Black & White Thread XII
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- This topic has 100 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated 5 years, 8 months ago by Howard Brown.
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AuthorPosts
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October 24, 2018 at 7:26 am #304780Michael LerchParticipant
Thanks Keelin for a wonderful finish to the Eleventh Thread in black and white cloud photographs. Here we go with the Twelfth thread and may it be as strange and wonderful!
Arizona B&W #180
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October 25, 2018 at 3:30 pm #305047Patricia L KeelinParticipant
And here we go again! Thanks for the launch, Michael. Who knows where we will venture?
Into The Unknown
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October 26, 2018 at 3:25 am #305136Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#181
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October 30, 2018 at 12:07 am #305816Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#182
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October 30, 2018 at 10:03 am #305868Hans StockerParticipant
And thus Volume XII is started by Michael, as magnificent as Volume XI is ended by Keelin. I hope indeed Strange Wonders Await!
Cloudy Washboard
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October 31, 2018 at 3:10 am #305987Patricia L KeelinParticipant
Strange and stranger, all will be welcome! Can’t wait to see what comes out in the wash.
Underlying Influence
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October 31, 2018 at 1:12 pm #306050Hans StockerParticipant
Nice and strange patterns in the Underlying Influence Keelin. Was it this Influence or the Washboard that made it come out …
Ragged In The Wash
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November 1, 2018 at 1:26 am #306158Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#183
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November 1, 2018 at 11:55 am #306228Hans StockerParticipant
Nice soft greys Michael.
With A Twist
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November 2, 2018 at 1:44 am #306348Patricia L KeelinParticipant
While my mind enjoyed tumbling on gentle cycle with Michael’s soft greys and a few suds with a twist, courtesy of Hans, I kept wondering what fate awaited Ragged In The Wash, and then…
Found This In The Dryer
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November 2, 2018 at 4:47 pm #306472Hans StockerParticipant
I really had to laugh about with whaty ou Found In The Dryer, Keelin. Maybe lost in the wrong topic? Your ingenious Mouse Witch With Wand in the Clouds-that-look-like-things awaits for a continuation in the next volume, but I don’t have a candidate yet. Can’t take long I hope.
After Some Unskilled Ironing
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November 2, 2018 at 5:40 pm #306516Patricia L KeelinParticipant
Very funny title to your follow-up, Hans! And the soft texture of your image makes it a pleasure to see. That said, I’ve had the same problem with ironing — only worse, I think.
Scorched
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November 3, 2018 at 12:41 am #306563Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#184
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November 5, 2018 at 1:47 am #306878Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#185
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November 5, 2018 at 9:44 am #306922Hans StockerParticipant
Ahhh, such a pity to scorch those tender tissues Keelin. Bad luck.
Arizona #184 and #185 by Michael fold and wrinkle to their hearts content.
Scouts
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November 5, 2018 at 5:18 pm #307005Patricia L KeelinParticipant
Indeed, Hans, the images Michael brought us above have the textural quality one would certainly not wish to smooth out. And now I wonder where your streamlined Scouts will lead? Off in the distance, some vision is being sketched into being.
Rough Draft
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November 6, 2018 at 10:41 am #307116Hans StockerParticipant
An imaginative Rough Draft Keelin. The emerging being in the distance has a magical feel. It maybe tries to figure out what he sees himself in the farther distance.
A Singularity
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November 6, 2018 at 7:19 pm #307212Patricia L KeelinParticipant
Speaking of imagination…Oh my. It seems I mis-read your comment, Hans, and thought you wrote that the emerging being* in the distance has magical FEET. Then, when I saw the image in accompaniment, my eyebrows reached a new elevation of surprise.
* I would like to see the rest of this creature!
Elevation Of Surprise
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November 7, 2018 at 5:15 pm #307348Hans StockerParticipant
A new Elevation Of Surprise! Yes for me too. Love the composition, the curling structure and composition.
As a matter of fact I didn’t look at A Singularity as a creature before, but once seen or pointed out….. Now I am curious for the rest of the creature too. Imagination seems to be boundless.
Boundless
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November 7, 2018 at 9:56 pm #307382Don HatfieldParticipant
I’m new to this thread and thought you might enjoy this one. While the photo is not, strictly speaking, a B&W image, it was taken with a camera converted to record only near infrared. Photo was taken using a custom white balance, which produces its sepia look. The picture itself reminds me of “the wings of storm battered dragons”.
