tibig
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Image Comments posted by tibig
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Beautifully framed and good light.
Regards, Tibi
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You certainly got them to react to your taking the picture. Of course quantum physics tells us we can never observe without disturbing :)
Regards, Tibi
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Beautiful shot!
Regards, Tibi
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Thanks for looking.
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Thanks for looking
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Thanks for looking
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Thanks, Les, you are absolutely right. He is much smaller and only if lucky she did not have him for breakfast.
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Thanks, Ruud
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It was already quite hot around noon.
Thanks for looking
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This is not the lucky spider from my previous post, just a colleagueof his that lives a couple of meters from him.
Thanks for looking
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Beautiful. It's time for these this year too!
Regards, Tibi
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Just a flower.
Thanks for looking.
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The light arrangement was indeed successful, you got wonderful details on the flowers.
Regards, Tibi
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Mike, Ruud and Pnina
Thanks for the supporting comments.
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Nice and fresh. Enjoy the spring, Tibi
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The crab spider is well matched to the color of the flower it uses asit's home. The fly was somewhat unlucky...
Thanks for looking.
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So much has been said about this image that I doubt I can come up with something new. For me the figure there works well. It is compositionally a point element, correctly placed so that the eyes should dance between the boat and him. Adds a bit of mistery and interest. Regards, Tibi
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I like the richness of the textured regions of this image: stiped sky, stripes on the hills, dark patches of deep blue sea. A very balanced composition. Compliments.
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Mike,
Thanks for the visit and comment
Tommy,
This is a "swept panorama" in which the camera is panned by hand and takes lots of shots that are automatically stitched together. So it ends up as (my best guess) a cylindrical projection rather than a perspective created by the lens. As for the focal length, it is equivalent to 25mm so fairly wide.
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Siegfried and Larry, thanks for your attentive comments. Indeed the wires could have been easily cloned out together with the pole. As for the shooting itself, it is a "swept panorama" in which the camera is panned by hand and takes lots of shots that are automatically stitched together. Ideally, if I would have used a tripod, there would be much less distortion as I assume the algorithm of the camera is based on a cylindrical projection.
World of a Crab Spider (2)
in Macro
Posted
Thanks, Tony