View allAll Photos Tagged structure.
Farmer in the terraces of the former volcano Kaiserstuhl - structures of terraces and grapevines. Please enlarge to discover details!
This storm was preceded by spectacular altocumulus asperitas clouds. Some of the smooth structures are still visible in this photo as well.
The thunderstorm was a joy to behold and photograph.
Spotted in South Central Louisiana......this ole cabin still hangs in the balance.....season after season.
Hard to tell which one is actually providing the most support though.......the cabin or the ivy......
Thank Y'all for checking in and taking a look....
Your comments/remarks are always very much appreciated.
Have a Great Thursday !
Jeff Hebert © All rights reserved
The ETFE façades are shaped in a “sail” like form and are installed on three sides of the building; East, South, and West. A total of 399 sails cover an area of 8,125 square meters, supported by 180 tons of structural aluminum framing and 57 carbon steel “headmounts”.
Graffiti on old mill structure in Turner's Falls, Massachusetts.
Shot with the Olympus E-5, Olympus Zuiko 14-35 f.20 lens.
the winding, steep streets are too narrow for vehicles in many parts, while the only sound to accompany your footsteps during a stroll may be that of the call to prayer.
On a bright day, the sun's rays bounce off sandstone-coloured walls and occasionally, you'll pass by a decaying three-floored Ottoman-style home, its wood-planked walls looming precariously over the street, or the open shutters of a teahouse with a group of old men sipping cups of Cay inside.
The old cobbled streets held plenty of other surprises: unexpected glimpses of well-known structures in the gaps between the decrepit collapsing traditional houses; gravestones on the side of the road, marking an ancient cemetery; a ruined stone arch hinting at an even older structure, all interspersed with modern hotels built in the traditional Turkish style to preserve the aesthetic appearance of the streets.
Structure Fire this was practice burn by local firemen, they managed to destroy the whole building safely, shot in North Carolina.
Back to when I got to Worthing pier when low tide coincided with the sunset.
Here I made my way out to nearly the end of the pier to capture the only bit of cloud that we had seen that day but the colours of the sky were lovely.
The pier added my foreground interest and the light on the foreground rocks was amazing too.
I have been out shooting some images in the mist this morning including shooting my fave tree near Upper Beeding which will be a monthly project.
Nikon F2AS
AI Nikkor 50 mm f/1.4
Nikon L1bc filter
Ilford FP4+125@ISO250
Developed in Diafine 3,5+3,5 min
1/2000 sec@f/2
Nikon F3
Zoom-NIKKOR 35~70mm f/3.5 AI-s
Nikon L1bc filter
Kodak professional Tmax 400@ISO500
1/250 sec@f/11
Developed in Diafine 3+3 min
The photographs over the next few days are all Infra Red and taken with my converted compact camera. Since Infra Red applies to a limited band in the electromagnetic spectrum (720nms to 1mm), and invisible to the naked eye, these photographs provide us with a glimpse into a parallel world to the one we can see. Here the IR makes the forest structure look like the living organism that it is. It's very reminiscent of the structure of blood vessels for instance.
Unlike the cyanotype method which goes back 180 years to the dawn of photography, Infra Red photography specifically dates from the publication of American physicist Robert Wood's IR photographs in the February 1910 edition of "The Century Magazine" and in the October 1910 edition of the "Royal Photographic Society Journal". Wood took an otherwise scientific process of spectrography and adapted it to capture landscapes. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_W._Wood