Pine Cones
Pictures for Pam, Day 131: Welcome to Spring!
Spring Growth
Pictures for Pam, Day 134: SSC: Hoverfly with Fair…
T U L I P
Magnolia
Pictures for Pam, Day 136: Macro Monday: Ballpoint…
A Branch of Blossom
Pictures for Pam, Day 137: Happy Monkey
Pictures for Pam, Day 138: Droplet on Houndstongue…
red leaf coming
Tulips Awakening
Day 1, Thistle sp., southern Texas
Day 1, Thistle sp., southern Texas
Day 1, Thistle sp., southern Texas
Day 1, Thistle / Cirsium horridulum, southern Texa…
Day 1, Thistle / pink form of Cirsium horridulum,…
nature at work
Seed Heads
Pictures for Pam, Day 146: HFF: Cool Fence in Nice…
acelerar@verano
Yet more buds ;-)
Pictures for Pam, Day 147: Translucent Mushroom wi…
Day 2, Turkey Vulture / Cathartes aura
Primavera in faggeta
Dwarf hyacinth
Pictures for Pam, Day 149: Scarlet Fritillary Blos…
beauty
Sternmagnolie - Frühlingszeit
Pictures for Pam, Day 156: Henbit Deadnettle Drizz…
Pictures for Pam, Day 158: Pink-Tipped Daisy
Pictures for Pam, Day 162: SSC: Backlit Mariposa L…
Pictures for Pam, Day 164: Macro Monday: Nature's…
Pictures for Pam, Day 128: Thanks Everyone!
Short-eared Owl / Asio flammeus
Pictures for Pam, Day 127: SSC: Signs of Spring!
Wilson's Snipe - from the archives
Great Gray Owl - from the archives
Spring bokeh
Great Gray Owl - from the archives
Northern Pygmy-owl - from the archives
A face only a mother could love
Great Tit
Pictures for Pam, Day 121: Lovely Poppies
By writing the absence of tracks of wind...
Short-eared Owl - from January
Cadillac
Pictures for Pam, Day 117: Snow Flakes
Helmeted Guineafowl
Pictures for Pam, Day 116: Micro Mushroom Pair in…
Spring has sprung ;-)
Eastern Kingbird, from my archives
Short-eared Owl / Asio flammeus
Fairy light bokeh
Pictures for Pam, Day 114: Espresso & Cream
Lovely Espresso Foam and Cream
Dramatic Espresso Foam and Cream
Long-eared Owl / Asio otus
Short-eared Owl / Asio flammeus
Skeletal
Pictures for Pam, Day 110: Frozen Droplet & Crazy…
Pictures for Pam, Day 109: Macro Monday: "What Has…
Paper Birch Catkin
remains of summer
Pictures for Pam, Day 108: Droplet-Encased Sporoph…
See also...
Flo.fam.Geraniaceae - géranium , pélargonium, érodium- Geranie , geranio
Flo.fam.Geraniaceae - géranium , pélargonium, érodium- Geranie , geranio
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Pictures for Pam, Day 130: Nice, France Presentation #5 (+8 insets)
(+ 8 insets!) If you would like to see all of my Nice, France pictures, please visit my Provence, France 2018 album! :)
Looking at some of the amazing photography here on ipernity, I am very often inspired this way or that. Sometimes I see pictures that make me want to run outside and go crazy with images of droplets, flowers, insects. Other times I want to work on my indoor shots. But I keep running into fabulous pictures of European settings of all sorts that have me jumping up and down (this makes sense, most of you live there! :D). So I think it's time for another presentation on our Provence, France trip!
I sure have been learning a lot about pictures that seem like they are garbage but aren't. Like I said in my last France post, I got plenty of blurry pictures because of how I was doing most of my street photography. (Camera at my hip, tilted up to people coming my way, unobtrusively photographed) I cannot get over how the use of an appropriate filter can turn junk into an intriguing image! (Well, to me anyway!) For someone who values crisp focus on a subject, it's amazing how good an originally blurry picture can look given the right treatment. That's not to say that all of my pictures turned out blurry! But to me, saved garbage images which capture my attention and are worthy of sharing are totally fascinating to me.
Today's main picture (without a blurry subject! :D) was a beautiful flower I found in a planter outside the produce market we visited. What a surprise to find that awesome bokeh when I took a look on the computer!
The rest of the pictures are pictures of people…you will see a whole lot of filter work on these images which has turned most of them into artistic works but hopefully you'll find them fun and interesting to look at. I would be interested to know what you think!
About these pictures:
PiP #1: Steve and I couldn't believe how common "Segue"-style uni-wheel scooters are! They are everywhere! This picture is one I just love because it looks like something out of a graphic novel.
PiP #2: I nearly deleted this pictures before I realized…wait!! He's a street drunk, this blurry picture will be perfect with the right treatment…well what do you know?! Did it work out for you?
PiP #3: I loved this pair waiting for the bus…so different and so photogenic. I think the treatment makes this look like a cool stamp!
PiP #4: Can you say "Jaundiced Stare"? LOL…I think she saw me taking her picture, what do you think? I couldn't help myself, isn't she amazing?! I'm just glad she didn't kill me! :D
PiP #5: I call this one "Trekkin' Granny"! Isn't she fabulous?! I hope I look that good at her age, talk about AWESOME!
PiP #6:This impressionist art filter turned this into something that I stared at and thought…that lady looks a bit like me!
PiP #7: A typical street in Nice, I liked the angle and mood of this image…it was one of the first blurry pictures that I decide to try and save.
