View allAll Photos Tagged whisp

Interpret: The Whispers

 

Titel: Imagination

 

Label/Jahr: Solar/ RCA 1980

 

Genre: Boogiefunk, Modern Soul

 

Warum diese Platte? Eigentlich wollte ich hier fotografieren aber weil es zwei Stunden lang geregnet hat hab ich halt Platten gekauft. Ich bin gerade hängengeblieben auf Früh-80er Boogie mit vielen Synthesizern.

 

Warum Vinyl? In der Vinylscheibe hat die Musik einfach ihr perfektes Speicherformat gefunden. CDs und mp3s sind für mich als Arbeitskopie okay aber eigentlich sind es Wegwerfprodukte.

 

Les figurines du jeu "Furie" (chez WHISPE EDITION)

This tiny whisp of a town is a photo treasure trove.

long exposures in the middle of the day... still getting used to this 9 stop ND filter.

SILVER WHISPER / PASSENGER (CRUISE) SHIP / BAHAMAS-NASSAU / AÑO DE CONSTRUCCIÓN:2001

The motions of nature :)

I may try making a HDR out of a series of these photos... after my "vacation" is over (because, unfortunately, "vacation" in listentothemountainsese is really a code word for being so busy you can barely fit in 6 hours of sleep a night.) I'm looking forward to going back to "doing schoolwork in my spare time" so I can get some sleep and do the really important stuff, ie photo editing. :P

The sights, sounds, and smells of rural Monmouth County in the 1890s have been re-created on nine acres at Longstreet Farm in Holmdel Park, Holmdel, New Jersey. Interpreters in period dress show both daily and seasonal agricultural and domestic activities.

 

(Taken at the gardens)

 

Historic Longstreet Farm,

National Register of Historic Places,

Monmouth County Park System,

Holmdel Park,

Longstreet Rd.,

Holmdel, New Jersey,

Listed: 1979-11-29

Nikon D7100 | AF-S Nikkor 35mm f/1.8G

I captured the barley late in the evening, when the sun was low and golden.

Whisps of mist were still rising from the loch.

 

It was 3 degrees below, and although the water temperature may have been warmer, nobody jumped in for a heat,

You can see the first whisps of violet flowers emerging there. It's going to be pretty damn colourful!

Photographing smoke art is one of the most rewarding aspects of home photography. We've all seen the wispy strands that float and glide through the air, but it's not until these trails are frozen in time do we see the true beauty and elegance of their construction.

 

In many images it's possible to see a subject within the smoke.

 

The advantage of smoke art photography is that - compared to water droplets - the patterns take longer to form so it's easier to judge when to take the shot. It's when the scene is viewed on the screen that the true diversity and uniqueness of the patterns is realised.

 

This was processed in Photoshop to highlight the patterns that exist within the formations.

 

The smoke was created by burning an incense stick against a black background. The light was a flashgun behind and below at an angle of 45° upwards with black card between the flash unit and the subject so that the light hit the smoke, but not the camera lens. The result was processed in Photoshop.

 

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

This is the last set of smoke art to be produced using this method. With so many uploads, it's difficult to create original ideas. So now I will be concentrating on a different and more creative method which I plan to have ready within a few months.

 

Watch this space.

Coneflower Papaya Papa, the white siding on the house really altered the exposure, but I kind of liked it !!

This sky is one of a series in our catalog of Clouds and Sky over the Rocky Mountains. We use them continuously as backgrounds for layouts in order to create impressions and generate emotions for the work laid on top of these backgrounds.

Alarm sounds off. Flames whisp the bottom of the kettle. Quickly you throw together a small breakfast; a banana and a muffin, just some quick carbs. Water fills your Nalgene. Chug. Kettle is done. Coffee gurgles as its poured into the french press. Wake the dog. Girlfriend too. Trailhead. Alpine start. Warm-up? Be bold start cold. Few miles down, getting easy. Elevation gains, hamstrings burning? Hardly. Not your first time. Chalky stone rub against your calloused hands, almost there. Big move now, does this still count as a scramble? You throw yourself over the edge, it’s dark still. You check your watch, right on time. Sun begins lifting off the horizon line. Not your first time.

View On Black

Ive been into clouds lately this one is a stitch of about 10 but croped down to only about 6

at about 105mm

God paints the sky for you.

With the drive up to Mtn. Evans to Summit Lake the clouds was whisping around in fascination.

West side of Mount Saint Helens with a view into part of the crater left from the erruption. You can just barely see whisps of steam coming from inside. This volcano is still active.

Photographing smoke art is one of the most rewarding aspects of home photography. We've all seen the wispy strands that float and glide through the air, but it's not until these trails are frozen in time do we see the true beauty and elegance of their construction.

 

In many images it's possible to see a subject within the smoke.

 

The advantage of smoke art photography is that - compared to water droplets - the patterns take longer to form so it's easier to judge when to take the shot. It's when the scene is viewed on the screen that the true diversity and uniqueness of the patterns is realised.

 

This was processed in Photoshop to highlight the patterns that exist within the formations.

The class unit for BN's large SD9 fleet moves a much newer SD40-2 off a wisker track in Superior. Note the whisp of steam from under the turntable (it was moved with steam). September of 1979 during a tour.

Kingsley Beach, Port Stephens NSW

The Demon From Down Under, wearing his UWF title belt and wearing the new outfit I made for his title defence in Japan.

© All rights reserved.

 

View from my office this morning. The black shapes at the bottom are whisps of fog and within them are street lights. Also those are power cables.

Winter sunrise at Deerfield Beach, calm and far from the fears of big winds and evacuations.

It was a beautiful day for golf. Slight breeze and about 68 degrees.

1 2 ••• 48 49 51 53 54 ••• 79 80