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November 8, 2018 at 10:17 am #307433Hans StockerParticipant
Welcome Don and thanks for this extraordinary post. Love the composition.
Is there any particular reason you make pictures of clouds in infrared? I hope for more sepia dragons (or anything else) from you. Just watch the pictures in this thread and former Volumes to see the variety of cloud impressions in black and white already produced. Take your time I should say. This is already Volume XII and we start a new one when there are 100 posts.
Dragonskin
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November 8, 2018 at 5:06 pm #307506Patricia L KeelinParticipant
A warm welcome to you, Don. Your sepia photo above is quite splendid. You’ve captured a compelling illusion of motion there — as if those battered dragon wings have yet to lose all their flight power. Echoing Hans, I hope to see more from you here— and on other forum topics as well.
Wonderfully detailed texture in your Dragonskin, Hans! Very convincing.
All Fired Up
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November 8, 2018 at 6:29 pm #307522Don HatfieldParticipant
Thanks to all for the warm welcome. Regarding IR, I just wanted to see what could be done (I do some B&W also). Not sure where you’re from ,but I thought you could use a view of what Dallas TX looks like at the end of a stormy August afternoon. Reminds me of what Dr Seuss says about “when the storm starts stopping”.
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November 9, 2018 at 1:21 am #307561Michael LerchParticipant
Hey Don, Looks like a classic Monsooner you captured there.
Arizona B&W#186
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November 9, 2018 at 8:54 am #307612Hans StockerParticipant
Great monsooner Don. These are the ones Michael is indeed quite familiar with. I am living on the other side of the pond in the moderate climates of the flatlands, or better the Netherlands.
And wow, Michael, your #186 is FANTASTIC. I have to write this in capitals. The strange round and less sharply drawn lenticular like structure – like a little box that opens – is just behind and in contrast with the sharply drawn cumulus. Together they make a wonderful and surreal composition. Ahhhh!
Here under no monsooner but it comes close. Spotted in France from a driving car.
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November 9, 2018 at 6:31 pm #307821Patricia L KeelinParticipant
Michael, you have transported us! Your #186 is as Hans has declared: FANTASTIC. Surreal beyond my wildest dreams — and they are hard to surpass.
And monsoon (Don) or no monsoon (Hans), impressive shots of magnificent skies above your noggins miles apart. Especially exciting to see as no rain is in sight for us here, and we are so dearly in need of it.
That said, there was a bit of cloud activity last week that caught and held my eye for a few breath-taking moments. The image below proved more intriguing once cropped.
Bejeweled Eyelid
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November 11, 2018 at 6:21 am #308044Michael LerchParticipant
Keelin..to continue the discussion on ” resolution” and improving your camera..and the B&W thread being a good place to continue the discussion..Let me say..that Photography is about Light.. working, manipulating, shaping, sculpting etc etc..with light…We,,have decided to photograph Clouds…Clouds are for the most part..not sharp, not well defined nor stationary to pose. Doing all the things we can do with light,applied to clouds makes me wonder if we are not masochists. We seem to try to work with odds really stacked against us…So things like ” resolution” really help but can become secondary when other aspects begin to fail or improve and make it even more difficult or easier to ” work” the Light.
To improve our odds in acquiring a good or great shot of clouds we must take advantage of when and where Light is to our advantage..The so called ” magic” hour offers much help to our manipulating Light. Midday sun is the worst with its high contrast. The hour or so after sun up and the hour or so before sun down gives us subdued highlites that we can capture details in without loosing details in the many shadows. IMHO B&W photos of cloud should be taken during these “magic’ hours for most and best effect. Of course I’ve taken shots during high noon but details in either the shadows or highlites paid the price. Using the angle of the sun can make cloud look sharper than it is…can help in directing the eye , create textures, create patterns, create depth, etc. So the best time of the day to shoot is early and late in the day..which also means when the light is less..meaning slower shutter speeds wider f stop or increased ASA rating with attached increase in ” noise” problem. Always a trade off. There have been really outstanding improvements in ” low light” digital photography. Lens and now camera bodies have anti shake built in and CMOS are just better performers in low lite situations. ASA 400 use to be when noise became an issue. Today ASA 24000 is when you have start looking hard for noise. But..a simple monopod or tripod will bring the shakes to a halt as well.
