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De online slagkracht van Barack Obama

Check out these online photos images:


De online slagkracht van Barack Obama
online photos
Image by Comicbase
The Dutch internet marketing magazine Emerce publishes a cover story on Politics 2.0 today. Barack Obama, the brand new Democratic candidate for the presidency, is on the cover, looking firmly and confident towards the horizon.
The cover says: "Internet as a political factor - The online power of Obama."

Foto: Jeroen Mirck / www.jeroenmirck.nl


Is Your Online Marketing Strategy Run on Monopoly Money?
online photos
Image by FindYourSearch
Many big businesses spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on their marketing budget in traditional advertising channels, while ignoring the importance of online marketing. Don't be one of them!

(Original photo licensed under Creative Commons Attribution by p e e p e r)

letters from spanish anarchists

A few nice photo letters images I found:


letters from spanish anarchists
photo letters
Image by margaretkilljoy
Five letters by Francisco Ferrer Guardia and two letters by Soledad Villafranca to F. Kupka. 1909-1910 and n.d. photo 2 of 18


letters from spanish anarchists
photo letters
Image by margaretkilljoy
Five letters by Francisco Ferrer Guardia and two letters by Soledad Villafranca to F. Kupka. 1909-1910 and n.d. photo 3 of 18


letters from spanish anarchists
photo letters
Image by margaretkilljoy
Five letters by Francisco Ferrer Guardia and two letters by Soledad Villafranca to F. Kupka. 1909-1910 and n.d. photo 9 of 18

Nice Photo Effects photos

Some cool photo effects images:


Government Office of the Slovak Republic
photo effects
Image by Miroslav Petrasko (blog.hdrshooter.net)
Quite the old photo. I took it from the 33 floor of the Slovak National Bank. Hopefully they have an open day again, so I can get there with a better camera equipment and take more shots :)
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For more info on this and other my photos, and my HDR tutorial, please visit my daily photo blog at blog.hdrshooter.net
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Daily photo blog - My portfolio - My HDR tutorial - My Twitter - My facebook page


A lot of green
photo effects
Image by Miroslav Petrasko (blog.hdrshooter.net)
A lot of green today. This spot is actually in the middle of the scenery I posted yesterday :)
______________________________________________________________

For more info on this and other my photos, and my HDR tutorial, please visit my daily photo blog at blog.hdrshooter.net
______________________________________________________________

Daily photo blog - My portfolio - My HDR tutorial - My Twitter - My facebook page

Meiji Memorial Picture Gallery 聖徳記念絵画館

Check out these picture images:


Meiji Memorial Picture Gallery 聖徳記念絵画館
picture
Image by Guwashi999
Meijijingu Gaien, Tokyo, Japan 2011/07/13
SIGMA DP2

Meiji Memorial Picture Gallery
聖徳記念絵画館



Welcome_Anaglyph stereo 3D picture: You need Red/Cyan glasses. آناگلیف
picture
Image by Shahrokh Dabiri
Shandiz is our best Persian kabab that it has been made from best part of the lamb!
For your information, each Shandiz skewer plus a full dish of cooked rice, costs equal to US - here (its price vary depends on the resturant class).
Don't miss it if you could visit Iran a day ;-)
I have removed my picture background to put more accent on my picture subject!
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برای خرید عینک اناگلیف (عینک سه بعدی) استاندارد به سایت معتبر "ایران سه بعدی" مراجعه کنید
www.3Diran3D.ir

Photo booth

Some cool photo booths images:


Photo booth
photo booths
Image by jesus-leon


Jugando con el Photo Booth y el N95
photo booths
Image by pedrobea
dedicada a la persona menos abstracta del mundo


photo booth
photo booths
Image by davedehetre

at a bar

Cool Search Image images

A few nice search image images I found:


1930 Cadillac V16 (02)
search image
Image by Georg Schwalbach (GS1311)
The Cadillac V-16 was Cadillac's top-of-the-line car from its January 1930 launch until production ceased in 1940 as the war in Europe killed sales. All were finished to custom order, and the car was built in very small numbers; only 4076 cars were constructed in the eleven years the model was offered. The majority of these were built in the single year of 1930, before the Great Depression really took hold. This was the first V16 powered car to reach production status in the United States.

In 1926, Cadillac began the development of a new, "multi-cylinder" car. A customer requirement was seen for a car powered by an engine simultaneously more powerful and smoother than any hitherto available. Development proceeded in great secrecy over the next few years; a number of prototype cars were built and tested as the new engine was developed, while at the same time Cadillac chief Lawrence Fisher and GM's stylist Harley Earl toured Europe in search of inspiration from Europe's finest coachbuilders. Unlike many builders of luxury cars, who sold bare chassis to be clothed by outside coachbuilding firms, General Motors had purchased the coachbuilders Fleetwood and Fisher Body to keep all the business in-house. Bare Cadillac chassis could be purchased if a buyer insisted, but the intention was that few would do so.

It was not until after the stock market crash of 1929 that Cadillac announced to the world the availability of the costliest Cadillac yet, the new V-16. The new vehicle was first displayed at New York's automobile show on January 4, 1930.

(Wikipedia)

- - -

Der Cadillac V16 des amerikanischen Fahrzeugproduzenten Cadillac war der weltweit erste PKW in Serienproduktion mit einem 16 Zylinder-V-Motor. Der Motor leistet 165 PS und besitzt einen Hubraum von 7,4 Liter. Zwischen 1930 und 1937 wurden 4387 Stück gebaut, der Preis lag bei 5950 US-Dollar.

Gut erhaltene Exemplare der 1930er-Produktion erreichen heutzutage einen Marktwert bis zu 500.000 US-Dollar.

(Wikipedia)


le bonheur est au milieu des champs
search image
Image by 1D110
4.1
plus filtre cokin G.N.D 120


Taormina-Sicilia-Italy - Creative Commons by gnuckx
search image
Image by gnuckx
To see more www.flickr.com/photos/gnuckx


Taormina
Taormina (Sicilian: Taurmina, Greek: Ταυρομένιον - Tauromenion, Latin Tauromenium) is a comune and small town on the east coast of the island of Sicily, Italy, in the Province of Messina, about midway between Messina and Catania. Taormina has been a very popular tourist destination since the 19th century. It has popular beaches (accessible via an aerial tramway) on the Ionian sea, which is remarkably warm and has a high salt content. Taormina can be reached via highways (autostrade) from Messina from the north and Catania from the south.

Contemporary age
In the late 19th century Taormina gained further prominence as the place where Wilhelm von Gloeden worked most of his life as a photographer of predominantly male nudes. Also credited for making Taormina popular was Otto Geleng, best known in his hometown of Berlin for his fine paintings, which he composed and painted in Italy but exhibited in Germany. What distinguishes Geleng, however, is his choice to depict the more southern regions where he captured the spectacular views and light of Sicily. He often painted the area's Greek colonial ruins, including Taormina. Taormina's first important tourist was Johann Wolfgang Goethe who dedicated exalting pages to the city in his book entitled "Journey to Italy," but perhaps it was Geleng’s views that made its beauty talked about throughout Europe and turned the site into a famous tourist center. The artist arrived in Sicily at the age of 20 in search of new subjects for his paintings. On his way through Taormina he was so enamoured by the landscape that he decided to stop for part of the winter. Geleng began to paint everything that Taormina offered: ruins, sea, mountains, none of which were familiar to the rest of Europe. When his paintings were later exhibited in Berlin and Paris, many critics accused Geleng of having an ‘unbridled imagination’. At that, Geleng challenged them all to go to Taormina with him, promising that he would pay everyone's expenses if he were not telling the truth.

