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Showing posts with label Website. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Website. Show all posts

Nice Image Website photos

A few nice image website images I found:


The Promise of the Snow Drop
image website
Image by Vincent_AF
Nikon D300, Micro Nikkor 55mm f/2.8, 55mm @ f4, 1/80sec, ISO-100

CC Attribution, Share Alike! Credit me by linking back to my flickr
account or my website. Thanks!

Follow me on twitter, facebook or tumblr

Please, don't use the comment box to promote your own pictures!



Juno Beach Pier Lightning Storm Over Ocean
image website
Image by Captain Kimo
captainkimo.com/juno-beach-pier-lightning-storm-over-ocean


Go to My Profile for:
* a list of my photography gear
* a list of my tutorials
* a list of software I use
* a link to my website
* to sign up for my monthly newsletter
* add me to your Facebook

Cool Photo Website images

Some cool photo website images:


Dancing in the Moonlight (30 seconds)
photo website
Image by juandiegojr
My website juandiegojr | photography

Explored!

To Sergio, por el testimonial y porque me apetece :P ea!!!

Toploader - Dancing in the Moonlight

Playa de la Viborilla
Benalmádena (Málaga)

Camera ► Nikon D90
Lens ► Tokina 11-16mm @ 11mm
Filter ► None
Aperture ► ƒ/2.8
Exposure ► 30 seconds
Flash ► None
ISO ► 400
Tripod ► Manfrotto 190PROBX + Head Manfrotto 804RC2

No HDR just one shot


Until The End Of The World (105.4 seconds)
photo website
Image by juandiegojr
My website juandiegojr | photography

Pantalán de Cross
Sacaba Beach (Málaga)

U2 - Until The End Of The World

Camera ► Nikon D90
Lens ► Tokina 11-16mm @ 11mm
Filter ► None but the fog was terrible! I couldn't see Sergio and he was just a few meters from me.
Aperture ► ƒ/4
Exposure ► 105.4 seconds
Flash ► None
ISO ► 200
Tripod ► Manfrotto 190PROBX + Head Manfrotto 804RC2

No HDR just one shot

Cool Image Website images

A few nice image website images I found:


Memorial to the Mutineers of the Battleship Potemkin
image website
Image by Matt. Create.
 
Odessa, Ukraine.

The Potemkin (Russian: Князь Потёмкин Таврический, Knyaz’ Potyomkin Tavricheski, ‘Prince Potyomkin of Tauris’) was a pre-dreadnought battleship (Bronenosets) of the Imperial Russian Navy's Black Sea Fleet. The ship was made famous by the Battleship Potemkin uprising, a rebellion of the crew against their oppressive officers in June 1905 (during the Russian Revolution of 1905). It later came to be viewed as an initial step towards the Russian Revolution of 1917, and was the basis of Sergei Eisenstein's silent film The Battleship Potemkin (1925).

Following the mutiny in 1905, the ship's name was changed to Panteleimon after Saint Pantaleon, but restored to Potemkin in 1917, before a final rename to Boretz za Svobodu (Fighter for Freedom) later in that year.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_battleship_Potemkin

Not as good a photo as I would like. This was taken back in my film days, then later scanned. Maybe someday I'll make it back to Odessa. It's really not all that far from Kiev.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Thoughts | Comments | Critiques | Questions ~ Always Welcome

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
by Matt Shalvatis - Roads Less Traveled Photography
Website | Facebook | Twitter
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
200+ Views & Other Sets @ Flickr
 


Golf-Course-Sunset-at-North-Palm-Beach-Over-Palm-Tree
image website
Image by Captain Kimo
captainkimo.com/golf-course-sunset-at-north-palm-beach-ov...


Go to My Profile for:
* a list of my photography gear
* a list of my tutorials
* a list of software I use
* a link to my website
* to sign up for my monthly newsletter
* add me to your Facebook


Harmonic
image website
Image by NeeZhom Photomalaya
unikversiti.blogspot.com

Shot at Teluk Ketapang beach - apply LucisArt plugin in Photoshop for more details and a bit like painting (but not too much, if too much then our photo will have much noise / grainy , but if you are not lazy and have noise reduction software then go on :D ). Have great days ahead :)

More photos on my website = www.photomalaya.com

My Facebook = www.facebook.com/Neezhom

Thanx for all comments and faves, all the best. Have a nice days ahead! We're all belong to each other and came from same father and mother (Adam and Eve), so peace and justice for all :)

"O God You do not create this to waste , The Exalted One please protect us from hellfire" SubhanAllah .......

