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photography

A happy coincidence

A happy coincidence

(Click to enlarge)
A webcam at Szentgotthárd, Hungary captured this curious bird looking into the camera. The webcam is set to shoot only one frame in every minute, so what are the chances?
plastik.hu

Credit: http://1972313.blogspot.com/2009/06/happy-coincidence.html

Caves

Credit: PicVault.org

Young Gallery

Credit: Young Gallery

From the site:

In a world obsessed with superficial image it is a refreshing contrast to look beyond the surface and appreciate the stuff that surrounds us for what it is made of, not just what it looks like on the outside.  English artist Nick Veasey uses x-ray technology to peel back the layers and peer inside all manner of subjects; people, objects, natural forms and animals.  The work has an ethereal, otherwordly quality, yet the things he uses to create the pictures are familiar.  Nick’s work has won awards in every relevant photographic competition and shown in galleries around the world.  These elegant yet unsettling artworks are a perfect example of the fusion between science and art.

End of the rainbow

Europa

From the page:

Europa

Jupiter's moon Europa has a crust made up of blocks, which are thought to have broken apart and 'rafted' into new positions, as shown in the image on the left. These features are the best geologic evidence to date that Europa may have had a subsurface ocean at some time in its past.

For more visit: NASA

 

Exposure

 

Ransom Riggs

The World’s Longest Exposures
by Ransom Riggs - January 13, 2009 - 7:46 AM                                              
My digital camera thinks a long exposure is a few seconds. Sometimes I get out my tripod and fool around with night photography — it’s amazing what a 30-second exposure can read in the dark that your eyes can’t! But 30 seconds — even 30 minutes — is nothing. British photographer Justin Quinnell is making waves with an amazing six month exposure he made in Bristol, England of the sun rising and falling over the city’s famous suspension bridge:

clifton_solargraph_1118714c.jpg

the so-reality of physics

Credit: wikimedia.org

Cheers Witchole.

John Divola - sorealist

 I just love the work of John Divola. He's like Hopper with grit and also poetry. His site is here

Bubble

Photographer Jason Tozer was asked to take some pictures of bubbles by Creative Review magazine, using the new Sony Alpha 350 D-SLR camera. More details on how he achieved the shots are posted at the CR Blog.

Further details on the Alpha 350 D-SLR can be found here.

credit:http://www.creativereview.co.uk/crblog/planet-tozer-how-he-did-it/

A smashing Soreal photo, remember this picture the next time you see a youngling blowing bubbles.

M)

Z

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