During the early 20th century the town became a colony of expatriate artists, writers, and intellectuals. D. H. Lawrence stayed here at the Fontana Vecchia from 1920 to 1922, and wrote a number of his poems, novels, short stories, and essays, and a travel book, Sea and Sardinia. Charles Webster Leadbeater, the theosophical author, found out that Taormina had the right magnetics fields for Jiddu Krishnamurti to develop his talents, so the young Krishnamurti dwelt here from time to time. Halldór Laxness, the Icelandic author, worked here on the first modern Icelandic novel, Vefarinn mikli frá Kasmír.

By this time Taormina had become "a polite synonym for Sodom" as Harold Acton described it. Later, however, after the Second World War Acton was visiting Taormina with Evelyn Waugh and, coming upon a board advertising “Ye Olde English Teas” he sighed and commented that Taormina 'was now quite as boring as Bournemouth'.

Archaeology
The present town of Taormina occupies the ancient site, on a lofty hill which forms the last projecting point of the mountain ridge that extends along the coast from Cape Pelorus to this point. The site of the old town is about 300 m above the sea, while a very steep and almost isolated rock, crowned by a Saracen castle, rises about 150 m higher: this is undoubtedly the site of the ancient Arx or citadel, the inaccessible position of which is repeatedly alluded to by ancient writers. Portions of the ancient walls may be traced at intervals all round the brow of the hill, the whole of the summit of which was evidently occupied by the ancient city. Numerous fragments of ancient buildings are scattered over its whole surface, including extensive reservoirs of water, sepulchres, tesselated pavements, etc., and the remains of a spacious edifice, commonly called a Naumachia, but the real destination of which it is difficult to determine.
The Teatro Greco ("Greek theatre").

But by far the most remarkable monument remaining at Taormina is the ancient theatre (the teatro greco, or "Greek theatre"), which is one of the most celebrated ruins in Sicily, on account both of its remarkable preservation and of the surpassing beauty of its situation. It is built for the most part of brick, and is therefore probably of Roman date, though the plan and arrangement are in accordance with those of Greek, rather than Roman, theatres; whence it is supposed that the present structure was rebuilt upon the foundations of an older theatre of the Greek period. With a diameter of 109 metres (after an expansion in the 2nd century), this theatre is the second largest of its kind in Sicily (after that of Syracuse); it is frequently used for operatic and theatrical performances and for concerts. The greater part of the original seats have disappeared, but the wall which surrounded the whole cavea is preserved, and the proscenium with the back wall of the scena and its appendages, of which only traces remain in most ancient theatres, are here preserved in singular integrity, and contribute much to the picturesque effect, as well as to the interest, of the ruin. From the fragments of architectural decorations still extant we learn that it was of the Corinthian order, and richly ornamented. Some portions of a temple are also visible, converted into the church of San Pancrazio, but the edifice is of small size.


taormina rainbow messina bougainvillea basil basilico hotel san domenico giardini naxos etna volcano vulcano island isola sicilia sicily italia italy sea sun landscape free europe wallpaper michael micky castielli resolution vacation holiday travel flight creativecommons creative commons zero CC0 cc0 CC cc panoramio flickr googleearth maps geotagged gnu gimp wikimedia

Cool Photo Galleries images

Some cool photo galleries images:




OneWorld Art Show & Fundraiser for Haiti- SafeWater Nexus-MAB Ventures-Erin K Productions-ArtistRun-Sutton Realty-RonSombilonGallery (494)
photo galleries
Image by SOMBILON ART, MEDIA and PHOTOGRAPHY
One World Art Show & Haiti Fundraiser proceeds benefiting Safe Water Nexus - Mobilize - Distribute - Sustain

Presented by MAB Ventures Inc. & Erin K Productions

Photos by Ron Sombilon Gallery

www.SafeWaterNexus.org
www.MonikaBlichar.com
www.ErinKProductions.com

Promotions by ArtistRun
Photography Sponsors - Valerie Tran & Jennie Nguyen of West Coast Sutton Realty

Vtran@Sutton.com
Jennie@sutton.com

www.ArtistRun.org
www.RonSombilonGallery.com

Passing Time

Check out these photo images images:


Passing Time
photo images
Image by K.G.Photos
Have not had time to go out and take photos. So sad. I did how ever get some studio lights in the other day. There fun to mess with. I've been having a ton of problems with my website so for right now its just pretty plain.

(-2,0,+2) Hand Held

Photomatix

Topaz Adjust, Detail, DeNoise

Photoshop Cs3

My Website
Website This site is under construction
Tumblr
Twitter
FaceBook

45 Stunning HDR Images for Architecture Around the World
A photo of mine was featured here. Click To See



In wait for the next (Explored on Front Page)
photo images
Image by Insight Imaging: John A Ryan Photography
This is very close to the original shot. I had never shot with my 50mm prime at night before, but this night I gave it a shot with some decent results.

If you get a chance please check out both Bob and Val's Images, as they were the ones who so graciously took a stranger from the Toronto area out for the night.
www.flickr.com/photos/bob_west/

www.flickr.com/photos/_val_w/

Cool Picture images

Some cool picture images:



take my picture . L1064342
picture
Image by Susan NYC
The boys were yelling, "Take my picture!" The girls were saying, "No, no!". She wasn't all that sincere about hiding her face, though.


Kodak Picture Spot: Big Thunder Mountain Railroad
picture
Image by Scott Smith (SRisonS)
I stood in this spot just long enough for some people to ask me to take their picture. And they had their Photopass card ready. ;)

Big Thunder Mountain Railroad
Frontierland
Magic KIngdom
Walt Disney World, FL

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Zenfolio (Order My Work) | 500px | Pinterest | Disney's Human Element Blog | Wizarding World Photo Tour

Cool Image Websites images

A few nice image websites images I found:




Maison Dr Pepito - The living room
image websites
Image by bestarns [www.spiritofdecay.com]
Urbex Session : Maison Dr Pepito (BE) , 06.2013
Follow me on facebook now www.facebook.com/pages/Bestarns-Pics/218906584873421
Thanks ;)
My website : www.spiritofdecay.com

Wedding, Charlottenburg, Schöneberg

Some cool wedding photo images:


Wedding, Charlottenburg, Schöneberg
wedding photo
Image by Skley
Wedding ist beste wo gibt! ;)

Camera: Canon EOS 500N + EF 50mm
Film: Adox CMS 20
Developer: Adotech

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Visit me @ Facebook



www.facebook.com/Skley.Photography


wedding at herstmonceux castle
wedding photo
Image by http://heatherbuckley.co.uk
wedding at herstmonceux castle
heather buckley

Follow me on Twitter

I have a Facebook Photography page where I upload lots of images and chat with peeps. Please join www.facebook.com/heatherbuckleyphotography


Wedding Table at Manchebo Beach #aruba...
wedding photo
Image by japp1967
Wedding Table at Manchebo Beach #aruba #beach #caribbean #sun #nature #iphone #instaiphone #wedding

9 Likes on Instagram

Nice Online Photos photos

Check out these online photos images:




online photos
Image by UrvishJ
© Urvish Joshi Photography 2005-'11

Photography and Post-Production: Urvish Joshi
Twitter: twitter.com/#!/Cacofuny

The image is copyright protected and any unauthorized use is strictly prohibited. Contact - doc.urvish@gmail.com if interested in the image.

Nice Image Editor Online photos

Some cool image editor online images:


EST Sidmouth Co Op donation Oct 2011. Photo by EST
image editor online
Image by Donkey Sanctuary Press Images
Press Release: Donkey riding centre presented with £2,000 cheque
The Elisabeth Svendsen Trust for Children and Donkeys
20th October 2011

A donkey riding therapy centre in Sidmouth was thrilled to be presented today with a cheque for £2,000 from The Co-operative Membership award.