Nice Photo Website photos

Some cool photo website images:


30 Seconds before the storm
photo website
Image by Tim Swinson | http://timswinson.com
Website | 500px | Google+ | Facebook

Took this in a rush, no time for a tripod. 4 photos stiched together in photoshop. 30 seconds later there was very heavy rain, strong wind and lightning everywhere.

This is actually how the sky looked. Not some processing effect. Very strange the dark blue clouds and the sun setting behind the storm gave it a surreal look.


Good evening Kuwait
photo website
Image by Najwa Marafie - Free Photographer
Location: Shuwaikh Beach
City: Shuwaikh
Country: Kuwait


Check our NEW update on our website
N-Studio Official website
YouTube Channel
FaceBook
Mobile: +965 66 383 666
E-Mail: N_Studio@Live.Com
------------------------------------------------------

Gear: NIKON D3X




Rate my photo: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10



288/365: Flaam Landscape
photo website
Image by Najwa Marafie - Free Photographer

Location: The lake
City: Flaam
Country: Norway


Check our NEW update on our website
N-Studio Official website
YouTube Channel
FaceBook
Mobile: +965 66 383 666
E-Mail: N_Studio@Live.Com
------------------------------------------------------

Gear: NIKON D3X




Rate my photo: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Nice Image Website photos

A few nice image website images I found:


Manoir des peintures 06
image website
Image by bestarns [www.spiritofdecay.com]
Urbex Session : Manoir des peintures (BE) , 06.2013
Follow me on facebook now www.facebook.com/pages/Bestarns-Pics/218906584873421
Thanks ;)
My website : www.spiritofdecay.com

Nikon D3S Review and the Enola Gay (the website review has sample video from Nikon D3S)

A few nice image site images I found:


Nikon D3S Review and the Enola Gay (the website review has sample video from Nikon D3S)
image site
Image by Stuck in Customs
Want to see other popular reviews?

The Reviews section of the site is filling up fast! I only review stuff that I actually use, but I find myself using more and more stuff! Also, I figure that most people don't have time to wade through a hundred reviews, and you just want the best stuff out there... that's what I focus on - The Best Stuff!

Some recent popular reviews include the Nik Software Review, the Woopra Review, and the still-growing Nikon 85mm Review.

Nikon D3S

It's a great camera. It's so great I bought one to be a backup for my D3X. Truthfully, it's more than just a backup -- well, rather than repeat myself, you can read the full thing on the Nikon D3S Review page.


Egypte : colonade souteraine.
image site
Image by New York Public Library
Digital ID: 88438. Zangaki -- Photographer. 1860s-1920s

Source: [Photographs and prints of Egypt and Syria.] (more info)

Repository: The New York Public Library. Photography Collection, Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Division of Art, Prints and Photographs.

See more information about this image and others at NYPL Digital Gallery.
Persistent URL: digitalgallery.nypl.org/nypldigital/id?88438

Rights Info: No known copyright restrictions; may be subject to third party rights (for more information, click here)


Hyderabad Development
image site
Image by DaveWilsonPhotography
Here's another of the "contrasting lifestyles" images I took while in India a couple of years ago. The contrast between the poverty of the construction workers, living in tents and tin huts on the site, and the wealth of the workers in the huge office blocks they were building was striking and shocking to me.

You are invited to visit my gallery at photography.webartz.com.

View on black
View large on black

Cool Photo Website images

Check out these photo website images:


Tunisia Staff Ride - U.S. Army Africa Soldiers apply WWII North Africa campaign lessons to current mission - May 2010
photo website
Image by US Army Africa
Official Website
Twitter Feed
Facebook Fan Page

U.S. Army Africa Soldiers apply lessons of WWII to current mission

By Rick Scavetta, U.S. Army Africa

KAIROUAN, Tunisia – Col. Stephen Mariano looked down into a foxhole carved atop a rocky hill top near El Guettar, where in March 1943, troops from U.S. Army II Corps battled German panzers.

