Showing posts with label Photography. Show all posts
Astana from a height (2010)
Astana - the capital of the Republic of Kazakhstan (since December 10, 1997). The city's population of about 700 thousand people. The city is second in the country by population after the Alma-Ata. The city is located in northern Kazakhstan on the river Ishim in place of its closest approach to the river Nuroy. Astana - the coldest capital of the world, after Ulan Bator, the capital of Mongolia.
Incredible Graphics or Images?
The graphics in that you will surely suspect. The author, Henrik Moses, was able to pencil us conjure up the human sorrow, pain and suffering and happiness and joy.Exceptional skill portrayed us every detail of the human body, flowers, sky and nature.
Henrik Moses is born in 1968, in Netherlands. He studied art, philosophy and psychology. But, he never studied drawing / painting, he is self-taught. You can also find his works signed with his nickname Shimoda 7. He is so dedicated to his realistic drawing… Well, I don’t have enough words, so I’ll quote him:
“Realism is not an imitation of nature, it’s a representation of it. A magnifier through which we can see and appreciate the beauty of things we often fail to notice.”
Interesting Multiple Exposure photography
In photography, a multiple exposure is when two or more individual exposures are made to create a single photograph. In this post, we will present you with some interesting Interesting Multiple Exposure Photos taken by Dan Mountford, which created some really interesting and impressive effect.
Underwater photography has never been more exciting than this
Jason Heller is a commercial and wildlife photographer based in New York City.Jason can be best described as a conceptual commercial photographer specializing in underwater, travel & lifestyle photography, but the depth and breadth of his work both in and out of the studio has no bounds.
Beautiful Wreckage
There is nothing quiet so dramatic as the seasonal journey of a lotus pond: the rising up from muck in the summer heat; the outrageous, near-brashness of the flowering, the floppy leaves like mainsails catching the least breeze; and the inevitable collapse in the low-angled light of autumn, adding a remarkable physicality to the season of Fall, another victory for gravity and decomposition.