View allAll Photos Tagged transparency
Scenic aerial view of crystal-clear water with variations in depth visible through the water's color.
The lighter turquoise hues indicate shallower areas or sandy bottoms, while the deeper blues indicate greater depth or the presence of underwater reefs.
Shot from above one of the highest dunes cliffs at Ras Mohammed National Park.
De kleurenversie van het vorige zwart-wit beeld. Het heeft naar mijn aanvoelen meer sfeer.
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When you have nothing to hide thats called Transparency........
We All have something to Hide..............
This week's theme for Mosaic Montage Monday was Transparency. I decided to go with something golden. HMMM!
Sorry for my delay in posting but I had to play tonight in Mount Forest ON and it is a couple of hours away from Paris.
On top of that, I get there at 6pm and set up my drums and then it starts to snow. It keeps snowing for the next 5 or 6 hours. So it was a slow night driving home after finishing at 2am.
So a Sunday slide, very much fits into the post.
I do not recall how I did this shot, but thought it looked good so here you have it.
Manchmal ist die Glasfüllung der Tür oder des Fensters, durch die ich schauen will, nicht klar und was ich sehe, ist undeutlich, unklar, verschwommen, nur die Konturen sind sichtbar. Manchmal reicht es, das Glas zu reinigen, aber manchmal reicht es nicht und dann muss ich es öffnen, um zu sehen, worauf ich neugierig war.
Sometimes the glass panel of the door or window through which I want to look is not clear and what I see is indistinct, unclear, blurry, only the contours are visible. Sometimes cleaning the jar is enough, but sometimes it's not enough and then I have to open it to see what I was curious about.
Laguna de Los Tres below the majestic Cerro El Chaltén (or Fitz Roy, 3358 m.a.s.l.) and Aguja Poincenot (3002 m.a.s.l.) in the Circo de Los Altares (or Circle of The Altars, or Circolo degli Altari). Parque Nacional Los Glaciares (El Chaltén, Santa Cruz, Patagonia Argentina).