Its working the Light..seeing the Light and using it to your advantage so that resolution isn’t even considered when looking at the final product, that is what I’m gettin at. Here in Arizona an overcast day is a great day to shoot clouds.as long as there are clouds lower than the overcast. Our midday sun is really just too much but putting an overcast on it..makes the Light workable. True, overcast days in Phoenix are rare and don’t last a whole day anyway.
Another thing is the CMOS,,a lot of them but not all,,are sensitive, they record, they ” see”..further into the infrared than our eyes/brain do. B&W can show this ” advantage ” well especially when using Adobe Lightroom. ” Clarity function brings the unseen to visibility.
I guess Im saying even a inexpensive camera takes a great shot if the operator knows how to work the light,,knows how to anticipate the light and be patient for the Light to be right. So, don’t be afraid to work up the chain of cameras. As your ability and fun and creativeness grows with working Light ,,the need for better and better technology grows..but it all starts with working the Light.
On a side note..used cameras mite be something to look into..Cameras don’t hold their value very well,,except when retail outlets try to make high profits…Ebay etc etc mite yield you a really good camera for cheap..used..just make sure you get instruction manual AND photo processing software( on a DVD usually) and computor cords for downloading pics. With point and shoot cameras..be careful with how they are powered..” special” batteries or regular AA or AAA or etc batteries..If buying a used camera make sure battery charger comes with it unless it takes regular AA etc etc.
anyway..
Arizona B&W187
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November 11, 2018 at 6:27 pm #308119Patricia L KeelinParticipant
Thank you, Michael, for shining a light on LIGHT. To be sure, I’ll be holding onto your thoughtful and generous reply for guidance as I wade through camera options. This may take some time, but meanwhile, I will try to apply your keen insights on timing and patience.
With An Eye On Future Possibilities
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November 12, 2018 at 2:56 pm #308298Hans StockerParticipant
Future Possibilities has a nice contrast between sharp and vague, Keelin. And lots of success with wading through camera options. Remember….
It´s All About Light
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November 14, 2018 at 2:42 am #308563Patricia L KeelinParticipant
En zo komt het licht binnen, Hans! Dank je!
Lightness Of Being
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November 14, 2018 at 2:45 pm #308641Hans StockerParticipant
Haha, wat een prachtige wollige cirrus Keelin! Beautiful and just what the title says.
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November 15, 2018 at 10:21 pm #308857Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#188
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November 16, 2018 at 8:50 am #308928Hans StockerParticipant
From woolly (Lightness of Being) to splashy (#188) …
Polished Beneath
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November 17, 2018 at 2:53 am #309069Patricia L KeelinParticipant
Yet further along, one never knows…
What Goes On Below The Surface
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November 17, 2018 at 3:23 pm #309155Hans StockerParticipant
What Goes On Below The surface comes off from the screen like a giant wave, Keelin.
Below the surface the …
Seaweed Tangles
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November 18, 2018 at 6:21 pm #309338Patricia L KeelinParticipant
The Seaweed Tangles beautifully, Hans, and rising above for a bit of air — or is it for the chance to view clouds?, we might see a breach, a breath, and…
A Whale Of A Splash
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November 19, 2018 at 8:02 pm #309560Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#189
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November 21, 2018 at 2:01 am #309827Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#190
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November 23, 2018 at 12:39 am #310344Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#191
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November 23, 2018 at 10:27 pm #310753Patricia L KeelinParticipant
You’ve captured wild, dramatic energies in your Arizona B&W#189 and #190, Michael, and no less beauty with #191.
When The Breeze Takes A Breath
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November 24, 2018 at 11:11 pm #310967Michael LerchParticipant
Thank you Keelin! Yes, time for a little calm.
Arizona B&W#192
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November 28, 2018 at 3:48 am #311560Michael LerchParticipant
ArizonaB&W#193
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November 29, 2018 at 5:42 pm #311874Patricia L KeelinParticipant
Calm is exactly what’s needed, Michael, and Arizona B&W#192 delivers a welcomed dose. Yet I love the way #193 sweeps in with its gentle disturbance.
Below, all is still calm, and bringers of light are there to be seen.
Faeries In The Forest
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November 30, 2018 at 11:26 pm #312097Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#194
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December 4, 2018 at 9:26 pm #314215Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#195
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December 6, 2018 at 1:10 pm #316230Hans StockerParticipant
Some great work from you two! I have to catch up again after Whale Of A Splash by Keelin (very funny title also) and #193 by Miachel (wonderful composition).