The award was presented to The Elisabeth Svendsen Trust (EST) in Sidmouth to develop a soft play area at the centre for children with special needs and disabilities.

EST Sidmouth was selected as winners of The Co-operative’s Big Community Vote after being shortlisted for an online poll which invited members to vote for their favourite project.

The cheque was presented by John Wood, area committee member for Co-operative in the South and West region who said: “The centre is excellent and I am very impressed with the work that is done at EST. This project to build a soft play area will be a huge asset for the hundreds of local children with special needs who visit the centre.”
Louise Blair from EST said: “We are thrilled to receive this cheque from The Co-operative, it will help us to create a fantastic soft play area for our children to play in while they are waiting for their riding therapy sessions.”
EST Sidmouth has been providing donkey riding therapy sessions to children throughout Devon since 1978. Around 180 local children with special needs and disabilities visit the centre each week for therapeutic riding sessions. The charity also provides outreach visits to residents of nursing homes, hospices and care homes.

ENDS

NOTES TO EDITOR
For an interview, further information or images, please contact The Elisabeth Svendsen Trust for Children and Donkeys press office on 01395 573142/573014 or mobile 07970 927778

About The Elisabeth Svendsen Trust for Children and Donkeys
The Elisabeth Svendsen Trust for Children and Donkeys (EST) provides donkey-riding therapy to children with special needs and disabilities and offers therapeutic visits for elderly people in the local community.

EST Centres are based in Belfast, Birmingham, Ivybridge, Leeds, Manchester and Sidmouth.

The charity was founded by the late Dr Elisabeth Svendsen M.B.E. in 1975 (formerly The Slade Centre) and is connected to The Donkey Sanctuary.

The charity relies entirely on donations and its Adopt-a-Donkey scheme to provide free and unique donkey therapy to hundreds of children and elderly people in the community every week. For further information telephone: 01395 573133, view www.elisabethsvendsentrust.org.uk or visit your nearest centre.


Untangle your knitting muddles with The Donkey Sanctuary
image editor online
Image by Donkey Sanctuary Press Images
Knitting and crochet may not seem like the most traditional of summer activities - although certain crowd members at Wimbledon may disagree – but with last month being reportedly the wettest June in the UK since 1910, there is surely no better excuse to stay in the dry and get hooked on some creative projects for The Donkey Sanctuary.

Over recent years, many of the charity’s supporters have picked up their needles to create wonderful, donkey-themed, knitted and crochet projects to raise money to help donkeys worldwide. The resulting woolly donkeys, keyrings, phone socks and tissue holders have been flying off the shelves in the charity’s Visitors’ Centre in Sidmouth, Devon, and online at www.donkeyworld.org.uk.

The free patterns for these fun and quirky projects are great to get cracking with if you already know your ‘garter stitch’ from your ‘stocking stitch’, but what if your ‘slip one, knit one, pass slip stitch over’ leaves you with your needles in a twist and your knitting in a tangle on the floor? The Donkey Sanctuary has the answer.

The charity is hosting ‘Knit and Natter’ sessions at its Sidmouth headquarters on 18th July and 19th September between 1 - 2:30pm for knitting novices and enthusiasts alike. These gatherings are the perfect opportunity for beginners to pick up the basics and more advanced knitters to tackle new and more complicated projects, all whilst having a good natter and finding out about the charity’s global work. No charge is made for these sessions, although donations are gratefully received to help fund the charity’s work to help donkeys in need the world over.

For further event details, activity prices and booking, please call 01395 573156 or visit www.thedonkeysanctuary.org.uk/visit. All proceeds from events help fund the worldwide work of The Donkey Sanctuary.

For more information about The Donkey Sanctuary’s donkey-themed knitting and crochet patterns, please contact the charity’s Volunteer Fundraising team at VFR@thedonkeysanctuary.org.uk.

ENDS

Notes to Editor
For an interview, further information or images, please contact The Donkey Sanctuary press office on 01395 573142/573124 or mobile 07970 927778.

About The Donkey Sanctuary
International animal welfare charity The Donkey Sanctuary was founded by the late Dr Elisabeth Svendsen M.B.E. in 1969. It supports projects to alleviate the suffering of donkeys in 28 countries worldwide, including sanctuaries across Europe, where more than 15,000 donkeys and mules have been cared for, and major projects in Egypt, Ethiopia, India, Kenya and Mexico, where donkey welfare is improved through community education and veterinary work. It also provides donkey-assisted therapy for children with additional needs and therapeutic visits for elderly people in the local community from centres in Belfast, Birmingham, Ivybridge, Leeds, Manchester and Sidmouth.
For further information telephone: 01395 578222, view www.thedonkeysanctuary.org.uk or visit the charity’s headquarters near Sidmouth in Devon (open 365 days/free admission).


PENNY’S ITALIAN TREK TO HELP DONKEY CHARITY
image editor online
Image by Donkey Sanctuary Press Images
PRESS RELEASE from The Donkey Sanctuary
07 February 2011

Penny Williams, a small business consultancy partner, from Oake near Taunton, needs local support to raise funds for her up and coming sponsored walking challenge in northern Italy, in aid of abandoned, cruelly treated and neglected donkeys.

Penny is taking part in the Cinque Terre Challenge from 10th to 17th April in aid of international animal welfare charity The Donkey Sanctuary.

The expedition will lead Penny and 17 other walkers throughout Liguria National Park and finishes with a visit to the charity’s Italian counterpart, Il Rifugio degli Asinelli, where hundreds of rescued donkeys are cared for, including Rocco rescued just before Christmas from terrible conditions.

Penny who currently cares for donkeys Jenny and Honey through The Donkey Sanctuary’s fostering scheme, wishes to extend her support for the charity by taking up this challenge. She needs local support to help reach the £1,850 sponsorship target, which will be used to fund The Donkey Sanctuary’s rescue centres throughout Europe.

She says: “I am very fortunate to have raised over £300 so far, thanks to the support of my family and friends. As I still have a great deal more money to raise for the sponsored challenge, any help would be greatly appreciated.”

Penny can be contacted on 01823 462898 and has a dedicated webpage on the online charity fundraising platform JustGiving, where donations can be made securely with confidence at www.justgiving.com/Penny-Williams1

To find out more about The Donkey Sanctuary’s rescue centres and holding bases throughout Europe visit www.thedonkeysanctuary.org.uk.

ENDS

NOTES TO EDITOR
For an interview, further information or images, please contact The Donkey Sanctuary press office on 01395 573097/573014 or mobile 07970 927778

About The Donkey Sanctuary
The Donkey Sanctuary aims to protect donkeys and mules and promote their welfare worldwide.

The charity was founded by Dr Elisabeth Svendsen M.B.E. in 1969 and has since provided a sanctuary for life to more than 14,500 donkeys and mules in the UK, Ireland and Mainland Europe.

It alleviates the suffering of working donkeys in developing countries and has major projects in Egypt, Ethiopia, India, Kenya and Mexico where donkey welfare is improved through education and veterinary work.

The charity relies entirely on donations to continue its vital work in 29 countries worldwide. For further information telephone: 01395 578222, view www.thedonkeysanctuary.org.uk or visit the charity’s headquarters near Sidmouth in Devon (open 365 days/free admission).

Cool Free Image images

Some cool free image images:




State Flowers page 1052-1053
free image
Image by perpetualplum
This color illustration is from the public domain book "The Home and School Reference Work" Volume III by The Home and School Education Society, H. M. Dixon, President and Managing Editor. The book was published in 1917 by The Home and School Education Society.

