View allAll Photos Tagged whitespace
Relic Vintage #BlackLivesMatter with the power fist.
Update: The muralist filled in the whitespace with the names of the deceased. Say their names.
From Minnesota's North Shore, a father and son set out for a day of fishing on a foggy and unusually calm Lake Superior.
A vivid collision of regulation and nature—this playful scene captures a "No Parking" sign perfectly juxtaposed with a cheerful potted plant in the heart of Andalusia. A quirky snapshot of Spanish street charm where rules meet creativity.
Sphinx
Model sketch - 2nd version of previous post with added digital whitespace
Ink & watercolour
Paper
15 x 21 cm
Added digital whitespace
WOW ... it made Explore!
From the scrap pile ... mixed with a bit of white space (white sateen) ... and bound with the new Hope Valley Thistle Leaf in New Day. It measured 66" x 67" before wash and 61" x 62" after wash ... always amazes me the shrinkage but sure love the krinkles it creates. Oh ... and not a single pucker on the back either ... that sateen sure glides across the machine plate
Blogged here: shinersview.blogspot.com/2010/01/scrap-buster.html and here shinersview.blogspot.com/2010/05/spring-2010-bloggers-qui...
The Cana Island Lighthouse in Door County, Wisconsin is one of many lighthouses on the peninsula.
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This is the art appearing in the rooms and corridors of The Hotel Gansevoort, NYC. I took each photograph appearing in the hotel in the surrounding neighborhood and within the neighboring restaurants, shops, and clubs.
Don called on his way to the beach and told me to look at the sky. I think it qualifies for "Negative Space" theme for the "This may not be Old San Juan but..." group.
The weather is changing from mid 80's F. to possible rain tomorrow. I'll take the rain!
A rainbow shined beautifully, yet arched into a frown.
As every now and then, the rain still comes down.
I have stepped right over you, like scattered debris.
As the sun's rays now light down a new path for me.
- After the Storm
I am late at posting week 26 theme. The theme is composition using the rule of thirds and whitespace.
Based on observations made with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, and obtained from the Hubble Legacy Archive, which is a collaboration between the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI/NASA), the Space Telescope European Coordinating Facility (ST-ECF/ESA) and the Canadian Astronomy Data Centre (CADC/NRC/CSA).
All sizes:- www.flickr.com/photos/mickhyde/14031048956/sizes/k/in/pho...
6 image RGB, Reduced by 50%
HST site:- hla.stsci.edu/hlaview.html#Images|filterText%3D%24filterT...
Image processing Michael L Hyde (c) 2014
A day trip with new friends on a sunny day was the best way to celebrate the start of our wedding season! They said this area is normally covered in fog, but the sun was quite lovely.
This photo is one of the few "negative space" photos I've taken because it seems I really like filling the space much more. But I liked this sight but never posted it because I have no idea what it's supposed to be. Taken on my birthday, 2 years ago and now it's for "This may not be Old San Juan but..." group theme of negative space.
(Sorry to be gone so long, after visiting children went home I imploded and got sick for a while....)
~ Quoting Julius Caesar.
- I've been going through my archives :) Wishing you all a wonderful weekend! Enjoy the World Cup games!
Python is an interpreted, high-level, general-purpose programming language. Created by Guido van Rossum and first released in 1991, Python's design philosophy emphasizes code readability with its notable use of significant whitespace. Its language constructs and object-oriented approach aim to help programmers write clear, logical code for small and large-scale projects.
Python pickle module is used for serializing and de-serializing a Python object structure. Any object in Python can be pickled so that it can be saved on disk. What pickle does is that it “serializes” the object first before writing it to file. Pickling is a way to convert a python object (list, dict, etc.) into a character stream. The idea is that this character stream contains all the information necessary to reconstruct the object in another python script.
We're here visiting Pickle Art
30/52
Lately, I've heard a lot about "negative space photography", "white space photography" and stuff.
And... I had an idea in my mind, which was absolutely not this one, to be honest... but I haven't managed to bring it to life yet, so I decided to edit this picture to try my hands at white space photography :)
This picture is a part of my "Emotions" series. It's called "Relief", which may seem to be a positive feeling, and it's mostly white, so it's not as dark as usual. But when I shot this picture with my sister Ava, we decided to shoot something about despair, hence the head down.
I think that Muse's lyrics "I want to get free from desolation and despair" is very powerful and is an inspiration to me in this picture. The relief depicted here is a wanted relief, an utopic relief... but not something reached yet.
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I took surprisingly few images in New York. I simply enjoyed being there and pounding the streets.
It reminded me a little of when I first moved to London and enjoyed simply wandering from one location to another, finding out how the city weaves itself together, where the nice little streets are that you can amble down in peace, and which are the main veins that can get you quickly from A to B.
I enjoyed stopping at different cafes, restaurants and bars to see what vibe different areas had. I almost went to the Bronx too, but had to catch an earlier flight out due to weather and my plans for the last day were scuppered.
Whatever I did and wherever I went, I always seemed to find myself back at this building though, the beautiful Flatiron.
I was also drawn back to the Calexico burrito stand which is at the base of this iconic building. A wonderful burrito that I look forward to having again on my next trip there.
Have a great weekend everyone.
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"Cartographic Grids" - Artist: Juan Geuer
Visiting the Ottawa Art Gallery this weekend (entrance is free by the way - how fabulous is that!?) I was struck by the stark sense of calm that this particular exhibit evoked. White on white, barely visible grid lines on mylar paper, clean white walls, and a linear bench. To me it was sheer beauty.
Today, as I look out the window from my desk, I see a similar white space, only this time it is the sheer quantity of snow that is falling, masking the external surroundings... Oh spring, please come soon :)
From the exhibit description:
“Scribing on white mylar.
Collection of the Ottawa Art Gallery.: Gift of Els Geuer-Vermeij, 2013
Juan Geuer created his Cartographic Grids between 1975 and 2003. Influenced by geophysical maps, these ethereal works were delicately scribed into Mylar by the artist’s hand. Situated at the threshold between philosophy and geography, they play with our perception and our assumptions about maps as we question what exactly they are measuring (C. Langill, “A Luminous Precision,” 2019).”
Source: Ottawa Art Gallery, 2019