Curved Ceiling
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December 9, 2018 at 9:35 pm #317302Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#196
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December 11, 2018 at 3:42 am #317641Patricia L KeelinParticipant
B&W never fails to deliver surprises here. Love the above, Michael and Hans!
The Subtle Shades Of Mystery
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December 12, 2018 at 1:21 am #317929Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#197
Claudette Colbert
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December 12, 2018 at 9:49 am #318004Hans StockerParticipant
Keelin, The Subtle Shades Of Mystery leads the eyes perfectly to the to the left bottom of the picture where the mystery of soft textures and crepesculars hold the eyes in wonder. Love it!
Michael, I had to look up who Claudette Colbert was. Great B&W! Your Arizona B&W #197 with this name attached to it intrigue me. What kind of a puzzle this is?
Outwards
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December 12, 2018 at 4:58 pm #318103Patricia L KeelinParticipant
Danke je, Hans! And speaking of mysteries…
Michael, you teased us cleverly with Arizona B&W#197. My brow also furrowed for a moment, but once paredolia glasses were donned, Cloudette Colbert stepped out of the shadows with a starlet look upwards as if to say: Is my bouffant in place?
And in your image above, Hans, the look of softness and sense of motion reminds me of pulling on a favorite warm sweater before stepping out into the autumn chill. Just in time to go Outwards and…
Give The Duster A Good Shake
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December 14, 2018 at 11:52 pm #318717Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#198
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December 17, 2018 at 3:51 pm #320107Hans StockerParticipant
Nice shake …… and another bites the dust!
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December 17, 2018 at 8:08 pm #320187Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#199
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December 21, 2018 at 12:55 am #321021Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#200
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December 23, 2018 at 2:44 am #321468Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#201
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December 23, 2018 at 10:00 pm #321606Don HatfieldParticipant
Michael – The sci-fi buff in me says : Arizona B&W # 199 looks like the Starship Enterprise. Perhaps Cpt Kirk really did visit Earth in our century.
Above and beyond that, the arrangement of the (lenticulars and cumulus ?) makes a wonderful; photo. The cropping of the photo really emphasizes them, as there are no distracting elements.
Thanks for your continued inspiration. You make me want to move away from my BBS.
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December 27, 2018 at 5:14 am #322304Patricia L KeelinParticipant
Michael, Arizona B&W #201 will long remain a favorite. And Hans, your duster comment made me laugh aloud. Then there’s astonishment at the remarkably crisp detail you captured. Meanwhile, I was still in cleaning mode and…
Found This Under The Bed
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December 28, 2018 at 9:09 pm #322594Michael LerchParticipant
Don and Keelin, Thanks for your kind words. I like boldly going ,with clouds, where few others have gone. Like Keelin, I find the strangest things.
Arizona B&W#202
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December 30, 2018 at 5:50 pm #322863Patricia L KeelinParticipant
Michael, your Arizona B&W#202 looks like what it feels like when curiosity is rewarded with such a cloud capture. It might be that lovers of the wonders above can’t help but cave in to such cravings.
The Irresistible Urge To Explore
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December 31, 2018 at 1:28 pm #322983Hans StockerParticipant
Curiosity was certainly rewarding this year. Continuous inspiration, like Don said. And we keep exploring. I look forward for what great surprises you all will produce in Black & White (or in color).
To end this year ….
Some Soundless Fireworks
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January 5, 2019 at 1:09 am #323857Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#203
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January 7, 2019 at 5:38 pm #324269Patricia L KeelinParticipant
Great dynamics in your images above, Hans and Michael. I, too, wonder what this new year will bring. No doubt there will be winds that blow in ways that amaze with cloud formations that keep us all looking up.
Mysterious Forces
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January 9, 2019 at 1:51 am #324479Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#204
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January 10, 2019 at 10:27 am #324702Hans StockerParticipant
Well, looking up really pays off! Love the fine structures in Mysterious Forces Keelin. B&W #203 and #204 by Michael are both wonderful compositions. Forgive me my pareidolia, but I see bright white teeth (#203) and a close up of an elephant (#204), while #204 also gives this abstract feeling of an infinite space.
