect as a slice is being lifted with a fork. The toppings include what looks like colorful bell peppers, tomatoes, and herbs scattered across the surface. There's also a glass of what appears to be water with ice visible in the foreground. The photo has a shallow depth of field, focusing on the stringy cheese and pizza, while the background is pleasantly blurred. The pizza appears to be served on a white plate or surface in what seems to be a restaurant setting.
The mille-feuille, vanilla slice or custard slice, similar to but slightly different from the Napoleon, is a French pastry whose exact origin is unknown. Its modern form was influenced by improvements made by Marie-Antoine Carême. Wikipedia
Lemon slice on granite.
Strobist: White foam core board behind granite (to control reflections). 580EX II (~1/8 power) on stand over and slightly behind lemon. I held a letter-size piece of white paper about 5" from the flash to diffuse the light.
You can see a few similar shots, here.
I got the idea for having the slice of lemon stand up from here.
If you're interested in licening this image, you can go here.
This is a sliced DC 4 low-cost digital camera in a tabletop montage. Compositing of the PCB photography and the mounted case was performed with GIMP.
The camera is equipped with SQ908 microprocessor. I found the specifications and thought about soldering the CMOS and 128Mb DRAM to a AVR32 microcontroller, targetting a selfmade webcam ;-)
Sliced Coins QA quilt top. Great QA from Elizabeth D. at her Don't Call Me Betsy blog. Photo taken at twilight just after I finished sewing on the borders!
Sliced by Goddess Diana, at Avant Garde, on Sat 3-17-18.
"...blood is a hard limit for me." - Kayfar
A Slice of Reality is a work of modern art by Richard Wilson. It was commissioned for the Millennium Dome and lives on the north-western bank of the Greenwich Peninsula.
It consists of a 9-metre (30 ft) sliced vertical section of the former 800-ton-60-metre (200 ft) sand dredger "Arco Trent". Portions of the former living quarters of the vessel are visible such as a pool table in the lower decks.. I can just imagine playing pool on a boat : )
While i was walking around looking for the ship i asked some cyclists is they had seen a scrapped boat around.. I was informed that it wasn't scrap and was indeed art, Which made me laugh!
You are free to:
Share — copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format
Adapt — remix, transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially.
You must give appropriate credit and provide a link to the www.napavalley.com home page.
A crew member slices a particularly stubborn piece of the R.H. Thomson "Ramps to Nowhere" before an excavator finishes the job and removes it.
Backlit with off-camera flash.
Gear Used:
-Nikon D3100/18-55mm kit lens.
-Yongnuo YN560 II.
-Tripod.
-Remote shutter release.
(see the kiwi slices picture for the explanation on how to achieve this)
This is one of those 'nearly' shots. I was really pleased with the idea at the time, but it doesn't quite work. Maybe the gap should have been higher in the frame, maybe the focus should have been on the subject not the frame? what do you think?
Inside a stairwell, Southbank Centre, London.
Holga 120GFN, Fuji Superia 400