Nearby, retired Army Col. Len Fullenkamp conjured tales of U.S. Army Rangers under Lt. Col. William Darby marching through darkness along a nearby ridge to surprise sleeping enemy infantrymen with fixed bayonets. Soldiers from the 1st Infantry Division hacked fighting positions from solid rock as enemy tanks rumbled into the valley. U.S. Army artillery units skimmed shells across the desert at approaching German armor.

Mariano began to wonder, “Had my grandfather dug one of these foxholes? Was his artillery position somewhere nearby? Did he fire on Germans coming through this gap?”

Mariano, 45, of Redlands, Calif., was among several U.S. Army Africa officers who took part in a four-day “staff ride,” – onsite discussions of Tunisia’s World War II battlefields geared toward finding insights into U.S. Army Africa’s present challenge – building cooperative relationships with African land forces to increase security, stability and peace in the region.

In late 1942, U.S. forces landed in North Africa with British troops. Their first fights were with Vichy French units, who later joined the Allied cause. Together, they pushed east into Tunisia, where they clashed with German and Italian troops among craggy, cactus-covered hills and washed out wadis.

As a U.S. Army Africa’s strategic planner, a look back at the alliance between American, British and French forces offered Mariano a glimpse at an international coalitions’ growing pains and how friction between partners can doom a mission. On a more personal level, the staff ride allowed him to recapture his family’s past.

Henry Mariano, Sr., was a sergeant with the 2nd Battalion, 62nd Armored Field Artillery Regiment who survived combat in North Africa, Italy and France before being wounded during the Battle of the Bulge in Belgium.

“This staff ride is a historic event, on a historic event, separated by 67 years,” Mariano said. “To be here, where my grandfather was, is pretty powerful to me.”

The tour began May 27 outside Sidi Bou Zid, where U.S. forces suffered a horrible defeat in mid-February 1943. They stopped for the evening in Gafsa, a city in Central Tunisia that changed hands between Allied and Axis forces several times during the campaign.

The second day, they focused on the Allied defeat at Kasserine Pass, followed by the U.S. Army’s first solid gains against veteran German troops in the counterattack at El Guettar. The next day, U.S. Army Africa Soldiers ventured east to focus on British Gen. Bernard Montgomery’s attempt to punch through Axis defenses at the coastal town of Enfidaville, roughly 40 miles southeast of Tunis.

Perched on a craggy knoll near Takrouna, Col. David Buckingham, U.S. Army Africa’s senior operations officer, bent the spine of Atkinson’s book, deep in thought about how for two days in mid-April 1942, New Zealanders came to death grips with Italian defenders in the limestone foothills outside Enfidaville.

Afterward, they paid respects to French and British Commonwealth troops buried nearby.

“Tying this staff ride together with Memorial Day, taking time to better understanding leadership and feel the sacrifice of our soldiers, has been both poignant and educational,” Buckingham said.

At each stop, officers thumbed through worn copies of Rick Atkinson’s “An Army At Dawn,” at their hip as Fullenkamp spoke of the bravery, heroics, ingenuity, lunacy and debacles of the North African campaign. After discussions, they poked through thorn bushes and cacti along the rocky terrain, searching for battlefield remnants.

At El Guettar, Maj. Gen. William B. Garrett III, commander of U.S. Army Africa, found a tin C-ration can and passed it to his senior logistics officer, Col. Mike Balser. Others found shards of shells and bullet casings. Lt. Col. David Konop, the command’s public affairs officer, found a link from a 30-caliber machine gun belt.

It was hard to not be overwhelmed in the presence of such history, to walk this consecrated ground, Fullenkamp said.

Like the 34th Infantry Division, they climbed the hills near Fondouk Pass. They stood in the cold rain below Longstop Hill, just as the U.S. Army’s 1st Battalion, 18th Infantry Regiment had when they relieved the 2nd Battalion of the British Coldstream Guards, around Christmas 1942.

The U.S. Army Africa tour wrapped up in the Tunisian capital, Tunis, the prize the Allies had fought seven months to pry away from German control. The Soldeirs took part in a May 31 Memorial Day ceremony at the North Africa American Cemetery and Memorial near Carthage, Tunisia.

