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From a set of photographs called "trip to north carolina and walks around my neighborhood" by Atlanta-based photographer Mary Robinson
10 likes 5 repins
Aerial Nudes by Auckland-based John Crawford
13 likes 12 repins
Photography of the Invisible World is a blog by Dr. Klaus Schmitt about his journey into the invisible world of UV, IR and fluorescence photography.
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Photography of the Invisible World is a blog by Dr. Klaus Schmitt about his journey into the invisible world of UV, IR and fluorescence photography. // These are so cool.
3 likes 3 repins
Fantastic Pit at Ellison's Cave, Georgia #vertical #geological #void
10 likes 14 repins
Photographs by Heavenly Vaults, a photography book by David Stephenson
2 likes 4 repins
Self -portrait by James Appleton bathed in the glow of the Aurora Borealis and a volcanic eruption on the Fimmvˆruh·ls mountain pass, Iceland.
4 likes 10 repins
1900 block Ellis Street, Western Addition district, San Francisco. Photographed in 1977 by Dave Glass (daveglass on Flickr)
5 likes 8 repins
Absolutely stunning images by New York-based photographer Simen Johan.
10 likes 26 repins
Carl Kleiner photographs a new promo series for IKEA, this time turning kitchenware into art.
6 likes 1 repin
Wouter van Buuren is a 39-year-old Dutch photographer and acrobat. He scales utility poles and climbs out skyscraper windows to take vistas of cities and landscapes from the literal tops of the world. He stitches them together without Photoshop to create "total landscapes" mimicing a satellite's view of earth, using only his hands to put them together.
2 likes 1 repin
Gorgeous untitled photograph by Missy Prince on Flickr.
1 like 6 repins
Amazing photograph by German photographer Klaus Leidorf (www.flickr.com/ph...)
3 repins
$100 Stadler Form Anna - Ceramic Space Heater -- I need this.
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Claus Sonne is a photographer based in Nyrup, Denmark
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Claus Sonne is a photographer based in Nyrup, Denmark
2 likes 2 repins
These are Frank Hurley’s famous early colour photographs of Sir Ernest Shackleton’s ill-fated ‘Endurance’ voyage, as part of the British Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition, 1914-1917. Hurley was the official photographer on the expedition.
1 like 4 repins
Bernard Lang's aerial photography is all about finding 'the ideal distance' — the point where humans and nature can live together in a perfect match.
1 repin
MIT has made a camera that can take 1 Trillion frames per second. With this high speed capability, they can actually SEE the movement of photons of light across a scene or object.
1 like 2 repins
"Saint-Nicolas-de-la-Grave, France": Google Street View cinemascapes, by Aaron Hobson
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"Route 17, South Africa": Google Street View cinemascapes, by Aaron Hobson
1 like 3 repins
"Dearagon, Spain": Google Street View cinemascapes, by Aaron Hobson
"Going-to-the-Sun Hwy., Glacier Nat. Park, Montana. June 8, 1963." 35mm Kodachrome transparency. (from a selection of vacation slides found on eBay and in a thrift store)
4 likes 6 repins
Before & After - pairs of photographs showing the passage of time by Irina Werning.
2 likes 4 repins
Marco Suarez makes landscape photography cropped in a circle. You can buy them for $60.
2 likes 1 repin
This nebula-like cluster is so bright, so rich with star-like objects at the center it looks like a celestial cloud. I thought, maybe this is a section of space, magnified, telescoped and possibly viewed through a fish eye lens. But is it really? Click through to the full article to find out! Whatever it is, it was photographed by Norwegian photographer Christoper Jonassen.
2 likes 1 comment 5 repins
"Photographing fog transforms it in unpredictable ways. It shows the fog flowing in waves and currents, partially burying hills and towers with new 'ground.' After shooting and reframing enough times, some shots turn out particularly evocative. Sometimes they just happen to resonate with how I am feeling that day, or they come out otherworldly or dreamy. During processing, I get a chance to make the image 'speak' for me by bringing out the qualities that I like." — Terence Chang
3 likes 3 repins
"Codec Movements" is a series of experimental collages exploring form, color, texture and typography by Heath Killen (+source)
This is pretty weird. By Swedish artist/protographer Anders Krisar, who has a fascination with realistic textures and representing human psychology.
5 likes 13 repins
Brent Schoepf — Gorgeous. @Victor Ng, you might like this.
3 likes 9 repins
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Fred Feuerstein ;-)