Centrifugal
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January 12, 2019 at 11:35 pm #325132Howard BrownParticipant
Hans, I see your elephant in Michael’s B&W # 204 – remarkable.
Still that login problem, having just logged in – but again F5 did the trick.
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January 11, 2019 at 8:53 pm #324951Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#205
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January 12, 2019 at 4:26 pm #325094Hans StockerParticipant
Wired Cirrus
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January 13, 2019 at 6:11 pm #325260Patricia L KeelinParticipant
No doubt about the elephant — a fantastic image, Michael! It’s a bit mesmerizing, and I was happy to see it did not take on a pinkish hue after staring at it for quite some time. #205 also sets the mind to seeing things without the aid of alcohol or advanced pareidolia. Another fine shot.
Having set my mind to wander, I mis-read the title of Hans’s following image as Wired Circus (honestly, no imbibing was involved!). I like the wild vertical dance of clouds you captured there, Hans, while Centrifugal gives the feeling of a look out the back window at warp speed. I wonder where we’re headed next…
Above and Beyond?
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January 15, 2019 at 2:26 am #325504Michael LerchParticipant
Definitely above us
Arizona B&W#206
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January 15, 2019 at 8:31 am #325541Hans StockerParticipant
Underneath
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January 16, 2019 at 2:54 am #325653Patricia L KeelinParticipant
Couldn’t Be Closer (without getting wet)
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January 17, 2019 at 10:43 am #325847Hans StockerParticipant
That looks like familiar Dutch weather like we are having here at this very moment, Keelin. Nice warm and dry inside and doing some photoshopping?
A Somewhat Wintery Feel
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January 19, 2019 at 5:21 am #326233Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#207
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January 19, 2019 at 10:40 pm #326318Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#208
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January 21, 2019 at 4:23 pm #326585Hans StockerParticipant
Arizona B&W #207 and #208 have both a very special texture, Michael. I love #207 in particular.
No Blood Involved Nor Wolves
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January 23, 2019 at 9:55 pm #326932Michael LerchParticipant
Yes Hans, an early morning canopy of perlucidus with cumulus underneath created a good show! A lively apparition you have caught there!
Arizona B&W#209
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January 24, 2019 at 1:18 pm #327029Hans StockerParticipant
Arizona B&W #209 is a fluffy one Michael.
Next one is
Tickling
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January 26, 2019 at 3:58 am #327262Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#210
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January 27, 2019 at 4:57 pm #327479Hans StockerParticipant
Playful Winds
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January 28, 2019 at 9:37 pm #327678Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#211
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January 29, 2019 at 4:25 am #327731Patricia L KeelinParticipant
Fantastic photos, Hans and Michael! Impossible to say one is favored over another as each image displays its own beauty and mood. Today, the clouds took on a formation that surprised me in its vastness. The same texture continued to the right of the sun filling most of the late morning sky.
Embroidered
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January 29, 2019 at 12:02 pm #327770Hans StockerParticipant
Thanks Keelin and a nice capture with this sky covering formation, Keelin. When the sky coverage was that vast it must have been impressive!
Shadowing
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January 30, 2019 at 5:57 pm #327979Michael LerchParticipant
Nice Textures There You Two!
Arizona B&W#212
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February 1, 2019 at 10:08 pm #328316Michael LerchParticipant
A Different Perspective
Arizona B&W#213
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February 4, 2019 at 10:42 pm #328750Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#214
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February 5, 2019 at 2:37 am #328768Patricia L KeelinParticipant
A great capture in Shadowing, Hans, mystery to spare in that one. And thanks, Michael, for your comment on textures above. Your Altocumulus example from two perspectives is a very interesting study in the almost physical feeling of rising /falling the images evoke. And your most recent B&W#124 is a stunner, the physical reaction was a dropped jaw on seeing that one!
A different sense of motion is what moved me to take the photo below. The clouds looked intent on heading somewhere, so full of purpose in this moment.
Directionally Unchallenged
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February 5, 2019 at 10:41 pm #328887Hans StockerParticipant
You describe the movement in Directionally Unchallenged just it just as it shows Keelin. Love its texture and composition.
And Arizona B&W #214 seems to show two sitting ghostly figures on a bench Michael, but I know you prefer the abstract approach and also that way you got me with this mystic virga formation.
The last weeks the sky over here is dominated by too much featureless variations of all kinds of stratus, but my archive is of help. I once spotted something beary clawing its way through the sky.