This image of the U.S state flowers appears between pages 1052 and 1053

Nice Love Image photos

Check out these love image images:



Love in her eyes
love image
Image by 'Ajnagraphy'

Nice Image Url photos

Check out these image url images:


[Guernsey, coast at Gouffre, Channel Islands] (LOC)
image url
Image by The Library of Congress
[Guernsey, coast at Gouffre, Channel Islands]

[between ca. 1890 and ca. 1900].

1 photomechanical print : photochrom, color.

Notes:
Title from the Detroit Publishing Co., Catalogue J--foreign section, Detroit, Mich. : Detroit Publishing Company, 1905.
Print no. "10429".
Forms part of: Views of the British Isles in the Photochrom print collection.

Format: Photochrom prints--Color--1890-1900.

Rights Info: No known restrictions on reproduction.

Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA

Part Of: Views of the British Isles (DLC) 2002696059

Higher resolution image is available (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ppmsc.08105

Call Number: LOT 13415, no. 127 [item]


[St. John's College, chapel from the river, Cambridge, England] (LOC)
image url
Image by The Library of Congress
[St. John's College, chapel from the river, Cambridge, England]

[between ca. 1890 and ca. 1900].

1 photomechanical print : photochrom, color.

Notes:
Title from the Detroit Publishing Co., Catalogue J--foreign section, Detroit, Mich. : Detroit Publishing Company, 1905.
Print no. "10075".
Forms part of: Views of England in the Photochrom print collection.

Format: Photochrom prints--Color--1890-1900.

Rights Info: No known restrictions on reproduction.

Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA

Part Of: Views of England (DLC) 2002696059

Higher resolution image is available (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ppmsc.08088

Call Number: LOT 13415, no. 110 [item]

Polluted River Stream

Check out these free photo downloads images:


Polluted River Stream
free photo downloads
Image by shaire productions
By Sherrie Thai of ShaireProductions. Feel free to download and use these as a background for commercial or noncommercial projects. If you decide to use them, please let me know how it goes by sending a link or an image. Enjoy!


Stone Texture
free photo downloads
Image by shaire productions
By Sherrie Thai of ShaireProductions. Feel free to download and use these as a background for commercial or noncommercial projects. If you decide to use them, please let me know how it goes by sending a link or an image. Enjoy!


Leaves Growing on a Wall
free photo downloads
Image by shaire productions
By Sherrie Thai of ShaireProductions.com

Feel free to download and use this as a background for commercial or noncommercial projects. If you decide to use it, please let me know how it goes by sending a link or an image. Enjoy!

Nice Photo Creator photos

A few nice photo creator images I found:


Hamill Street Area: Ancient lights eastern boundary yard No. 249A
photo creator
Image by Public Record Office of Northern Ireland
Creator: Alexander R. Hogg for Belfast Corporation

Date: 15th August 1912

Description: Hamill Street Area: Ancient lights eastern boundary yard No. 249A on plan. Streets in photo: Hamill Street.

PRONI Ref: LA/7/8/HF/3/71

Copying and copyright:
Please see www.proni.gov.uk/index/research_and_records_held/copying_...

For Copy Orders, contact:
Email: proni@dcalni.gov.uk

For fees and charges see: www.proni.gov.uk/index/about_proni/are_there_any_fees_and...

Nice Digital Picture Frame photos

Check out these digital picture frame images:


Tree in the Cold
digital picture frame
Image by Rusty Russ
Do trees get cold? Maybe not, but I was taking this picture.


IMG_2078 tablets and frames
digital picture frame
Image by Jeremy Toeman
So THAT's who is buying digital picture frames!

Zhang Yin, Nine Dragons

A few nice dragon image images I found:


Zhang Yin, Nine Dragons
dragon image
Image by Forest2Market
Image. Women Who Impacted Forestry-Related Industries. www.forest2market.com/blog/TAKE-THE-QUIZ-Women-Who-Impact...


Dragon Bench outside Hall Green Library
dragon image
Image by ell brown
A bench outside Hall Green Library that resembles a Dragon.

It might have been made by Hall Green School.

It may also have something to do with the Big Lottery Fund's Awards for All scheme.

I live nearby here, so kept thinking I need to get images of this interesting looking bench.


Chasing Dragons
dragon image
Image by neil_mach
2012 All images strictly © Neil_Mach

Nice Photo Art photos

A few nice photo art images I found:


Ballet, Magisterial Gaze. In Pastel
photo art
Image by Pat McDonald
Photo Art by Patrick McDonald

www.innographx.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=5993

Created from photo: www.pbase.com/rcalmes/image/71095204
Original photo copyright Richard Calmes

www.pbase.com/rcalmes/image/55583435


Smoke - Mattys pure imagination
photo art
Image by MattysFlicks
Smoke - Mattys pure imagination

This is my third attempt at smoke art. With this image my goal was to illustrate a photo realistic portrait of Willy Wonka (Gene Wilder) using only colored smoke photographs. All of the smoke photos were manipulated and colored in photoshop cs5. The final psd was approximately 600mb and contained 225 layers. The project took approximately 80 hours to complete.

"Where is fancy bred? In the heart or in the head? Shall we roll on?"
-- Willy Wonka


SHN Urban Wear 2010
photo art
Image by mauriciosantana.com.br
SHN Urban Wear 2010
--
Photography: Mauricio Santana, Victor Nomoto
Art+Photo Direction: Daniel Bonavita
Make-up: Juliana Beraldo
Photo Manipulation: Daniel Bonavita
Model: Bruno Consani
--

Photo shoot to the brand new Urban Wear collection of SHN brand.
www.shn.art.br

Closemotion is a studio/collective of Mauricio Santana, Victor Nomoto and Daniel Bonavita
www.closemotion.com.br

Rock On

Photographers expand horizons in 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest 110311

A few nice online photo edit images I found:


Photographers expand horizons in 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest 110311
online photo edit
Image by familymwr
PHOTO CAPTION: Awarded 2nd Place Reflections in Soap by LTC MARK BONICA - Division 1 Active Duty Military

www.Facebook.com/FamilyMWR

Photographers expand horizons in 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest 110311

By Tim Hipps
FMWRC Public Affairs

ALEXANDRIA, Va. – Brenda Walker strolled upon “one of those right places at the right time” alongside East Fork Indian Creek River when she photographed “Morning Serenity” on Fort Campbell, Ky…

Retired Col. Richard Pugh shot three photographs of “Point Lobos,” just south of Monterey, Calif., and combined them into one image by working 15 minutes with Photoshop…

Staff Sgt. Pablo Piedra won a footrace with his wife to the bottom of a stairwell at Heidelberg Castle in Germany just before he looked up and photographed “9”…

…all three were winners in the 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest sponsored by the Army Family and Morale, Welfare and Recreation Command.

There were 3,691 entries from around the world – 1,348 in Division I for active duty military personnel and 2,343 in Division II for other eligible MWR patrons. After Army garrisons selected their best entries, 664 Division I and 1,031 Division II photographs were forwarded for Department of the Army judging.

“There were many really excellent photos, which made the judges’ decisions a difficult task,” said Linda Ezernieks, who monitors the annual contest at Army MWR Headquarters in Alexandria. “Originality, creativity and technical quality were the main criteria in making final selections.”

Winners in each category – animals, digital darkroom, design elements, military life, monochrome, nature & landscapes, people, and still life – were posted on a website where Army Knowledge Online account-holders voted for their favorite photo in each division.

Walker’s “Morning Serenity” took first place in the nature and landscapes category and was voted the most popular photograph in Division II.

The subject of the photo is a fisherman wading and casting in the middle of East Fork Indian Creek River while the sun shines through the lush, green trees and casts a rainbow-like appearance off the steam hovering above the stream.

“It’s back on Fort Campbell,” Walker said. “I take my dog running back there early morning. It was really hot and the steam was rising and the rays were going through the trees. It was absolutely beautiful back there.

