I have been taking photos for 5 years, and have learned much through talking to other photographers, sharing my pictures and receiving feedback, and watching tutorials on the internet.Most of my pics are Covering very Wide angle of view (show Entire Building in one Picture) and also they are High Dynamic Range. for me light is very Special element in Photography.
Showing posts with label photos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photos. Show all posts
Monday, August 18, 2014
Beautiful Iranian Mosque Photography
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23 years old photographer Mohammad Reza Domiri Ganji from Iran captures the beautiful panoramic and architectural mosque photos you haven't seen before. Words from his site:
Labels:
Abstract,
Architectural,
architecture,
Art,
beautiful,
fisheye,
HDR,
iran,
Iranian,
Mosque,
Photography,
photos,
Reza Domiri Ganji
Monday, September 23, 2013
Untouched Photos Taken with iPhone 5S
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Apple announced iPhone 5S and iPhone 5C in WWDC on September 10, 2013. This gorgeous new iPhone 5S has many new features including Touch ID and 64-bit processor and a lot more. It features new 8 mega-pixel iSight camera with True Tone Flash. Lets have a look at some of the pictures taken with iPhone 5S.
Photos Taken with iPhone 5S
Saturday, December 11, 2010
Outstanding Photos Taken With a Mobile Phone
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They say the best camera is the one you have with you. Your mobile phone is always with you so I guess you could say it’s your best camera. Obviously, a mobile phone’s camera is no match for a professional level DSLR, but you might be surprised at the great pictures many people are taking with their cell phones. Not only are phone cameras getting better all the time, but there’s all sorts of apps you can get for many of them to edit and improve your pics.
In this post we’ll take a look at quite a number of outstanding photos taken with a camera phone. Some of the pics were edited using apps on the photographer’s phone while some weren’t. Feel inspired and don’t forget to take pictures!
Photos Taken With Camera Phone
Labels:
Camera Phone,
Mobile,
mobile phone,
Outstanding,
photos
Saturday, August 28, 2010
Animals Perfectly Comfortable with Snow
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While some animals hibernate in the winter and prefer to sun themselves during the warmer months, other animals are perfectly comfortable with the snow and offer photographers a plenty of opportunities for remarkable photos. To celebrate the nicer facets of the leaving winter, we now collected some beautiful and adorable photos of animals in snow. These photos are nice to look at and will help you get a break from the regular work and hopefully get a fresh perspective on whatever you have to get done today.
Perfectly Comfortable with Snow
Monday, August 16, 2010
Hot-Shot Photos Taken at Perfect Time
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The most hilarious and off-the-wall images are taken at the right time and right angle. But capturing these bizarre moments is not a piece of cake for many. Many times you have to wait hours to just take that perfect shot and only once in a while you get lucky enough to get your right shot actually right.
Today we present some of the beautiful photos shot at exactly the right moment.
35 Hot-Shot Photos With Perfect Timing
Thursday, August 12, 2010
Lovely Life Thing Photos
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Monday, August 9, 2010
Brilliant Photo Manipulation Art
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Photo manipulation is probably one of the most popular application areas in which Adobe Photoshop is used extensively. One of the main reasons for that is its ability to blend real photos with vibrant colors and digital painting to emphasize some beautiful details which makes this software ideal for this kind of work. Here are 45 incredible examples of Photo manipulated images from extremely talented Photoshop artists.
Chog
Labels:
Art,
Brilliant,
Manipulation,
Photo Manipulation,
photos
Thursday, July 29, 2010
The Beauty of Architecture Photography
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Our surrounding is full of many beautiful things: fashionable or traditional ,architectural photography can be as exciting as it is gratifying. In this type of photography, a photographer usually experiments with various timing , settings, angels and effects to achieve the most interesting shot of buildings. In this post we collect some of beautiful, unusual and bizzare architectural photos as well as related concept artworks for your inspiration.
Rise up to the sky
Rise up to the sky
Labels:
architecture,
beautiful,
beauty,
bizzare,
interesting,
Photography,
photos,
unusual
Saturday, July 24, 2010
Outstanding Award Winning Photos from Around the World
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This post showcases beautiful photographs that have won photo contests such as National Geographic Contest, Nikon Technology, Energizer, Sony, Smithsonian Mag, Nature Conservancy, National Wildlife Refuge Association, etc. Photography is always been a fun activity and as a profession it is the job of creative people. You can express your feeling, your observations, and your imagination in very creative and appealing ways by using your camera. We hope that this showcase will inspire you to get out and shoot more.
Outstanding Award Winning Photos
Friday, July 2, 2010
Incredible Photos of Fireworks
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What do many of the world’s biggest celebrations have in common? Fireworks! If you love a good fireworks display, but you can’t wait until New Year’s Eve or the next big boom-worthy occasion, you’ll love what we have for you here. We’ve collected 41 incredible photos of fireworks that you can enjoy any time of the year!
Photo by PeaPix