All agreed that their experience in Tunisia was unlike walking the U.S. battlefield of Gettysburg, tracing the footsteps of Pickett’s men from Spangler’s Woods to the Emmitsburg Road. Nor was it like stepping from the shores of Normandy onto Omaha beach’s Dog Green sector on D-Day staff rides.

This tour was focused on lessons the U.S. Army learned over the course of a seven-month campaign across North Africa.

“No one’s ever done something like this, in this context, before. We’re using the book ‘An Army At Dawn’ and we are an Army Service Component Command at dawn,” Mariano said. “That’s the connection. It’s brilliant. “

Early on, Garrett challenged his staff to ask tough questions along the way and encouraged them to discuss tactical operations, but also look for insights into overall strategic goals. In North Africa, U.S. Army leaders found innovative ways to grow and succeed against often-insurmountable odds, he said.

“Talking about the past, in the present, that’s what this is about,” Garrett said. “This staff ride is simply a mechanism, a tool for helping us think about the challenges leaders faced in Africa during World War II and applying insights to our present focus.”

PHOTO CAPTION:

U.S. Army photo by Rick Scavetta
Cleared for Public Release

Official Website
Twitter Feed
Facebook Fan Page


Tunisia Staff Ride - U.S. Army Africa Soldiers apply WWII North Africa campaign lessons to current mission - May 2010
photo website
Image by US Army Africa
Official Website
Twitter Feed
Facebook Fan Page

U.S. Army Africa Soldiers apply lessons of WWII to current mission

By Rick Scavetta, U.S. Army Africa

KAIROUAN, Tunisia – Col. Stephen Mariano looked down into a foxhole carved atop a rocky hill top near El Guettar, where in March 1943, troops from U.S. Army II Corps battled German panzers.

Nearby, retired Army Col. Len Fullenkamp conjured tales of U.S. Army Rangers under Lt. Col. William Darby marching through darkness along a nearby ridge to surprise sleeping enemy infantrymen with fixed bayonets. Soldiers from the 1st Infantry Division hacked fighting positions from solid rock as enemy tanks rumbled into the valley. U.S. Army artillery units skimmed shells across the desert at approaching German armor.

Mariano began to wonder, “Had my grandfather dug one of these foxholes? Was his artillery position somewhere nearby? Did he fire on Germans coming through this gap?”

Mariano, 45, of Redlands, Calif., was among several U.S. Army Africa officers who took part in a four-day “staff ride,” – onsite discussions of Tunisia’s World War II battlefields geared toward finding insights into U.S. Army Africa’s present challenge – building cooperative relationships with African land forces to increase security, stability and peace in the region.

In late 1942, U.S. forces landed in North Africa with British troops. Their first fights were with Vichy French units, who later joined the Allied cause. Together, they pushed east into Tunisia, where they clashed with German and Italian troops among craggy, cactus-covered hills and washed out wadis.

As a U.S. Army Africa’s strategic planner, a look back at the alliance between American, British and French forces offered Mariano a glimpse at an international coalitions’ growing pains and how friction between partners can doom a mission. On a more personal level, the staff ride allowed him to recapture his family’s past.

Henry Mariano, Sr., was a sergeant with the 2nd Battalion, 62nd Armored Field Artillery Regiment who survived combat in North Africa, Italy and France before being wounded during the Battle of the Bulge in Belgium.

“This staff ride is a historic event, on a historic event, separated by 67 years,” Mariano said. “To be here, where my grandfather was, is pretty powerful to me.”

The tour began May 27 outside Sidi Bou Zid, where U.S. forces suffered a horrible defeat in mid-February 1943. They stopped for the evening in Gafsa, a city in Central Tunisia that changed hands between Allied and Axis forces several times during the campaign.

The second day, they focused on the Allied defeat at Kasserine Pass, followed by the U.S. Army’s first solid gains against veteran German troops in the counterattack at El Guettar. The next day, U.S. Army Africa Soldiers ventured east to focus on British Gen. Bernard Montgomery’s attempt to punch through Axis defenses at the coastal town of Enfidaville, roughly 40 miles southeast of Tunis.