“I take my camera everywhere I go now.”

Walker left her business card on the windshield of a truck parked nearby and later learned the fisherman was Sgt. Randy Shorter of Fort Campbell.

About five years ago, Walker took some of her photographs to the MWR Custom Framing Shop at Fort Campbell, where she found out about the Army Photography Contest. She has produced prize-winning photos for the past three contests.

“It’s a wonderful opportunity to get exposure, plus cash prizes,” said Walker, 48, a military family member. “I enjoy looking at everybody else’s work. It inspires me and motivates me to get out and get more interesting, different shots.”

What does Walker enjoy most about photography?

“Just being able to capture what I see through my eyes, my heart and my head,” she said. “A lot of it comes out through your emotion. It’s another form of art.”

Pugh, of Clarksville, Tenn., took first place in the Division II digital darkroom category with “The Owl,” second in design elements with “Blue Mosque,” and third in nature and landscapes with “Point Lobos.”

Pugh shot the high-tech looking photo of “The Owl” at Land Between The Lakes, a national recreation area located south of Paducah, Ky., and embellished it in Photoshop, as he did with “Blue Mosque,” a shot of the roof of a mosque in Istanbul, Turkey.

“I like this contest,” said Pugh, 65, who photographed winning entries in each of the past three years after serving 30 years in the Army. “It gives people a chance to show off something they did, which is great.”

Piedro, 31, an Army recruiter in Douglasville, Ga., is a former combat photographer. His “9” earned first-place honors in the Division I design elements category. He took third place in digital darkroom with a self-portrait called “Beast within Me” that would make a dandy Halloween poster.

“I got the idea when I was in the gym working out with my partner and a couple people came up to us and said: ‘You guys are lifting like beasts.’ The idea just popped into my head, so I got home, took the shot, and just started editing,” Piedro said. “That’s where that photo came from.”

The subject of the photo looks like a cross between a werewolf, a vampire and an Avatar, complete with fangs, dagger-like fingernails and alien ears – seemingly howling at the moon that looms behind a naked tree.

“The fangs, the ears, the eyes and the hands are all Photoshopped,” Piedro said. “And the stomach that’s concaved a little bit, that was done in Photoshop. For the background, I took certain parts of images from other photos, adjusted them, and made everything into one image.”

So what’s real?

“The body, and the face,” Piedro replied. “That’s it.

“If you look closely, the eyes are actually black and the pupils are red, so that’s been Photoshopped.”

Piedro, however, does not think of himself as a Photoshop expert.

“I actually don’t do too much Photoshop,” he said. “I try to keep my images as pure as possible. But every now and then, I get my creative side and I do a little bit of Photoshop – just trial and error, playing around.”

Piedro won two categories and received an honorable mention in the 2007 Army Photography Contest but missed the competition the past two years.

“I think it’s a great, great program,” he said. “It’s a great way to get the creative process of people that do see the world and travel the world by being in the military, and not even just as Soldiers, but supporting staff, civilians, wives.

“It’s a great way to get recognition for something that we love to do.”

As is often the case with photography, Piedro did not know exactly what he shot that day in the stairwell to the gardens at Heidelberg Castle – until he downloaded the photo.

“When I got home and I looked at, I was like: ‘That’s 9, yeah.’ And that’s where the title came from.”

Piedro cherishes photography’s uncanny ability of giving him the opportunity of “freezing a moment in time that only I can see and sharing that with others.”

Several other military photographers earned multiple places in the 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest.

Holly Swegle of Fort Hood, Texas, took first place in Division II monochrome for “Dress Shop,” second in animals for “Painted Birds” and third in people for “American Woman.”

Lt. Col. Mark Bonica of Fort Sam Houston, Texas, took second in Division I still life with “Reflections in Soap,” third in monochrome with “… and We All Fall Down” and received an honorable mention in military life with “Free Gift When You Join Today.”

Staff Sgt. Brandon Quarterman of Fort Bliss, Texas, won the Division I popular vote contest for “Reaching Perfection,” which topped the still life category.


SIDEBAR:

Here are the results of the top three finishers in each category with photographer’s rank, name, installation and photo title:

2010 Army Digital Photo Contest
Division I

Animals – 1. Pfc. Amber Smith, Yongsan, Korea, What’s for Dinner; 2. Staff Sgt. Wilberto Sierra, Fort Bliss, Texas, Dragonfly; 3. Staff Sgt. Robert Curtis, Vicenza, Italy, Tough Love.

Digital darkroom – 1. Spc. Thomas Mort, Fort Knox, Ky., Over the Top; 2. Sgt. Shawn Cassatt, Yongsan, Korea, On the Range; 3. Staff Sgt. Pablo Piedra, Fort McPherson, Ga., Beast within Me.

Design elements – 1. Staff Sgt. Pablo Piedra, Fort McPherson, Ga., 9; 2. 2nd Lt. Thomas Malejko, Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., Arch Elements; 3. Lt. Col. David Tygart, Stuttgart, Germany, Sunset Under Glass.

Mililtary life – 1. Sgt. Darlene Martinez, Fort Drum, N.Y., The Sacrifices We Make; 2. Staff Sgt. Joey Suggs, Fort Meade, Md., Dental Care; 3. Sgt. Shawn Cassatt, Yongsan, Korea, Remember Me.

Monochrome – 1. Sgt. 1st Class Lance Widner, Mannheim, Germany, Great Grandmother; 2. Col. John Powers, Camp Zama, Japan, Calm Morning at Mount Fuji; 3. Lt. Col. Mark Bonica, Fort Sam Houston, Texas, … and We All Fall Down.

Nature & landscapes – 1. 1st Lt. Christopher Snell, (unknown location), Sunset Swim; 2. Spc. Juan-Pablo Marin, Fort Benning, Ga., Moon Set; 3. Spc. Jenny Lu, Hohenfels, Germany, Hong Kong at Night.

People – 1. Capt. David Callender, (unknown location), Anna’s Dream; 2. Lt. Col. David Tygart, Stuttgart, Germany, Eval Fairy; 3. Col. Joseph Mancy, Stuttgart, Germany, Eyes that Speak.

Still life – 1. Staff Sgt. Brandon Quarterman, Fort Bliss, Texas, Reaching Perfection; 2. Lt. Col. Mark Bonica, Fort Sam Houston, Texas, Reflections in Soap; 3. Warrant Officer Larry Olson, Wiesbaden, Germany, Sunflower in Contrast.

Division II

Animals – 1. Susan Doran, Rock Island Arsenal, Ill., Defiance; 2. Holley Swegle, Fort Hood, Texas, Painted Birds; 3. Eric Armstrong, Camp Zama, Japan, Man O’ War.

Digital darkroom – 1. Col. Richard Pugh, Fort Campbell, Ky., The Owl; 2. Stephen Cullum, Stuttgart, Germany, Volksfest FDR; 3. Gary Cashman, Yongsan, Korea, BMX Composite.

Design elements – 1. Robert LaPolice, Selfridge, Mich., Just Riveting; 2. Col. Richard Pugh, Fort Campbell, Ky., Blue Mosque; 3. James Holbrook, Stuttgart, Germany, What do I call this.

Military life – 1. Nell Williams, Fort Stewart, Ga., My Dad, My Hero; 2. Rebecca Colburn, Fort Carson, Colo., The Test Drive; 3. Ann Marie Detavernier, Baumholder, Germany, The Love Letter.

Monochrome – 1. Holly Swegle, Fort Hood, Texas, Dress Shop; 2. Barbara Underwood, Fort Lee, Va., Light and Shadows; 3. Jeffrey Kline, Fort Sam Houston, Texas, Texas Snow.

