View allAll Photos Tagged subtle
"Subtle & Muted" Please click on the thumbnail to enlarge it to better see the richness and complexity of the image.
Name: Jama Shelton
Age: 36
Occupation: Professor; Social Worker
Outfit: Shirt from J.Crew. Bow Tie from the Tie Bar. Pants from H&M. Belt from Urban Outfitters. Shoes from Cole Hahn.
Song That Best Describes Jamma’s Look: “I Walk the Line” by Johnny Cash.
Exploring Nik Color Efex Pro 3.0 I just received. Applied filter: vignette blur. Host software: Appel Aperture 2.1. Please tell me what you think about this digital effect.
This is my favourite from the project. Unfortunately I think the 'stronger' photo of envy will better meet the brief.
A photo for a shoot to take a photo representing "Envy" for a production of the Seven Sins by BodySoc, Bath University.
Testing out my new Tamron 17-35 on a nice fire I setup tonight, could have gotten some better shots but I let this burn for a good 3 hours before I took the shot, oh well I think it turned out decent.
Spc. Mark Ramirez, an infantryman in 1st Platoon, Company D, 1st Battalion, 8th Infantry Regiment from Fort Carson, Colo., works to negotiate a locked door during a clearing operation in Mosul, Iraq, April 1, 2008. A car bomb factory, several bags of homemade explosives and bomb making materials were found and destroyed during the raid. Photo by Spc. John Crosby, 115th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment.
I went into Liverpool today to check out the subtlemob. I didn't really get any good shots but the people who took part seemed to be having a good time.
This photo can be viewed bigger on the Liverpool 365 website.
One of a pair of side windows flanking the sanctuary designed by John Hayward, with the intention of bridging the gap between his densely coloured windows in the east wall and the plain glazing to the north and south.
St Michael's Paternoster Royal was famous for the burial of London's most famous mayor, Dick Whittington here in 1423, but the site of his grave has long since been lost. Destroyed along with so many others in the Great Fire of 1666, the church was rebuilt by Sir Christopher Wren between 1685-94 (steeple finished only in 1713). The church had the misfortune of being hit by a V1 rocket in 1944 and was left in ruins for two decades before becoming the last of the City churches to be restored in 1968.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Michael_Paternoster_Royal
The interior is slightly smaller than its pre-war form owing to the conversion of the west end into the Mission to Seafarers offices, but the restoration by Elidir Davies has been a great success, with several Wren period furnishings (from here and elsewhere) reinstated.
The most striking feature of the interior is the group of stained glass windows by John Hayward, with three vibrant east windows on the theme of the struggle between Good & Evil in the east wall and a further window commemorating Whittington on the south side.
St Michael's is a real gem, a charmingly restored Wren church with some impressive modern glass. It is normally open and welcoming 9am-5pm during weekdays
A successful hair flip photo. I loved the golden light that filtered through the hall of this photo.
I should know better than to try to clandestinely photograph people on a moving bus on such a bright sunny day but sometimes you can't resist the subjects. I know this one is perhaps too subtle, but I liked the framing of her head against the structure outside the window. And when you look at it original size you'll see what drew me to her in the first place.
I was always told that I should keep lighting subtle for photography.
Day 108/365
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The inconspicuous little flowers of Native Spinach/Warrigal Greens (Tetragonia tetragonioides). [Lower Blue Mountains, NSW]
The subtle pinks and blues are just as beautiful as the knock your eyes out colours in the other shots.
For some reason, when I look at this, I think of sweets.
No post production.
"I think that one's art is a growth inside one. I do not think one can explain growth. It is silent and subtle. One does not keep digging up a plant to see how it grows."
Emily Carr
Canadian Painter
I have been shaking my head for a couple of weeks regarding this LP album of organ music and this amazing album cover. Thought of some ways of shooting an lp portrait, but none of my ideas were, uh, er... appropriate. So...I give up. Here it is in all its glory. It is an amazing marketing concept. I wonder if it worked out for them? Cannot find a date on it. I am guessing the late 1950s or early 1960s. Wow. Your ideas for an LP portrait would be welcome. Don't anybody claim it was a more innocent time.