Perched on a craggy knoll near Takrouna, Col. David Buckingham, U.S. Army Africa’s senior operations officer, bent the spine of Atkinson’s book, deep in thought about how for two days in mid-April 1942, New Zealanders came to death grips with Italian defenders in the limestone foothills outside Enfidaville.

Afterward, they paid respects to French and British Commonwealth troops buried nearby.

“Tying this staff ride together with Memorial Day, taking time to better understanding leadership and feel the sacrifice of our soldiers, has been both poignant and educational,” Buckingham said.

At each stop, officers thumbed through worn copies of Rick Atkinson’s “An Army At Dawn,” at their hip as Fullenkamp spoke of the bravery, heroics, ingenuity, lunacy and debacles of the North African campaign. After discussions, they poked through thorn bushes and cacti along the rocky terrain, searching for battlefield remnants.

At El Guettar, Maj. Gen. William B. Garrett III, commander of U.S. Army Africa, found a tin C-ration can and passed it to his senior logistics officer, Col. Mike Balser. Others found shards of shells and bullet casings. Lt. Col. David Konop, the command’s public affairs officer, found a link from a 30-caliber machine gun belt.

It was hard to not be overwhelmed in the presence of such history, to walk this consecrated ground, Fullenkamp said.

Like the 34th Infantry Division, they climbed the hills near Fondouk Pass. They stood in the cold rain below Longstop Hill, just as the U.S. Army’s 1st Battalion, 18th Infantry Regiment had when they relieved the 2nd Battalion of the British Coldstream Guards, around Christmas 1942.

The U.S. Army Africa tour wrapped up in the Tunisian capital, Tunis, the prize the Allies had fought seven months to pry away from German control. The Soldeirs took part in a May 31 Memorial Day ceremony at the North Africa American Cemetery and Memorial near Carthage, Tunisia.

All agreed that their experience in Tunisia was unlike walking the U.S. battlefield of Gettysburg, tracing the footsteps of Pickett’s men from Spangler’s Woods to the Emmitsburg Road. Nor was it like stepping from the shores of Normandy onto Omaha beach’s Dog Green sector on D-Day staff rides.

This tour was focused on lessons the U.S. Army learned over the course of a seven-month campaign across North Africa.

“No one’s ever done something like this, in this context, before. We’re using the book ‘An Army At Dawn’ and we are an Army Service Component Command at dawn,” Mariano said. “That’s the connection. It’s brilliant. “

Early on, Garrett challenged his staff to ask tough questions along the way and encouraged them to discuss tactical operations, but also look for insights into overall strategic goals. In North Africa, U.S. Army leaders found innovative ways to grow and succeed against often-insurmountable odds, he said.

“Talking about the past, in the present, that’s what this is about,” Garrett said. “This staff ride is simply a mechanism, a tool for helping us think about the challenges leaders faced in Africa during World War II and applying insights to our present focus.”

PHOTO CAPTION: U.S. Army Africa staff at Fondouk Pass, Tunisia.

U.S. Army photo by Rick Scavetta
Cleared for Public Release

Official Website
Twitter Feed
Facebook Fan Page

Nice Photo Website photos

Some cool photo website images:



189/365: My Country..... My Soul
photo website
Image by Najwa Marafie - Free Photographer
Models: Hussain Al.Aryan

Check our NEW update on our website
N-Studio Official website
YouTube Channel
FaceBook
Mobile: +965 66 383 666
E-Mail: N_Studio@Live.Com
------------------------------------------------------

Gear: NIKON D3X




Rate my photo: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10


The Cute Bee
photo website
Image by Najwa Marafie - Free Photographer
Model: Sara AL.Aryan


Check our NEW update on our website
N-Studio Official website
YouTube Channel
FaceBook
Mobile: +965 66 383 666
E-Mail: N_Studio@Live.Com
------------------------------------------------------

Gear: NIKON D3X



Rate my photo: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Cool Image Website images

Check out these image website images:




Dashing Shadow
image website
Image by chasedekker
I'm not really sure why I have not put this up yet, as it is one of my favorite photos. A male leopard, presumably an older one, makes his way through the thorny brush in Kruger National Park, South Africa. We followed this leopard for about 45 minutes until we decided it was a good time to leave him to his much wanted solitude.

