A classic abstract. Well done.
Did you paint it or...?
A classic abstract. Well done.
Did you paint it or...?
Great story and brings back memories from when I was there in 2003. I went there because it was rumoured to have some surf (which is visible in your photo). After a day or so I met an expat who lived up the coast and he lent me an old surfboard. And I managed to get a day or two in the water when the swell came up. Then I became the tourist attraction for some of the pilgrims. I also remember on occasion feeling quite warm pockets of water passing me in the current from the south. Then I realised there is a nuclear facility down the coast and I am fairly positive it was the source (as a long term surfer you may feel that a little bit sometimes but not to that extent). I was a touch worried about radiation exposure but I think it was ok - and I haven't seen any strange ghosting in any of my photos... 😁
I was attempting to make a composite image, but I was so excited when I was shooting I used the wrong lens/focal length and didn't get enough images to make a complete view. Despite that, I think it came out pretty interesting, if not just a novelty.
A few obligatory shots from the oculus
Love the cat. Could we lose the toes on the right?
Tim
Beautiful abstract painting of which the colors fit together very harmoniously.
Lou
I was attempting to make a composite image, but I was so excited when I was shooting I used the wrong lens/focal length and didn't get enough images to make a complete view. Despite that, I think it came out pretty interesting, if not just a novelty.
A few obligatory shots from the oculus
Excellent series and a joy to watch. Thank you.
Lou
[quote="@MikeFewster"]
For the Led Zep true believers.I don't get the reference as I stopped following pop music when Dylan left Folk ..... mostly ... But I like staircases and have several that I return to rather regularly . and offer this as one of those
WhyNot
For your reflection on Mike's staircase image I put aside our affairs, because your image is mercilessly beautiful and artistic and the prosaic character of the exhibition space enhances these qualities. Even without the paintings, the space is great.
Lou
Fantastic images - I love the first one with the stiched shots. Looks perfect as it is. If I remember correctly @JimKasson has done quite a number of great composites like that as well. Can be really effective if well done!
The B&W oculus shot is excellent with its symmetry and brightness and the edit from last time as well. Fantastic work throughout! 👍
Angry sky
Beautiful beach seascape Chris, which comes into its own at maximum magnification. The photo lends itself to a person walking out of the sea onto the beach towards the wooden bench. The photo has a fine nice balance.
Lou
A classic abstract. Well done.
Did you paint it or...?
100% in camera digital image. Only modification was the colors.
Red rock river
Everytime I hike to the place we fondly call the "red rock river," I get another opportunity to take photos of the water cascading and splashing over the rocks. Occasionally, the sunlight plays a magical role, transforming the water's appearance into something quite different.
On this particular occasion, there were also dark, clouds looming over head.
With these, we are looking straight into the mouth of powerful water coming right at us. The water itself becomes the leading line and the subject. They are all different, each one strong in its own way, each one emphasizing the strength of the water rather than taming it with slow exposures. I like the first best because it's an unusual image, with an unusual angle, but mostly because of the drama of the ominous sky and the beauty of the mountain peaks almost hidden in the background. In this one the vanishing point is marked with a visual X and all the power spreads out from there: the water, the textured rocks, the dark trees, the distant mountains. Lovely.
INDIAN SELF-PORTRAIT
Pete's image of worshippers (and photomakers) in an around the Ganges from a few weeks ago, inspired me to dig up this one from our trip to India.
On the first days there, we were in Mammalapuram (or Mahabali Puram), a city on the Bengal coast close to Chennai (aka Madras).
That city is known for a few architectural highlights of Hindu culture and religion : a few temples hewn from sheer rock, and a Shore Temple, that sits almost right at the beach because the shoreline has changed over the ages. There were a lot of pilgrims there. Clearly a place where people come in groups to worship but also to enjoy themselves, and for many a first encounter with the ocean.At first light, I went out and found the beach already crowded with groups, many in religious red and orange, but others also in just their festive attire.
There was a small fairground with oldfashioned (handpowered) merry-go-rounds, food vendors, a guy with a horse that had a business of letting people sit on that horse to get their photo taken etc. Many were already using smartphones, but definitely not the majority.
To cater to the people without smartphones and cameras, a couple of enterprising locals roamed the beach, armed with a small compact camera and a portable printer that is used for "instant" photos. They offered their services to provide pilgrims with family portraits on the beach, made and printed on the spot.
Obviously, I was interested in their activities and made some images of their operation, as part of the general atmosphere, thrilled to see and experience all that on our very first morning on the subcontinent. I had a blast of a time.
A white European guy roaming that beach between 5.30 and 7.00 AM long before breakfast and before more tourists would show up, I drew some attention myself.
I was asked to pose with several small groups of people.One young lady went a step further and wanted a photo with me solo, standing as close as possible.
She went and found one of the photo vendors to get our portrait made and buy it.
This transaction enabled me to catch this "selfie by proxy":
And thus you became a part of the culture, and of this young lady's story. The story told in the background of the photo is of the culture and the people enjoying their fellowship and their celebration, dressed in traditional garb in a traditional location, but the foreground story is the determined and serious young lady who wanted to incorporate a foreign stranger into her story. Who knows what story she has told herself and her friends about you, or what role you play in her ongoing story, or whether others she's met share the stage with you. To me, the image embodies the intriguing way we weave our human stories together across culture and geography.
For the Led Zep true believers.
This does not look like a stairway to heaven and in fact if it is most distressingly walled off. Perhaps the visitants to Heaven #8 are those who have been found lacking at the last minute and are stuck in the stairwell. It appears ancient, well used, and more recently made inaccessible. The stairs are a magnetic leading line that winds upward, forcing us to look for something wonderful at the end, but instead, barring us from proceeding. An artistic metaphor for frustration.
Putting bokeh into perspective... by simple.joy, on FlickrI suppose the title should be enough of a description... Only thing I'll add: it was in equal parts challenging and fun to create this. 😅
Well done, another meticulous creation that is visually puzzling and pleasing at the same time. I get the feeling that the art pencil is sketching the bokeh cubes and brining them to life to drift away as they are produced, which is kind of how art works anyway once we have an idea - the sketch or under painting, the final created product, the launch out into the world. That perhaps isn't what you intended, but I claim my own prerogative to see these offerings through the distortion of my own interpretation, and hope others see my offerings that way as well.
What a winsome kitty! I can think of only two cats I have met who were walking on leads like this, and I was duly impressed, since every cat I have ever had would have wound itself up in the lead and shredded me for even suggesting such a thing. The kitty is a tad soft (maybe she moved her head a bit) but it doesn't detract for me since cats are soft things anyway, and it adds to her overall impression, which is such softness that I want to pick her up. I don't mind the toes, which prove there is a human that she owns and cares for attached to the other end of her lead, and we know she was thoughtful enough to take him for a walk.
Angry sky
Was this taken during the hurricane (Idalia)?
I straightened the horizon.
😉
Rich