Berndt2 Wall Art
66 creative works found
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More art than photo, really… took this in a near-whiteout at Perisher, and extracted the main tree by massively increasing contrast and levels. Hence the slight fuzziness, hence the large drop-off in detail behind the tree, and hence (I think) the rather pleasing effect!
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It’s Paris, It’s the Louvre, It’s the Glass Pyramid from the Da Vinci Code. It’s also a 10-20mm lens and above all… a pleasure and privilege to have been there again!
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Thanks for all the comments! This is a macro closeup of the lava lamp on my desk, taken a little while after I shook it to make it DO something! The photo was rotated 180 degrees to take advantage of the light reflecting off the tapered part of the glass, which I thought made it look more like the bubbles were being ‘spawned’. Saturation was increased, but the colours are real.
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Why yes, this would make a great Valentines Day card. Thanks for asking!
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I spent a couple of weekends last year taking photos of these spectacular little carnivorous flowers, drosera peltata . This shot in particular looks makes them look strikingly like War of the Worlds aliens. I don’t usually do series of photographs, but I might upload a few more of these.
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Urban cityscape as viewed from the observation deck of the Shinjuku government tower (the south one, I think) in Tokyo, Japan. (Admission is free to both towers’ observation decks, so if you’re ever in Shinjuku, bear that in mind. Bear in mind also that your chances of the weather being clear enough to see Mt Fuji are cripplingly small. I certainly didn’t see it!) Anyway, back to the shot: I like it, it’s pretty cool, and I just adore Tokyo; but I was really, REALLY surprised when it won the October pentaxforums forum challenge poll, for the theme : “Cityscape” 8)) So in that regard, I guess it is the most ‘popular’ photo I’ve taken, as well as one I like!
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A moment of contemplation
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Sometimes you just can’t script these sort of photos. I’d taken a couple of the empty footpath featuring just the door with the chalk writing. Then, out of nowhere, people with suitcases! Awesome 8) Location: Drury Lane, London.
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Time stops
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Absolutely fascinating building at 1 Lime Street which sadly is often overlooked in favour of The Gherkin (30 St Mary Axe) (bah!) nearby. Designed by Richard Rogers and completed in 1986, like the Pompidou Centre in Paris a lot of the items usually found inside buildings (stairs, elevators) are actually on the outside. Pentax istDS with Sigma 10-20mm lens.
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The reason why I like this shot is because it’s a photo of a Sydney icon that many people have, but a view of which that hasn’t really been captured. I also like it because I really approached the taking of this shot correctly. From knowing the right lane to be in, to having all the settings in the camera properly preset, to having the right camera and lens ready. And then I got lucky – the cloud cover was just right to avoid blow-outs and just for ONCE there was enough of a break in traffic that cars didn’t get in the way. I know it’s not quite perfect but it’s pretty much exactly what I set out to photograph. this photo won first place in a Pentaxforums.com members competition on the theme Symmetry in February 2008. Woohoo!!
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‘Drosera Peltata’. I’d love to know what the attitude of hardcore vegetarians is towards plants that eat animals…. but as a fellow carnivore, it gets my respect!
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I took a whole series of these two birds seemingly courting. This is probably my favourite, though their poses vary in other frames from coy and coquettish to quite enamoured….. (or so I like to think)
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I’m not sure at what point I decided to approach the ‘In the Moment’ challenge numerically (one person, two pigeons, three lions) but it happened!
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Actually it’s a view up the atrium of the Galleries Lafayette* (previously incorrectly referred to as ‘Printemps’) department store in Paris, France. They’re remarkably indulgent about tourists taking photos from the balconies on each floor (and in my case, although not for this shot, from the floor of the cosmetics department looking upwards). *The view from the roof is pretty spectacular, too, by the way – and it’s free!
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I got inspired by the dandelion shots I’d seen on RB recently and decided to take some myself.
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Yes, the inflight movies were boring. That’s why, when I spotted ice crystals forming on my aeroplane window and realised I had my Tamron 90mm macro lens handy, I decided to dedicate some time to capturing some of them properly. This was probably the best one. The vaguely rainbow-coloured background is based on the actual even more vague colours bounced off the window (ie. this photo has had its saturation enhanced)... but really it’s the natural and random formation of the crystals and their ‘artistic’ placement that I was captivated by.
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I took this while on holiday in Austria, and had it as my desktop theme for several months. Ah, the serenity…. / (ah, the killer red and black runs!) / (ah, the Apres Ski!) / (ah.. the memories of DJ Oetzi’s “Ein Stern der deinen namen traegt” hitting #1)
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I don’t usually go for square crops, and windows are more for looking through than looking at (generally). But for this one I decided to make an exception.
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Part 3 of a series that arose out of me realising I had, prior to that time, ZERO dandelion shots in my (hypothetical) portfolio.
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Street art in Barcelona, Spain. (In any other city, it might be called “grafitti”)
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How often is disaster averted when an anonymous hero does what needs to be done without saying a word?
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