For more, like and follow me at:
www.facebook.com/chasedekkerimages

Website:
www.chasedekker.zenfolio.com

Nice Photo Website photos

Some cool photo website images:


Robust. Zuverlässig. Kompakt.
photo website
Image by stereokultur.com
"Drei Worte" No. 4
Robust. Zuverlässig. Kompakt.
-------
Falls Ihr das Bild für eure Website, ein Magazin, etc. nutzen wollt, seht euch bitte meine CC-Lizenz für die Bilder an. Des Weiteren wäre ich dankbar, wenn Ihr mir eine kurze Mail mit dem Link zum Ort der Nutzung zusenden könnten an folgende Adresse: bildnutzung (ät) stereokultur.com

If you want to use the photo for your website, a magazine, etc., have a look on my CC-license for my photos. Furthermore I would be very thankful, if you send me an e-mail with the link to the location of your usage to the follwoing address: bildnutzung (ät) stereokultur.com
-------
Die Serie "drei Worte" zeigt Dinge, die mir in meinem täglichen Leben begegnen, an sich aber wenig spektakulär sind.
Die Idee hinter der Serie ist, diese Dinge in einer Form in Szene zu setzen, dass sie einen ästhetischen Wert entwickeln.
Drei Worte sind ausreichend um einem Gegenstand neuen Glanz durch seine ohnehin vorhandenen Eigenschaften zu geben.
Drei Worte, welche im Kopf bleiben.

-----

The series "drei Worte"; (three words) contains things, that appear to me in every day life, but which basically are nothing spectacular.
The idea behind the series is, to present those things in a setting, that gives them an aesthetic value.
Three words are enogh to give those things new glance according to their own characteristics.
Three words that stay in mind.


Zuverlässig. Chick. Vielseitig.
photo website
Image by stereokultur.com
"Drei Worte" No. 8
Zuverlässig. Chick. Vielseitig.
-------
Falls Ihr das Bild für eure Website, ein Magazin, etc. nutzen wollt, seht euch bitte meine CC-Lizenz für die Bilder an. Des Weiteren wäre ich dankbar, wenn Ihr mir eine kurze Mail mit dem Link zum Ort der Nutzung zusenden könnten an folgende Adresse: bildnutzung (ät) stereokultur.com

If you want to use the photo for your website, a magazine, etc., have a look on my CC-license for my photos. Furthermore I would be very thankful, if you send me an e-mail with the link to the location of your usage to the follwoing address: bildnutzung (ät) stereokultur.com
-------
Die Serie "drei Worte" zeigt Dinge, die mir in meinem täglichen Leben begegnen, an sich aber wenig spektakulär sind.
Die Idee hinter der Serie ist, diese Dinge in einer Form in Szene zu setzen, dass sie einen ästhetischen Wert entwickeln.
Drei Worte sind ausreichend um einem Gegenstand neuen Glanz durch seine ohnehin vorhandenen Eigenschaften zu geben.
Drei Worte, welche im Kopf bleiben.

-----

The series "drei Worte"; (three words) contains things, that appear to me in every day life, but which basically are nothing spectacular.
The idea behind the series is, to present those things in a setting, that gives them an aesthetic value.
Three words are enogh to give those things new glance according to their own characteristics.
Three words that stay in mind.

Nice Image Website photos

Some cool image website images:


Inspiration: We Heart Stuff
image website
Image by Patrick Haney
I heart We Heart Stuff. You'll find just enough content on the site to not make it overwhelming and just enough "flare" to keep it interesting, yet easy on the eyes.

Visit the site: http://www.weheartstuff.co.uk/
Read more about this Web Design Inspiration set on Flickr


The Promise of Spring
image website
Image by Vincent_AF
CC Attribution, Share Alike! Credit me by linking back to my flickr account or my website. Thanks!




Follow me on twitter, facebook or tumblr

Don't use the comment box to promote your own pictures, please. I consider those comments spam and I will remove them. Thanks!

Please, no awards and no group invites with compulsory comments/awards. Just open groups and/or critique, those are very welcome! Thank you!


(animated stereo) Constantinople (Istanbul) street scene, 1911
image website
Image by Thiophene_Guy
To animate view the image at original resolution (click all sizes) or simply scroll down to the first comment.