PiP #8: This one is not a great success but I like it because it's a memory shot. Explanation: it's got Mr. Pizza AND one of the delivery scooter guys reflected in the glass! We encountered a very crabby rider the night we arrived in Nice on the narrow alley streets and were trying to find parking. We hadn't even gotten to our Air BnB apartment yet and we'd been flying for many hours. We were tired and anxious about finding our place to stay. This guy was annoyed that we were making it hard for him to get down the street and had a few things to say about it. Heh…but Steve's driving was totally AMAZING…negotiating between cars on these streets was a seemingly futile idea but Steve never touched a car, with mere inches on either side! At one point I had to get out to let him know if he would touch or not. He made it around a car with less than an inch at the mirror! INCREDIBLE! Funny thing is, the next day we saw that scooter rider and he remembered us. He was actually quite nice and helped us with directions! :)
Pam, I'm going to take a wild guess that the flowers in my main picture are wild geraniums and once you let me know that I'd mistakenly labeled a wild geranium as a Redstem Storksbill. It was nice to have that pointed out to me! And so I took a look on your stream…I found one! This beautiful, artistic interpretation of a wild geranium is so classically Pam, since you have always loved to create these lovely spheres of your subjects. Wonderful! And I sure hope that your day is going ok! Big hugs from southern Oregon! :)
Explored on 3/20/19, highest placement, #1.
Looking at some of the amazing photography here on ipernity, I am very often inspired this way or that. Sometimes I see pictures that make me want to run outside and go crazy with images of droplets, flowers, insects. Other times I want to work on my indoor shots. But I keep running into fabulous pictures of European settings of all sorts that have me jumping up and down (this makes sense, most of you live there! :D). So I think it's time for another presentation on our Provence, France trip!
I sure have been learning a lot about pictures that seem like they are garbage but aren't. Like I said in my last France post, I got plenty of blurry pictures because of how I was doing most of my street photography. (Camera at my hip, tilted up to people coming my way, unobtrusively photographed) I cannot get over how the use of an appropriate filter can turn junk into an intriguing image! (Well, to me anyway!) For someone who values crisp focus on a subject, it's amazing how good an originally blurry picture can look given the right treatment. That's not to say that all of my pictures turned out blurry! But to me, saved garbage images which capture my attention and are worthy of sharing are totally fascinating to me.
Today's main picture (without a blurry subject! :D) was a beautiful flower I found in a planter outside the produce market we visited. What a surprise to find that awesome bokeh when I took a look on the computer!
The rest of the pictures are pictures of people…you will see a whole lot of filter work on these images which has turned most of them into artistic works but hopefully you'll find them fun and interesting to look at. I would be interested to know what you think!
About these pictures:
PiP #1: Steve and I couldn't believe how common "Segue"-style uni-wheel scooters are! They are everywhere! This picture is one I just love because it looks like something out of a graphic novel.
PiP #2: I nearly deleted this pictures before I realized…wait!! He's a street drunk, this blurry picture will be perfect with the right treatment…well what do you know?! Did it work out for you?
PiP #3: I loved this pair waiting for the bus…so different and so photogenic. I think the treatment makes this look like a cool stamp!
PiP #4: Can you say "Jaundiced Stare"? LOL…I think she saw me taking her picture, what do you think? I couldn't help myself, isn't she amazing?! I'm just glad she didn't kill me! :D
PiP #5: I call this one "Trekkin' Granny"! Isn't she fabulous?! I hope I look that good at her age, talk about AWESOME!
PiP #6:This impressionist art filter turned this into something that I stared at and thought…that lady looks a bit like me!
PiP #7: A typical street in Nice, I liked the angle and mood of this image…it was one of the first blurry pictures that I decide to try and save.
PiP #8: This one is not a great success but I like it because it's a memory shot. Explanation: it's got Mr. Pizza AND one of the delivery scooter guys reflected in the glass! We encountered a very crabby rider the night we arrived in Nice on the narrow alley streets and were trying to find parking. We hadn't even gotten to our Air BnB apartment yet and we'd been flying for many hours. We were tired and anxious about finding our place to stay. This guy was annoyed that we were making it hard for him to get down the street and had a few things to say about it. Heh…but Steve's driving was totally AMAZING…negotiating between cars on these streets was a seemingly futile idea but Steve never touched a car, with mere inches on either side! At one point I had to get out to let him know if he would touch or not. He made it around a car with less than an inch at the mirror! INCREDIBLE! Funny thing is, the next day we saw that scooter rider and he remembered us. He was actually quite nice and helped us with directions! :)
Pam, I'm going to take a wild guess that the flowers in my main picture are wild geraniums and once you let me know that I'd mistakenly labeled a wild geranium as a Redstem Storksbill. It was nice to have that pointed out to me! And so I took a look on your stream…I found one! This beautiful, artistic interpretation of a wild geranium is so classically Pam, since you have always loved to create these lovely spheres of your subjects. Wonderful! And I sure hope that your day is going ok! Big hugs from southern Oregon! :)
Explored on 3/20/19, highest placement, #1.
, Dida From Augsburg, photosofghosts, Holger Hagen and 55 other people have particularly liked this photo
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Bonne journée Janet !
My greetings!
Happy day and spring:time)
My fave PiPs : No1.............I love the graphic effects and the slightly off-kilter composition.
No2.............Perfect for the subject matter!
No5.............I love the colourful subject against the not-so-colourful buildings!
Overall, an offbeat and slightly wacky series of PiPs..............which I suspect reflect your personality :-))
Very well work!
Best wishes
Füsun
Third from right is my favorite!
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