Nature & landscapes – 1. Brenda Walker, Fort Campbell, Ky., Morning Serenity; 2. Mylan Dawson, Kaiserslautern, Germany, Ash Clouds over Holland; 3. Col. Richard Pugh, Fort Campbell, Ky., Point Lobos.

People – 1. Sherry Keene Hobbs, Garmisch, Germany, Belly Dancer; 2. Eugenia Whittenburg, Fort Shafter, Hawaii, Happy Beach Feet; 3. Holly Swegle, Fort Hood, Texas, American Woman.

Still life – 1. Mylan Dawson, Kaiserslautern, Germany, Green Tomato; 2. Michael Slone, Fort Meade, Md., Morning Coffee; 3. Frank Leon, Fort Knox, Ky., The faucet chronicles.

Connect with us:
www.Facebook.com/FamilyMWR
www.Twitter.com/FamilyMWR
www.YouTube.com/FamilyMWR

ks 110321


Photographers expand horizons in 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest 110311
online photo edit
Image by familymwr
PHOTO CAPTION: Awarded 2nd Place Light and Shadows by RETIRE BARBARA UNDERWOOD - Division 2 Other Eligible Patron

www.Facebook.com/FamilyMWR

Photographers expand horizons in 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest 110311

By Tim Hipps
FMWRC Public Affairs

ALEXANDRIA, Va. – Brenda Walker strolled upon “one of those right places at the right time” alongside East Fork Indian Creek River when she photographed “Morning Serenity” on Fort Campbell, Ky…

Retired Col. Richard Pugh shot three photographs of “Point Lobos,” just south of Monterey, Calif., and combined them into one image by working 15 minutes with Photoshop…

Staff Sgt. Pablo Piedra won a footrace with his wife to the bottom of a stairwell at Heidelberg Castle in Germany just before he looked up and photographed “9”…

…all three were winners in the 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest sponsored by the Army Family and Morale, Welfare and Recreation Command.

There were 3,691 entries from around the world – 1,348 in Division I for active duty military personnel and 2,343 in Division II for other eligible MWR patrons. After Army garrisons selected their best entries, 664 Division I and 1,031 Division II photographs were forwarded for Department of the Army judging.

“There were many really excellent photos, which made the judges’ decisions a difficult task,” said Linda Ezernieks, who monitors the annual contest at Army MWR Headquarters in Alexandria. “Originality, creativity and technical quality were the main criteria in making final selections.”

Winners in each category – animals, digital darkroom, design elements, military life, monochrome, nature & landscapes, people, and still life – were posted on a website where Army Knowledge Online account-holders voted for their favorite photo in each division.

Walker’s “Morning Serenity” took first place in the nature and landscapes category and was voted the most popular photograph in Division II.

The subject of the photo is a fisherman wading and casting in the middle of East Fork Indian Creek River while the sun shines through the lush, green trees and casts a rainbow-like appearance off the steam hovering above the stream.

“It’s back on Fort Campbell,” Walker said. “I take my dog running back there early morning. It was really hot and the steam was rising and the rays were going through the trees. It was absolutely beautiful back there.

“I take my camera everywhere I go now.”

Walker left her business card on the windshield of a truck parked nearby and later learned the fisherman was Sgt. Randy Shorter of Fort Campbell.

About five years ago, Walker took some of her photographs to the MWR Custom Framing Shop at Fort Campbell, where she found out about the Army Photography Contest. She has produced prize-winning photos for the past three contests.

“It’s a wonderful opportunity to get exposure, plus cash prizes,” said Walker, 48, a military family member. “I enjoy looking at everybody else’s work. It inspires me and motivates me to get out and get more interesting, different shots.”

What does Walker enjoy most about photography?

“Just being able to capture what I see through my eyes, my heart and my head,” she said. “A lot of it comes out through your emotion. It’s another form of art.”

Pugh, of Clarksville, Tenn., took first place in the Division II digital darkroom category with “The Owl,” second in design elements with “Blue Mosque,” and third in nature and landscapes with “Point Lobos.”

Pugh shot the high-tech looking photo of “The Owl” at Land Between The Lakes, a national recreation area located south of Paducah, Ky., and embellished it in Photoshop, as he did with “Blue Mosque,” a shot of the roof of a mosque in Istanbul, Turkey.

“I like this contest,” said Pugh, 65, who photographed winning entries in each of the past three years after serving 30 years in the Army. “It gives people a chance to show off something they did, which is great.”

Piedro, 31, an Army recruiter in Douglasville, Ga., is a former combat photographer. His “9” earned first-place honors in the Division I design elements category. He took third place in digital darkroom with a self-portrait called “Beast within Me” that would make a dandy Halloween poster.

“I got the idea when I was in the gym working out with my partner and a couple people came up to us and said: ‘You guys are lifting like beasts.’ The idea just popped into my head, so I got home, took the shot, and just started editing,” Piedro said. “That’s where that photo came from.”

The subject of the photo looks like a cross between a werewolf, a vampire and an Avatar, complete with fangs, dagger-like fingernails and alien ears – seemingly howling at the moon that looms behind a naked tree.

“The fangs, the ears, the eyes and the hands are all Photoshopped,” Piedro said. “And the stomach that’s concaved a little bit, that was done in Photoshop. For the background, I took certain parts of images from other photos, adjusted them, and made everything into one image.”

So what’s real?

“The body, and the face,” Piedro replied. “That’s it.

“If you look closely, the eyes are actually black and the pupils are red, so that’s been Photoshopped.”

Piedro, however, does not think of himself as a Photoshop expert.

“I actually don’t do too much Photoshop,” he said. “I try to keep my images as pure as possible. But every now and then, I get my creative side and I do a little bit of Photoshop – just trial and error, playing around.”

Piedro won two categories and received an honorable mention in the 2007 Army Photography Contest but missed the competition the past two years.

“I think it’s a great, great program,” he said. “It’s a great way to get the creative process of people that do see the world and travel the world by being in the military, and not even just as Soldiers, but supporting staff, civilians, wives.

“It’s a great way to get recognition for something that we love to do.”

As is often the case with photography, Piedro did not know exactly what he shot that day in the stairwell to the gardens at Heidelberg Castle – until he downloaded the photo.

“When I got home and I looked at, I was like: ‘That’s 9, yeah.’ And that’s where the title came from.”

Piedro cherishes photography’s uncanny ability of giving him the opportunity of “freezing a moment in time that only I can see and sharing that with others.”

Several other military photographers earned multiple places in the 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest.

Holly Swegle of Fort Hood, Texas, took first place in Division II monochrome for “Dress Shop,” second in animals for “Painted Birds” and third in people for “American Woman.”

Lt. Col. Mark Bonica of Fort Sam Houston, Texas, took second in Division I still life with “Reflections in Soap,” third in monochrome with “… and We All Fall Down” and received an honorable mention in military life with “Free Gift When You Join Today.”

Staff Sgt. Brandon Quarterman of Fort Bliss, Texas, won the Division I popular vote contest for “Reaching Perfection,” which topped the still life category.

SIDEBAR:

Here are the results of the top three finishers in each category with photographer’s rank, name, installation and photo title:

2010 Army Digital Photo Contest
Division I

Animals – 1. Pfc. Amber Smith, Yongsan, Korea, What’s for Dinner; 2. Staff Sgt. Wilberto Sierra, Fort Bliss, Texas, Dragonfly; 3. Staff Sgt. Robert Curtis, Vicenza, Italy, Tough Love.

Digital darkroom – 1. Spc. Thomas Mort, Fort Knox, Ky., Over the Top; 2. Sgt. Shawn Cassatt, Yongsan, Korea, On the Range; 3. Staff Sgt. Pablo Piedra, Fort McPherson, Ga., Beast within Me.