Something Beary
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February 6, 2019 at 9:40 pm #329033Michael LerchParticipant
Lots of time I go for that instant reaction. Perhaps that very first impact, very first reaction by the viewer , as being the truth for the viewer and the shot itself. Sometimes I have difficulty with a shot after assessing it for too long. Trying to hold on to the very first moment isn’t easy. Sometimes “weird”, the surreal, makes it easier. I very recently stumbled across an internet article on the Lundehund of Norway. Having 6 toes is one feature that makes this dog unique. Hans, your picture above is now so associated and my original take of it has dimensions to its “truth” I had not even conceived of…yes, directionally unchallenged!
Arizona B&W#215
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February 7, 2019 at 1:00 pm #329126Hans StockerParticipant
Mchael, you surprised me with your cryptic and even mystic comment and also with your Arizona B&W #215, which seems to be a picture of the Hound Of The Baskervilles in reply on Something Beary. I googled for the Lundehund and found out it is an amazing breed, but why in heaven meant for hunting these beautiful puffins?
A Hill Where Puffins Might Live
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February 7, 2019 at 9:28 pm #329178Michael LerchParticipant
I wouldn’t want to be bit by a Puffin! Those beaks!
Arizona B&W#216
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February 8, 2019 at 2:15 am #329216Patricia L KeelinParticipant
Are you sure the Something Beary was clawing through the sky, Hans, and not a Lundehund paddling in the sea? To the eye (the good one that still works) of this paredoliac (if this isn’t a real word, I think it should be), I could not help but see an otter giving in to insatiable curiosity. It is a marvelous bit of mystery and a breathtaking, dreamlike image. I like it very much indeed.
And thank you, Michael, for sparking curiosity about the Lundehund. Pleased to hear they’re being saved from extinction, but hope Puffin is no longer on the menu. The swirls in your Arizona B&W#215 look to be forming a fiery lemniscate. Lovely!
Below The Puffins’ Perch
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February 11, 2019 at 2:43 am #329691Michael LerchParticipant
“Lemniscate” I need help with that since my dictionary is of no avail
Nice crag work there with the cliffs and clouds Keelin!
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February 11, 2019 at 4:58 am #329717Patricia L KeelinParticipant
Thanks for kind words, Michael. According to Wikipedia: “Lemniscate, in algebraic geometry, is the term for any of several figure-eight or ∞-shaped curves.” It isn’t a word I come across often (being from the other end of the campus), but it came to mind with your Arizona B&W#215.
Below is the upper portion of a photo (posted under Cloudscapes, December 13, 2018) that also appears to hold some possibility of forming an infinity symbol. I jokingly suggested calling it Cirrus intortus lemniscatus. While the drifting clouds never quite completed the left-side loop, it was fun to watch and worth the wait regardless.
That said and settled, I like the soft winged look of you image above. Beautiful!
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March 22, 2019 at 12:06 am #335407Howard BrownParticipant
Keelin, someone understands these higher dimensions:
Abel Prize
The winner received the prize for ‘ “fundamental work in geometric analysis and gauge theory,’. The article says ‘… of minimal surfaces, such as those formed by soap bubbles and more general minimisation problems in higher dimensions.’
So next time you feel raindrops falling on your head….
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February 13, 2019 at 1:27 am #329993Michael LerchParticipant
Thank You Keelin!
Arizona B&W# 218
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February 13, 2019 at 10:52 pm #330116Hans StockerParticipant
Dark Ceiling
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February 17, 2019 at 8:05 pm #330708Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W# 219
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February 20, 2019 at 12:28 am #331014Michael LerchParticipant
Arizona B&W#220
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February 20, 2019 at 3:18 am #331026Patricia L KeelinParticipant
Will wonders never cease? Apparently not with this B&W thread. Love the fantastic textures in your photos above, Michael. And that hovering smoothness of Dark Ceiling is completely captivating, Hans. As for the image below, what caught my attention was the way it bounced.
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February 20, 2019 at 7:54 pm #331156Hans StockerParticipant
Great texture in Arizona B-W #219 Michael. And the composition as well.
What caught my attention is what Keelin bounced back! Love that one and I can’t help but I see a front view of a horse’s head. It also looks like something thrown to the viewer leaving a trace and – indeed – bouncing just in front of us. Amazing.
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