Indycaver (Norm)'s photos with the keyword: Challenge

Sunday Challenge Abstract

The Official

10 Apr 2016 21 38 500
Our official work photographer ... Kris. Bear Run Mine Tour.

Something New

28 Dec 2015 9 40 478
My first micro 4/3rds camera.

A Beginning

07 Sep 2015 14 40 590
1929 Auburn 8-90 once owned by George Palmer Putnam ... Amelia Earhart's widower. Sold at auction and to be the beginning of the new buyer's restoration.

August 30th Challenge

30 Aug 2015 13 36 498
1) one shot in black & white 2) one shot using the white balance 3) one shot with selective color

The Great One

05 Jul 2015 10 30 622
Eagle Creek Ornithology Center

Nothing is more Welcoming ...

25 May 2015 8 38 378
than a portrait photography permit requirement.

Newspaper Headline ~ Front Page News

17 May 2015 8 23 487
Scene at local children's museum.

Metric Converter

03 May 2015 4 286
High~Key lighting Sunday Challenge.

Nightmare on Elm Street Film Can

03 May 2015 2 4 352
High~Key lighting Sunday Challenge.

Music Store Mural

09 Mar 2015 21 26 583
Photomatrix HDR. Photomatrix gives quite a variety of different HDR image choices, but I felt the artistic b/w looked more like what I was seeing when I took the photo.

Christmas Photo

14 Dec 2014 26 35 625
Original photo from www.deviantart.com/art/Snowman-Christmas-107371041 and PhotoFunia.

Jazz Age Photography

13 Oct 2014 15 32 526
Alfred Cheney Johnston collection of Ziegfeld Girls. I'm still dealing with a reluctant internet and my comments will be hampered until I get it figured out.

Kaleidoscope

15 Sep 2014 11 31 545
The color shaft to my kaleidoscope. The opaque looking shapes are actually little bits of mirrored plastic. The complete kaleidoscope is in a note in the upper left. I bought the kaleidoscope at an antique store. It's made to look like an antique, but it's not ... it's more of a homemade item/art. The kaleidoscope body is made out of stained glass. The viewing end is at the bottom and contains the viewing lens. The T end of the kaleidoscope is an acrylic rod filled with fluid and bits of color which slide down a spiral slot inside the rod. It works pretty much like a regular kaleidoscope with a prism at the T-end. You twist the rod as you look through the viewing lens and it changes all the shapes and colors. I just noticed while sitting here looking at the photo that it has a crack in it and I'm guessing it's been dropped sometime by one of the grand kids ... or maybe me! I did a search a few minutes ago and there are actually stained glass kaleidoscope kits available. Not quite the same design, but then I bought this one nearly 12 years ago.

Three Pawns

18 Aug 2014 12 32 531
From my old chess set.

Happy First Birthday TSC!

For The Sunday Challenge -- Through the Looking Gl…

25 May 2014 10 27 423
Shot using the cordless remote trigger on my Canon.

27 items in total