Design elements – 1. Staff Sgt. Pablo Piedra, Fort McPherson, Ga., 9; 2. 2nd Lt. Thomas Malejko, Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., Arch Elements; 3. Lt. Col. David Tygart, Stuttgart, Germany, Sunset Under Glass.

Mililtary life – 1. Sgt. Darlene Martinez, Fort Drum, N.Y., The Sacrifices We Make; 2. Staff Sgt. Joey Suggs, Fort Meade, Md., Dental Care; 3. Sgt. Shawn Cassatt, Yongsan, Korea, Remember Me.

Monochrome – 1. Sgt. 1st Class Lance Widner, Mannheim, Germany, Great Grandmother; 2. Col. John Powers, Camp Zama, Japan, Calm Morning at Mount Fuji; 3. Lt. Col. Mark Bonica, Fort Sam Houston, Texas, … and We All Fall Down.

Nature & landscapes – 1. 1st Lt. Christopher Snell, (unknown location), Sunset Swim; 2. Spc. Juan-Pablo Marin, Fort Benning, Ga., Moon Set; 3. Spc. Jenny Lu, Hohenfels, Germany, Hong Kong at Night.

People – 1. Capt. David Callender, (unknown location), Anna’s Dream; 2. Lt. Col. David Tygart, Stuttgart, Germany, Eval Fairy; 3. Col. Joseph Mancy, Stuttgart, Germany, Eyes that Speak.

Still life – 1. Staff Sgt. Brandon Quarterman, Fort Bliss, Texas, Reaching Perfection; 2. Lt. Col. Mark Bonica, Fort Sam Houston, Texas, Reflections in Soap; 3. Warrant Officer Larry Olson, Wiesbaden, Germany, Sunflower in Contrast.

Division II

Animals – 1. Susan Doran, Rock Island Arsenal, Ill., Defiance; 2. Holley Swegle, Fort Hood, Texas, Painted Birds; 3. Eric Armstrong, Camp Zama, Japan, Man O’ War.

Digital darkroom – 1. Col. Richard Pugh, Fort Campbell, Ky., The Owl; 2. Stephen Cullum, Stuttgart, Germany, Volksfest FDR; 3. Gary Cashman, Yongsan, Korea, BMX Composite.

Design elements – 1. Robert LaPolice, Selfridge, Mich., Just Riveting; 2. Col. Richard Pugh, Fort Campbell, Ky., Blue Mosque; 3. James Holbrook, Stuttgart, Germany, What do I call this.

Military life – 1. Nell Williams, Fort Stewart, Ga., My Dad, My Hero; 2. Rebecca Colburn, Fort Carson, Colo., The Test Drive; 3. Ann Marie Detavernier, Baumholder, Germany, The Love Letter.

Monochrome – 1. Holly Swegle, Fort Hood, Texas, Dress Shop; 2. Barbara Underwood, Fort Lee, Va., Light and Shadows; 3. Jeffrey Kline, Fort Sam Houston, Texas, Texas Snow.

Nature & landscapes – 1. Brenda Walker, Fort Campbell, Ky., Morning Serenity; 2. Mylan Dawson, Kaiserslautern, Germany, Ash Clouds over Holland; 3. Col. Richard Pugh, Fort Campbell, Ky., Point Lobos.

People – 1. Sherry Keene Hobbs, Garmisch, Germany, Belly Dancer; 2. Eugenia Whittenburg, Fort Shafter, Hawaii, Happy Beach Feet; 3. Holly Swegle, Fort Hood, Texas, American Woman.

Still life – 1. Mylan Dawson, Kaiserslautern, Germany, Green Tomato; 2. Michael Slone, Fort Meade, Md., Morning Coffee; 3. Frank Leon, Fort Knox, Ky., The faucet chronicles.

Connect with us:
www.Facebook.com/FamilyMWR
www.Twitter.com/FamilyMWR
www.YouTube.com/FamilyMWR

ks 110321


Photographers expand horizons in 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest 110311
online photo edit
Image by familymwr
PHOTO CAPTION: Awarded 1st Place Over the Top by SPC THOMAS MORT - Division 1 Active Duty Military

www.Facebook.com/FamilyMWR

Photographers expand horizons in 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest 110311

By Tim Hipps
FMWRC Public Affairs

ALEXANDRIA, Va. – Brenda Walker strolled upon “one of those right places at the right time” alongside East Fork Indian Creek River when she photographed “Morning Serenity” on Fort Campbell, Ky…

Retired Col. Richard Pugh shot three photographs of “Point Lobos,” just south of Monterey, Calif., and combined them into one image by working 15 minutes with Photoshop…

Staff Sgt. Pablo Piedra won a footrace with his wife to the bottom of a stairwell at Heidelberg Castle in Germany just before he looked up and photographed “9”…

…all three were winners in the 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest sponsored by the Army Family and Morale, Welfare and Recreation Command.

There were 3,691 entries from around the world – 1,348 in Division I for active duty military personnel and 2,343 in Division II for other eligible MWR patrons. After Army garrisons selected their best entries, 664 Division I and 1,031 Division II photographs were forwarded for Department of the Army judging.

“There were many really excellent photos, which made the judges’ decisions a difficult task,” said Linda Ezernieks, who monitors the annual contest at Army MWR Headquarters in Alexandria. “Originality, creativity and technical quality were the main criteria in making final selections.”

Winners in each category – animals, digital darkroom, design elements, military life, monochrome, nature & landscapes, people, and still life – were posted on a website where Army Knowledge Online account-holders voted for their favorite photo in each division.

Walker’s “Morning Serenity” took first place in the nature and landscapes category and was voted the most popular photograph in Division II.

The subject of the photo is a fisherman wading and casting in the middle of East Fork Indian Creek River while the sun shines through the lush, green trees and casts a rainbow-like appearance off the steam hovering above the stream.

“It’s back on Fort Campbell,” Walker said. “I take my dog running back there early morning. It was really hot and the steam was rising and the rays were going through the trees. It was absolutely beautiful back there.

“I take my camera everywhere I go now.”

Walker left her business card on the windshield of a truck parked nearby and later learned the fisherman was Sgt. Randy Shorter of Fort Campbell.

About five years ago, Walker took some of her photographs to the MWR Custom Framing Shop at Fort Campbell, where she found out about the Army Photography Contest. She has produced prize-winning photos for the past three contests.

“It’s a wonderful opportunity to get exposure, plus cash prizes,” said Walker, 48, a military family member. “I enjoy looking at everybody else’s work. It inspires me and motivates me to get out and get more interesting, different shots.”

What does Walker enjoy most about photography?

“Just being able to capture what I see through my eyes, my heart and my head,” she said. “A lot of it comes out through your emotion. It’s another form of art.”

Pugh, of Clarksville, Tenn., took first place in the Division II digital darkroom category with “The Owl,” second in design elements with “Blue Mosque,” and third in nature and landscapes with “Point Lobos.”

Pugh shot the high-tech looking photo of “The Owl” at Land Between The Lakes, a national recreation area located south of Paducah, Ky., and embellished it in Photoshop, as he did with “Blue Mosque,” a shot of the roof of a mosque in Istanbul, Turkey.

“I like this contest,” said Pugh, 65, who photographed winning entries in each of the past three years after serving 30 years in the Army. “It gives people a chance to show off something they did, which is great.”

Piedro, 31, an Army recruiter in Douglasville, Ga., is a former combat photographer. His “9” earned first-place honors in the Division I design elements category. He took third place in digital darkroom with a self-portrait called “Beast within Me” that would make a dandy Halloween poster.

“I got the idea when I was in the gym working out with my partner and a couple people came up to us and said: ‘You guys are lifting like beasts.’ The idea just popped into my head, so I got home, took the shot, and just started editing,” Piedro said. “That’s where that photo came from.”

