View allAll Photos Tagged towards
"Dove c’è molta luce, l’ombra è più nera." - Johann Wolfgang Goethe
Queste giornate di tarda estate mi lasciano in trepida attesa per le prime nebbie. Buon sabato :)
In velika Kapela, Croatia, there's still quite a piece of primordial forrest. A few mountaineering areas are open for visit, one of them is Samarske stene. This rock reminds me of a giant shell. Don't come too close to it! Wham! And nobody will ever find you.
Looking towards the boat's and yachts in moorings at Llandanwg beach marina,with marram grasse's both sides of the many pathways to the beach and our white German shepherd dog Cali walking in front of us.
Winds blow smoothly as SBB's sight-see train has departed from Arth-Goldau station. A class Re420 is passing with a panorama train and heading towards views of Gothard's rail line.
The going away shot of Freightliner 66623 with the 13.06 Dagenham Down Yard to Hope Earles Sidings empty cement tanks
Towards the end of our trip south through the Lemaire Channel, cloud descended over Booth Island, the light got beautifully soft and this image and the next few were taken. This was shot at nearly 9pm. Most people had gone inside for dinner, and just me and JP (John Paul Caponigro) remained on the top deck of the ship. This isn't everyone's light or conditions, but we both loved it. Eventually JP went down and I was up there alone. It was one of the memories from the trip that will stay with me always.
The Lemaire Channel, Antarctica.
I made a short film of what I saw in Antarctica. If you'd like to see it, head over to YouTube or you can watch it here on Flickr.
If you'd like to see all my Antarctica images together, you can visit my Flickr Antarctica album.
I wrote three blog posts about this amazing trip to Antarctica. If you'd like read about the trip and see some more documentary/BTS images, you'll find the blog posts here:
A quick scan on a frame taken using the Hasselblad on the slopes of 'The Cobbler'. The view North towards Ben Lomond was superb and a location that I hope to return to soon.
Hasselblad 503cx
Ilford HP5
80mm
Orange filter
ID-11
Everything in this modest image leads to the Gassendi crater. Seeing was definitely not my best ally; The image of the Moon on the computer screen swayed from side to side as a result of atmospheric fluctuations. A lunar photograph does not remotely live up to the view through the eyepiece of my maksutov telescope; The poor vision that was evident with the camera was not noticeable to direct view and all was calm in the soft, deep contrast of the telescope. An intense glow towards the lunar terminator and then, the deepest darkness.
Gassendi rises above the Mare Humorum crowned by a circular rim, barely distorted here by the effect of foreshortening, and a small crater that breaks the edge, generating the visual idea of a diamond ring; Cracks come and go between cliffs and fissures forged in stone and lava millions of years ago.
Perhaps due to the turbulence or my own inexperience, the photograph is far from being a good lunar photo, but it preserves the spatial mystery and the indecipherable sensation of silence of a mythical lunar wasteland.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Telescope: Maksutov Cassegrain "Explore Scientific" 127, f/15.
Camera: Player One Neptune-M (monochrome).
Filter: Player One IR685.
Mount: Sky-Watcher EQ3.
Stacking: AutoStakkert
Preprocessed: AstroSurface.
Post-processing: Gimp.
February 21, 2024, 01:16 UT.
Zona rural, Concordia, Entre Ríos, Argentina.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Related content:
www.flickr.com/photos/196619427@N04/52478879914/in/datepo...
Handheld due to lack of a tripod. That's what you get when you decide to leave it in the car and then its too far to get back and take it :P
I tried to give the photo a more dramatic look. I hope this noise doesn't get too ugly. Hope you liked it ;)
- You can find me also on 500px, 1x.com, facebook, twitter or e-mail me.
Life blurs when we see something we want. The inner child runs to it.
Taken with my old Olympus Half Frame, scanned and well, I just had fun.
Copyright: M. J. Hasan
Contact at System96@gmail.com
Taken from Sangu river, Bandorbon, Bangladesh.
Taken with Sony DSC-W50.
Aperture: f/16
Shutter: 120sec
ISO: 50
Focal Length: 24mm
Camera Body: Canon 5D MK II
Lens: EF 24-105 mm f/4L IS USM
Filters: Lee Filter Little Stopper, 06 HE grad
Processed: Lightroom 4, Photoshop cs3
www.picturedevon.co.uk | facebook
All comments and constructive criticism are welcomed here
This image and all other images are available to purchase.
By this point in the afternoon, the storm cloud had really built up and I was treated to an incredible light show. I expected this show to be short-lived, but the little patch of clear sky that the sun was shining through stuck around to allow me a number of compositions. For this one, I chose to wedge the view towards Hen Cloud between two patches of darkness: the shadowy millstone of the foreground and the distant brooding sky.