Ken Waller wrote on 9/11/18 5:09 PM:
I've had a number of my images done by Bay Photo put on metal plates and
I think that medium has a lot going for it.
There is also the nice detail that they can be more easily cleaned than
many other surfaces.
On the wall they float about 1/2" from the
ann sanfedele wrote on 9/11/18 6:55 AM:
and -- which ones?
This one was commissioned in 11x14:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/ellarsee/44342980492/in/album-72157700832934925/
Someone saw this on Friday night and wants to buy a copy from me, but I
haven't heard back from him:
https://www.f
Gonna need a bigger screen ;-)
Thanks mate I will ponder on that and might adjust it accordingly.
On 11/9/18, Igor PDML-StR, discombobulated, unleashed:
>
>1600 x 1200 is too large.
>Even on the screen where I have 1920x1200 resolution, it is very seldom
>that I have the browser window open t
96 is the magic number. Make it so that the long edge is 96 units, eg 960
pixels, and everything else falls into place.
> On 12 Sep 2018, at 09:12, Steve Cottrell wrote:
>
> Gonna need a bigger screen ;-)
>
> Thanks mate I will ponder on that and might adjust it accordingly.
>
>
>
> On 11/
The shot is centered on my phone and looks good. Fits the screen with room to
spare. Any smaller and it would be a postage stamp,
Paul
> On Sep 11, 2018, at 10:07 AM, Igor PDML-StR wrote:
>
>
>
> The funny highlight of the shot is the white bird head peeking from its
> shelter. I am not sur
Thanks for "clarification" Henk.
"Monarch" still seams an appropriate
reference.(?)
J
Sent from my iPhone
> On Sep 11, 2018, at 10:45 PM, Henk Terhell wrote:
>
> Reading from wikipedia:
>
> Danaus genutia, the common tiger, is one of the common butterflies of India.
> It belongs to the "crow
I haven't PESOed for quite a while...
Shinglebacks - I love these guys. They are the most endearing creatures but
they have the unfortunate habit of deciding that the warm bitumen of country
roads is a great place to soak up heat - with predictable consequences. I often
stop and move them off to
Dropbox image finally appeared
after several attempts.
Not a familiar critter.
Your efforts on their behalf are
more than generous!
J
Sent from my iPhone
> On Sep 12, 2018, at 4:49 AM, Brian Walters wrote:
>
> I haven't PESOed for quite a while...
>
> Shinglebacks - I love these guys. They are
What I am talking about would reduce the white space and actually
might make the photo appear larger on the phone screen.
Although that might depend on how the mobile browser deals with that.
But if you have one of the phones with a humongous screen and
incomprehensible screen resolution (iP
That's very nice indeed.
Yesterday (and today) I took the day off work because my cold got so much
worse. I went for a walk around the perimeter of the park, then up and down
each of the hills and through the centre, including that area. It really is a
wonderful place on an early autumn day wi
Excellent depth, Godfrey!
Tripod or random support?
J
Sent from my iPhone
> On Sep 12, 2018, at 5:39 AM, Bob W-PDML wrote:
>
> That's very nice indeed.
>
> Yesterday (and today) I took the day off work because my cold got so much
> worse. I went for a walk around the perimeter of the park, th
Thank you both for the compliments!
Sorry to hear about the cold, Bob! I hope you're feeling better today. The
parakeets would be fun ... In one of the neighborhoods I lived in, there was a
flock of midget parrots that did the "fly around and sqawk a lot" thing: it was
great!
Jack: It is a h
Sad but true. Man of our lizards do the same. I've seen the Shinglebacks
on those Aus. Border Control programmes.
Alan C
On 12-Sep-18 01:49 PM, Brian Walters wrote:
I haven't PESOed for quite a while...
Shinglebacks - I love these guys. They are the most endearing creatures but
they have the
I agree their software is clunky but I'v had very good experiences with their
customer service people.
-Original Message-
>From: Larry Colen Subject: Re: It seems that metal prints sell
>
>
>
>Ken Waller wrote on 9/11/18 5:09 PM:
>> I've had a number of my images done by Bay Photo put on
That's a very interesting creature. It looks like a young, unopened pine
cone, or rather that from a "cedar pine" (in which pine nuts are found).
Thanks for sharing it with us, Brian!
There are some very interesting animals in your "neck of the woods".
We still have very fond memories from t
Lovely set. Sorry I couldn't make it this time.
Chris
On Mon, 10 Sep 2018, 18:17 Bob W-PDML, wrote:
> ...or, Godfrey Does Greenwich
>
> https://lightroom.adobe.com/shares/00f4c7321374431ea848517ce1613814
>
> B
>
> --
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Good luck, John!
Those hurricanes ain't fun.
We've lived through a few major ones here, in TX, but we are some 100
miles inland.
My cousin lives NE of Wilmington, along US-17.
He is out of town, and he is scheduled to fly back on Sunday, coming back
from a long trip. At this point, he is n
Hard to tell which end is the head and which the tail.
Excellent image.
Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola
On Wed, Sep 12, 2018 at 7:50 AM Brian Walters
wrote:
> I haven't PESOed for quite a while...
>
> Shinglebacks - I love these guys. They are the most endearing
My intent is to hunker down here unless there is an urgent need to go help
family/friends.
I've been through this a few times before. I have a pretty good idea where the
flooding will be & I have routes planned out to avoid it if I do have to go out.
I've been in this house through five hurri
That's what I thought too.
That's the pushmi-pullyu.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Doctor_Dolittle_characters#The_Pushmi-pullyu
:-)
Igor
Daniel J. Matyola Wed, 12 Sep 2018 12:09:13 -0700 wrote:
Hard to tell which end is the head and which the tail.
Excellent image.
Dan Matyola
I'm expecting it to be more like the Big Bad Wolf and the little piggy living in
the "house of sticks".
Looks like the mandatory evacuations are starting to affect some inland
counties. If I-40 hasn't been switched to all westbound traffic already, it will
be soon.
This is the first major hu
Appears to be one of the few native Australian species that is neither poisonous
nor venomous.
On 9/12/2018 07:49, Brian Walters wrote:
I haven't PESOed for quite a while...
Shinglebacks - I love these guys. They are the most endearing creatures but
they have the unfortunate habit of deciding
They're very good with machine-guns though.
> On 12 Sep 2018, at 20:43, John wrote:
>
> Appears to be one of the few native Australian species that is neither
> poisonous nor venomous.
>
>> On 9/12/2018 07:49, Brian Walters wrote:
>> I haven't PESOed for quite a while...
>> Shinglebacks - I lo
Well... To some extent...
https://www.flickr.com/photos/alunfoto/43733932115/in/dateposted-public/
Jostein
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Thanks for those comments, Igor
That was a great day we had with you, Jane & Rob - can't believe it was 8 years
ago!
We also have turtles that have to be rescued from roads - not often, fortunately
although with the current very dry conditions we're experiencing it could be
more common this year
two from this morning, a moth called triangles and a butterfly called
tawny coster:
http://something-feathered.in/2018/09/13/triangles-and-tawny-coster/
k-x and fa 100/2.8 macro.
comments, if any, are appreciated.
~subash
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I guess great minds think alike, or cliches always repeat.
I shot this a much lower resolution a few years ago.
https://pdml.updog.co/webster26/PESO%20--%20%20obligatoryharvest.html
On 9/12/2018 4:41 PM, Jostein wrote:
Well... To some extent...
https://www.flickr.com/photos/alunfoto/43733932
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