This is a friend who bought this t-shirt from here (Redbubble) and added her own artistic vision (with help of an experienced ‘Slasher’). Photo taken at the 2008, Rainbow Serpent Festival. This was the first time i saw ‘someone’ wear my design.. i had to photograph it :) Read full journal entry HERE made with apophysis and photoshop
This shot was taken from a pedestrian bridge over the thames. The flight path to heathrow that day was over the city, so every 90 seconds a plane would appear in shot …. very handy. Cropped and treated in photoshop.
Panoramic view of Federation Square and the Yarra River from Princess Bridge. / / Panorama created with 3 images stitched together with PS CS3 / / Camera – Canon 350D / Lens – 10-22mm USM / Focal length – 16mm / Exposure – Manual / Aperture – f/5.6 / Shutter – 10 seconds / ISO – 100 / Tripod and cable release / / © Andrew Brown Cards / Urban and Architecture / Panorama / Landscape / Portraiture / Macro /
saw this umbrella at the market in Innisfail this morning, just happened to have my camera in the car, as one does. The bloke behind the stall was most dubious when I wanted a pic like this, he kept asking “what for”. Anyway I thought it was great. 612 views 06/11/09 / homepage feature sometime 2008
sold / Framed Print 20×16” / sale on RedBubble
Lengthy night exposure of the Ferris Wheel on the foreshore at Victor Harbor. Canon 400D 18-55 lens.
The spinning wait cursor is a cursor in Apple’s Mac OS X that indicates an application is not responding to system events. It is similar to the “not responding” status in the Microsoft Windows task manager. / The Apple Human Interface Guidelines officially refer to it as the “spinning wait cursor”; its colloquial names include “spinning pizza”, “spinning pinwheel”, “the beach ball of hell”, “spinning beach ball of death”, “Spinning beach ball of impending doom”, “spinning wheel of death”, “rainbow wheel of death”, and “marble of doom”. The suffix “of death” in these names is a reference to Microsoft Windows’ Blue Screen of Death (BSOD), which also leads to the acronym “SPOD” for “spinning pizza of death,” commonly used in mailing lists such as Mac-L. The suffix ‘of doom’ is also commonly used. The act of an application getting the spinning wait cursor is often referred to as “beachballing”. reference
More fun with the fisheye
Yes. Another flower I do not know the name of. Help please. / Another from my neighbours garden. / I called it spokes, as it looks like spokes from a wheel. Hope you like it. / Thanks for looking. Pentax K110D. / Pentax 18-55mm Lens. / Omax Macro & +4 Close Up Lenses.
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/ My Gallery / MySmugmug / / Thanks for looking!! / canon rebel xt, 100 mm macro will add EXIF info asap,curves and level adjustment
featured in Globes, Sphere’s and Curves 05-02-2009 / featured in C.O.R.E. 04-01-2009 MUSIC What goes up must come down / Spinnin’ wheel got to go ‘round / Talkin’ ‘bout your troubles it’s a cryin’ sin / Ride a painted pony let the spinnin’ wheel spin You got no money and you got no home / Spinnin’ wheel all alone / Talkin’ ‘bout your troubles and you never learn / Ride a painted pony let the spinnin’ wheel turn Did you find the directing sign on the / Straight and narrow highway / Would you mind a reflecting sign / Just let it shine within your mind / And show you the colors that are real Someone is waiting just for you / Spinnin’ wheel, spinnin’ true / a marriage between Incendia & Apophysis
543 views as of 10 November 2009. My first image to get 500+ views since I joined Red Bubble in May this year, this depiction of two hand-crafted Buddhist prayer wheels was shot inside a shop called Chamba Lama in the New Market, Calcutta, in mid-October, 2006. There was a nostalgic element here, because I went to school in the Himalayan town of Darjeeling, where it was commonplace to see wizened old Tibetan men and women with beautiful creased and lined faces, lips moving in reverence as their hands twirled their prayer wheels. The wheels are held in one hand and the tops rotate slowly and rhythmically as prayers are offered. On the metallic scroll closest to the camera, you can actually see the Sanskrit lettering that spells out the all-powerful incantation “Om”. This was one of a series of four shots taken in tricky lighting – but it has a slight edge over the other images, because of the depth of field and the presence of the second prayer wheel in the mid-frame area . I do not crop, enhance or post-edit my images in any way. Shot with a Pentax K100D, using a Sigma 18-125mm lens. F5.6, 1/10 sec, ISO 800, focal length 78mm. Featured in METALLIC JUNKTION, May 2009. Featured in BUDDHA, May 2009. Featured in ‘60s GLORY, September 2009. India3 – 3088