The purpose here is not to duplicate the original image, from the Library of Congress website, but to generate a downloadable animated gif to assist viewing and presentation. Note that the original there is first generation and should have more detail.

The library of congress offers a multitude of historical images online, many needing no license to redistribute. The original 1911 image, from an Underwood & Underwood negative, is titled Dogs choosing their sleeping quarters for the night - Constantinople. No known restrictions on publication. Library of Congress digital ID: hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ppmsca.05031

Image rotations, resizing, alignment, and animated gif generation done with StereoPhotoMaker, a freeware program by Masuji Suto & David Sykes.

Nice Image Website photos

Check out these image website images:


Inspiration: Adaptd
image website
Image by Patrick Haney
A unique look at web design with bands of color, large text, and a group of artistic links. The design is unconventional, but that's what makes it work.

Visit the site: http://adaptd.com/
Read more about this Web Design Inspiration set on Flickr


UNIVAC
image website
Image by Stuck in Customs
Daily Photo - Univac
I'm such a nerd and I love this computer.

My background is computer science and math, so I've always been into computers. This UNIVAC was just hitting its stride around the time I was born, and Moore's Law was kind enough to keep the doublings at a manageable rate so it wasn't a whole lot faster when I got my own first computer! I think I started with the Timex Sinclair 99 before getting into the C-64, then a whole host of Amigas before getting into the world of PCs (see these old vintage ads of computer stuff I tweeted about yesterday). Anyway, I'll try not to geek out too much here!

This photo was taken at the new Air and Space Museum in DC. There is an area in the back with all the rockets that also had the computers that were used alongside them at mission control. So, if you have any geek in you at all, I really recommend it.

Meet me at OpenCamp!
The Powers That Be talked me into speaking at openca.mp/, which is Aug 27-29 in Dallas. Who is OpenCamp for? As the website says, "Webmasters and web developers, bloggers, podcasters, social media enthusiasts and anyone interested in web content creation!" This is put together by the same people who did WordCamp Dallas and DrupalCamp Dallas. This should be one of the biggest events for bloggers this year - so I hope you can come out!

Cali Lewis, one of the organizers, recently mentioned OpenCamp in her recent Geekbrief video. You can get a full list of the speakers on the OpenCamp Page... along with me will be Chris Pirillo, John P, and many others.  I've heard Leo Laporte may even join the festivities... that would be a lot of fun to hang out with him again!

Right after OpenCamp, I'll be heading out to Burning Man in the middle of the Black Rock Desert. That will be a wild time!

Exclusive! Video to be released on Abduzeedo!
The crew over at abduzeedo.com/ grabbed the Exclusive of my new video release on Friday. It's a bit different than anything I have ever done... I hope you like it. I'll link over there on Friday so you can be among the first to see it.

New Prints Available

If you go over to the Prints area of the site, you can get links to all the latest prints to be released. I only release about 1% or 2% of the works as Limited Edition Numbered Prints. One of them is featured today over in a onemansblog.com/2010/05/19/my-new-custom-wall-art-from-tr.... That print should come available soon.

from the blog www.stuckincustoms.com


The Verdant Bough
image website
Image by Stuck in Customs
Wow I have a lot of reading for you today! I hope you have a coffee, a stiff drink, and/or some good music to accompany you!


First, my new photo today is entitled "The Verdant Bough". The photo was shot at this really cool place in Wyoming I found while running around Yellowstone with my rig. I'm glad I didn't fall down that cliff while shooting, but I guess that goes without saying.

Second, I had an article posted today in Smashing Magazine. It was originally titled 10 Principles of Beautiful Photography. That links here to my website, or you can visit the Smashing Magazine as well, although it's filled with a negative nancies down at the bottom with their own flavor of commentary. No worries... I have a thick skin and I enjoy all kinds of feedback. Both articles are the same, but I like the one here on the site a little since I think the photos are best appreciated in their larger size. The eye needs to surf across them to accept all the light levels and not let your brain reject them. It's a longer diatribe... but part of the reason this blog is soooo wide... 900 pixels across for each shot.

Oh, also, you can DIGG the article here! :)

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