The subject of the photo looks like a cross between a werewolf, a vampire and an Avatar, complete with fangs, dagger-like fingernails and alien ears – seemingly howling at the moon that looms behind a naked tree.

“The fangs, the ears, the eyes and the hands are all Photoshopped,” Piedro said. “And the stomach that’s concaved a little bit, that was done in Photoshop. For the background, I took certain parts of images from other photos, adjusted them, and made everything into one image.”

So what’s real?

“The body, and the face,” Piedro replied. “That’s it.

“If you look closely, the eyes are actually black and the pupils are red, so that’s been Photoshopped.”

Piedro, however, does not think of himself as a Photoshop expert.

“I actually don’t do too much Photoshop,” he said. “I try to keep my images as pure as possible. But every now and then, I get my creative side and I do a little bit of Photoshop – just trial and error, playing around.”

Piedro won two categories and received an honorable mention in the 2007 Army Photography Contest but missed the competition the past two years.

“I think it’s a great, great program,” he said. “It’s a great way to get the creative process of people that do see the world and travel the world by being in the military, and not even just as Soldiers, but supporting staff, civilians, wives.

“It’s a great way to get recognition for something that we love to do.”

As is often the case with photography, Piedro did not know exactly what he shot that day in the stairwell to the gardens at Heidelberg Castle – until he downloaded the photo.

“When I got home and I looked at, I was like: ‘That’s 9, yeah.’ And that’s where the title came from.”

Piedro cherishes photography’s uncanny ability of giving him the opportunity of “freezing a moment in time that only I can see and sharing that with others.”

Several other military photographers earned multiple places in the 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest.

Holly Swegle of Fort Hood, Texas, took first place in Division II monochrome for “Dress Shop,” second in animals for “Painted Birds” and third in people for “American Woman.”

Lt. Col. Mark Bonica of Fort Sam Houston, Texas, took second in Division I still life with “Reflections in Soap,” third in monochrome with “… and We All Fall Down” and received an honorable mention in military life with “Free Gift When You Join Today.”

Staff Sgt. Brandon Quarterman of Fort Bliss, Texas, won the Division I popular vote contest for “Reaching Perfection,” which topped the still life category.


SIDEBAR:

Here are the results of the top three finishers in each category with photographer’s rank, name, installation and photo title:

2010 Army Digital Photo Contest
Division I

Animals – 1. Pfc. Amber Smith, Yongsan, Korea, What’s for Dinner; 2. Staff Sgt. Wilberto Sierra, Fort Bliss, Texas, Dragonfly; 3. Staff Sgt. Robert Curtis, Vicenza, Italy, Tough Love.

Digital darkroom – 1. Spc. Thomas Mort, Fort Knox, Ky., Over the Top; 2. Sgt. Shawn Cassatt, Yongsan, Korea, On the Range; 3. Staff Sgt. Pablo Piedra, Fort McPherson, Ga., Beast within Me.

Design elements – 1. Staff Sgt. Pablo Piedra, Fort McPherson, Ga., 9; 2. 2nd Lt. Thomas Malejko, Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., Arch Elements; 3. Lt. Col. David Tygart, Stuttgart, Germany, Sunset Under Glass.

Mililtary life – 1. Sgt. Darlene Martinez, Fort Drum, N.Y., The Sacrifices We Make; 2. Staff Sgt. Joey Suggs, Fort Meade, Md., Dental Care; 3. Sgt. Shawn Cassatt, Yongsan, Korea, Remember Me.

Monochrome – 1. Sgt. 1st Class Lance Widner, Mannheim, Germany, Great Grandmother; 2. Col. John Powers, Camp Zama, Japan, Calm Morning at Mount Fuji; 3. Lt. Col. Mark Bonica, Fort Sam Houston, Texas, … and We All Fall Down.

Nature & landscapes – 1. 1st Lt. Christopher Snell, (unknown location), Sunset Swim; 2. Spc. Juan-Pablo Marin, Fort Benning, Ga., Moon Set; 3. Spc. Jenny Lu, Hohenfels, Germany, Hong Kong at Night.

People – 1. Capt. David Callender, (unknown location), Anna’s Dream; 2. Lt. Col. David Tygart, Stuttgart, Germany, Eval Fairy; 3. Col. Joseph Mancy, Stuttgart, Germany, Eyes that Speak.

Still life – 1. Staff Sgt. Brandon Quarterman, Fort Bliss, Texas, Reaching Perfection; 2. Lt. Col. Mark Bonica, Fort Sam Houston, Texas, Reflections in Soap; 3. Warrant Officer Larry Olson, Wiesbaden, Germany, Sunflower in Contrast.

Division II

Animals – 1. Susan Doran, Rock Island Arsenal, Ill., Defiance; 2. Holley Swegle, Fort Hood, Texas, Painted Birds; 3. Eric Armstrong, Camp Zama, Japan, Man O’ War.

Digital darkroom – 1. Col. Richard Pugh, Fort Campbell, Ky., The Owl; 2. Stephen Cullum, Stuttgart, Germany, Volksfest FDR; 3. Gary Cashman, Yongsan, Korea, BMX Composite.

Design elements – 1. Robert LaPolice, Selfridge, Mich., Just Riveting; 2. Col. Richard Pugh, Fort Campbell, Ky., Blue Mosque; 3. James Holbrook, Stuttgart, Germany, What do I call this.

Military life – 1. Nell Williams, Fort Stewart, Ga., My Dad, My Hero; 2. Rebecca Colburn, Fort Carson, Colo., The Test Drive; 3. Ann Marie Detavernier, Baumholder, Germany, The Love Letter.

Monochrome – 1. Holly Swegle, Fort Hood, Texas, Dress Shop; 2. Barbara Underwood, Fort Lee, Va., Light and Shadows; 3. Jeffrey Kline, Fort Sam Houston, Texas, Texas Snow.

Nature & landscapes – 1. Brenda Walker, Fort Campbell, Ky., Morning Serenity; 2. Mylan Dawson, Kaiserslautern, Germany, Ash Clouds over Holland; 3. Col. Richard Pugh, Fort Campbell, Ky., Point Lobos.

People – 1. Sherry Keene Hobbs, Garmisch, Germany, Belly Dancer; 2. Eugenia Whittenburg, Fort Shafter, Hawaii, Happy Beach Feet; 3. Holly Swegle, Fort Hood, Texas, American Woman.

Still life – 1. Mylan Dawson, Kaiserslautern, Germany, Green Tomato; 2. Michael Slone, Fort Meade, Md., Morning Coffee; 3. Frank Leon, Fort Knox, Ky., The faucet chronicles.

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www.YouTube.com/FamilyMWR

ks 110321

Touched

Check out these edit photos images:


Touched
edit photos
Image by maistora
- only lightly. This is how much I would 'edit' a photo like this. Compare to the SOOC (straight-out-of-camera) version I beamed yesterday...

(Couldn't resist the temptation :) Press 'L' to see better


Sandy Edgar
edit photos
Image by L.C.Nøttaasen
Ghostworks group SP Collaboration edit.
Portrait by Sandy Edgar
www.flickr.com/photos/seventsix/503849258/
Texture by Skeletal Mass
www.flickr.com/photos/skeletalmess/3171652976/in/set-7215...
View large on black


:- Feedback
edit photos
Image by Rob Warde
Horsham, West Sussex, Jan 2010.

Edited as before but with a slight twist. Thanks to Tommy for the tips, this is what Flickr is all about. Glad to have you back Mate. Slightly wider crop to allow for a vignette. I used Silver Efex Pro to perform a Holga B&W conversion rather which I prefer.

I also like to thank Mr. Luther Vandross for his support during the edit. Old School is the best school.

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