Fun at the carnival
A clockwork squid! Watercolour, ink, chalk pastel and metal leaf on canvas. I used my new airbrush on this one. Shiny bits: / Visit me on facebook: /
Details: / Camera: Canon EOS 5D Mk II / Lens: Canon EF 16-35mm f/2.8L II USM / Exposure: 5 exposures (-2,-1,0,+1,+2 EV) / Aperture: f/18 / Focal Length: 21mm / ISO Speed: 100 / Accessories: Expodisc, Manfrotto 190XB Tripod, Manfrotto 322RC2 Heavy Duty Grip Ball Head, Canon RC1 Wireless Remote / Date and Time: 05 September 2009 05.36pm Post Processing: / Imported into Lightroom / Exported 5 exposures to Photomatix / Tonemap generated HDR using detail enhancer option / Re-imported back into Lightroom / Exported HDR and 0 EV exposure to CS3 and layered HDR on top of 0 EV / Re-imported back into Lightroom / Dust removal in Lightroom / Sharpening in Lightroom / Added keyword metadata / Exported as JPEG
This mill is located in Little Rock, Arkansas and was in the opening credits of “Gone With the Wind”. Beautiful place to visit if you are ever in the area. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Dinorwig Quarry closed in 1969. Today – rather than fashioning wagons and forging rails – the workshops tell a very special story: the story of the Welsh slate industry. The Workshops and Buildings are designed as though quarrymen and engineers have just put down their tools and left the courtyard for home. / The National Slate Museum at Llanberis invested a £1.6 million lottery grant into bringing back to life the inheritance of the north Wales slate industry, which roofed the industrial revolution. Now, with imaginative interpretation, the remarkable relics of the slate industry can be understood and enjoyed by the many thousands of visitors to this stunning countryside, on the flanks of Snowdon. / The Museum originally opened to the public in 1972. Many of the sites former quarrymen and engineers were employed to present their craft, while equipment was collected from other Welsh quarries. In later years the quarry’s incline was restore to its former glory, and the Museum re-opened in 1999 with new unique features and facilities. In 2005, the National Slate Museum scooped the Wales Tourist Board’s prestigious ‘Sense of Place Award’. History of Slate / Harnessing the latest 21st century technology, it tells the story of the quarry’s development as pictures, words and music combine in a fascinating introduction to the quarryman’s world. People have been quarrying slate in north Wales for over 1,800 years. Slates were used to build parts of the Roman fort in Segontium in Caernarfon, and in Edward I’s castle at Conwy. But it was with the dawn of the Industrial Revolution in the 18th century that the slate industry really took off. / As small villages such as Manchester exploded into large towns and then cities with the coming of mills and factories, there was an enormous demand for slates to roof the long terraces of houses built as homes for the workers – as well as the foundries and factories themselves. In 1787 the ‘Great New Quarry’ of Dinorwig was opened on the slopes between the present village of Dinorwig and Llyn Peris. By the 1870s Dinorwig quarry employed over 3,000 men. Slate had become one of Wales’s most important industries / Wales produced over four-fifths of all British slates in this period, with Caernarfonshire the biggest producer among all Welsh counties. In 1882 the county’s quarries produced over 280,000 tons of finished roofing slates, and in 1898 the slate trade in Wales as a whole reached its peak with 17,000 men producing 485,000 tons of slate. / It’s a story full of hope and magic as well as sadness and poverty. There are regular showings of the To Steal a Mountain presentation in Welsh, French and German as well as English. Nikon D300 / HDR 5 shots, handheld on rail / Photmatix Pro3 / 18-200mm lens / PP in PS SC3
London, November 20003 ! taken originally with F75 28-100mm
www.galleriamancuso.com / blog / 2010 calendars This is for my friend johnny We have this running gag where we acuse each other of stealing each others shot when we go shooting together. This happens to be one of those shots! ; ) It’s all in good fun ; )
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