The sharp, crisp lines at the base of the fronds of a fan palm.
Picture of the Melbourne skyline taken from Flinders Street station
Kouramades Corfu
This was taken near Webb Bridge, Docklands, in Melbourne. I was fascinated at the rusty looking vertical pile on structures in mid build at night. The light, colour, reflection and diagonal the eye followed was incredible, and this is what I have tried to capture. Featured in Cityscapes and Skylines November 2009.
Railway crossing at Wingham, NSW.
This diagonal represents the strata of the earth in the real world. / The corner areas represent the way some groups think we should live, ie green. / The ragged white margin demonstrates the difficulty of integrating what is good for the earth and what is easy to acheive and how they often don’t approach each other very closely. This was created during a session of experimentation with the few programs I have to work with. Started with a photo but can not remember what it was of. It is also an experiment of making images fit what I would like to say, like I hope this gives you at least fifty reasons to think about how you can save the earth! Quoted from / ! http://greenliving.suite101.com/blog.cfm/not_out_of_sight_out_of_mind! No Escaping a Trashed Planet / © Shirley Siluk Gregory / Feb 7, 2008 / Thoughts on the massive amounts of waste humans have generated, causing such devastation as a continent-wide swath of plastic trash in the Pacific. There’s no escaping the fact that we humans have done a lot to foul our planet. And just because our waste might not be in our own backyards doesn’t mean it shouldn’t concern us. / Case in point: A sailor named Charles Moore, taking a rarely used Pacific Ocean shortcut in 1997, came upon seas filled with plastic trash that just kept coming, day after day after day. Today, that “Great Pacific Garbage Patch” has grown to an area twice the size of the continental U.S. And it’s likely to double in size over the next 10 years if people don’t start reducing their use of plastic, Moore warns. / But how easy it is to buy plastic every day and not think about where it eventually ends up. In fact, it’s darned hard not to buy plastic in one form or another: shampoo bottles, ketchup bottles, toothbrushes, computer keyboards, disposable pens, flashlights, dish scrubbers, etc. And even if you’re fanatical about recycling as much as you can, it’s almost impossible for the average person to recycle everything. / The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is just one sign that it’s time for us to remake our lifestyles. Between climate change and depleting fresh water aquifers, dwindling fossil fuel supplies and expanding ocean dead zones, the message from Planet Earth is clear and growing louder every day: ‘Stop messing me up, because you have to live here too.’
Part of the Roman theatre of Augusta Raurica, Switzerland.
Only detached by a crack, the two parts of this centuries-old wall are very close to each other but so different… The bricks in the upper right part have retained most of their color and texture whereas the lower left part is changed and covered by lichen. Ratiborice, Czech Republic. May 2008. Canon EOS 300X, Sigma 28-135. Post-processing: color correction, distortion correction, sharpening, watercolor, blend modes.
An oblique point of view of some pointed high railings. Although this is a ‘minimalist’ image, it is nevertheless a full-depth photo’ with lots of fine detail clearly visible in the painted steel (in a larger view, or in a print). The entire ‘sky’ is pure white. / .
‘Vines in Relief’ by Belmont Streetwear Detail: /
Taken on the NSW, Central Coast, Australia All images and writing are copyrighted © Samantha Goode and may not be used wholly or in part without the prior written permission by email, including copying, duplicating, manipulating, printing, publishing (even on a web site), reproducing, storing, or transmitting by any means.
Lamborghini Miura Thank you for your attention. Featured in the group Just lines / Featured in the group Shapes & Patterns In the calendar Abstractions - -
And as we wind on down the road / Our shadows taller than our soul / There walks a lady we all know / Who shines white light and wants to show / How everything still turns to gold / And if you listen very hard / The the tune will come to you at last / How all are one and one is all / To be a rock and not to roll The front man from one of the best rock bands of all time, Led Zeppelin I originally intended to draw this white on black paper, and I still might, but I drew this just tonight as I had not much else to do while i waited for a download to complete on the computer! / It took an hour. This is all done with diagonal lines only, no shading, no guidelines. / I used only a graphite 2B mechanical pencil on Reeves canvas paper, A4 Completed 4th April, 2009 Original For Sale
The still of night approaches, all calm, last light dies over the Seaward Kaikoura ranges Shot near the seal colony between the north and south bay, Kaikoura, New Zealand’s south Island. stunning soft light Shot on a Nikon D700 with 17-35mm lens, with Cokin ND4 grad filter. / Time stands still for another day
lizard’s tail.
Textured teals and greens scribbled around a diagonal line. Part of a boat being stored for the winter.
I found this gem in a street facing garden nearby. The scent of this beauty lured me to photograph it. The composition is a simple diagonal with the focus on a single blossom, a shallow depth of field blurs the background. I’m just a sucker for pink roses. I present this for certain member of the bubble… this is all her.
Made from light.
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