Photo by PeaPix
Saturday, May 1, 2010
35 Spectacular Photos by Tim Mckenna
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Here's a selection of 35 spectacular photographs taken by action sports and water photographer, Tim Mckenna.
Tim is one of the world's leading extreme sports photographers, and his work takes him to some of the most beautiful places on earth, as depicted in these spectacular photographs.
Be sure to visit Tim's website for more photos at http://www.timmckennaphotography.com


































Tim is one of the world's leading extreme sports photographers, and his work takes him to some of the most beautiful places on earth, as depicted in these spectacular photographs.
Be sure to visit Tim's website for more photos at http://www.timmckennaphotography.com
Sunday, February 28, 2010
American Supersonic Airliners
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Boeing-2707 SST - Supersonic Marvel, Largely Forgotten Today
Capable of transporting 296 passengers across the ocean at 2900 km/h. - 40 years ago, in 1968.
The Sixties were simply amazing times for fascinating technology development. In the automotive industry, the "American dream" of a powerful full-size car was still very much alive. In space exploration, we reached out to the Moon. In air travel, the dream of a supersonic passenger plane seemed almost certain to become reality. Witness "Boeing-2707" SST (Supersonic Transport):


(images credit: Testpilot.ru)
-------
America enters the race... Well, it was good while it lasted
It all started in 1952 with small-scale studies of SST designs by Boeing, but things heated up significantly when in 1962 the governments of Britain and France decided to join efforts in the creation of a supersonic "Concorde" airplane. The intrepid Russians also came up with the Tu-144 (no less capable, but plagued by accidents). The American government nearly panicked and responded with its own program SCAT (Supersonic Commercial Air Transport) in 1963, which got endorsement from President Kennedy himself. The race for dominating supersonic airways was on. (At that time it was believed that all future commercial aircraft would be supersonic). The goal was to produce a commercial aircraft capable of carrying 250 passengers (twice as many as the Concorde) at Mach 3 speed and a trans-Atlantic range of 4,000 miles. Such was the dream, loftier than the European projects, which energized American designers and manufacturers, almost on par with the idea of reaching the Moon.
Boeing 733 - from "delta wing" to "swept wing" design
The proposed plane would be almost twice as large as the Concorde, cost two times more and require twice as much time to build, but it would be the "American Dream" plane, the future of the world's airways (FAA estimated 500 of such planes in use by 1990)


Some initial concepts from the 50s:

Conceptual development of wing geometry (with variations on delta-wing and swing-wing themes):

(image courtesy of NASA)
The variable geometry wing already had quite a history in US (read this article), plus there was considerable data accumulated by the military in developing the XB-70 "Valkyrie" strategic bomber and YF-12 «Blackbird» spy plane. Engineers of the new Boeing plane boasted that European supersonic aircraft is based on already nearly obsolete technology, and while American model may not be the first, it will certainly end up to be the best.
Air tunnel testing of Boeing 733 model:

Some of these concepts looked like F111 fighters with variable geometry wings (a legacy from the TFX program), the others could pass for the upcoming Rockwell B-1 bomber. Some progress was being made, but Boeing did not enjoy a monopoly on SST research for long - in 1964 the government started a competition for preliminary designs: "Boeing" and "Lockheed" were chosen, but "North American" (responsible for the X-15 Rocketplane) was strangely declined. Thus, two giant corporations were pitched against each other, and the design race nicely heated up.
Lockheed 2000 - an honorable mention.
This baby was admirably full-size: some models could transport up to 300 passengers with range of 3500 miles. The Lockheed mock-up was proudly presented to the judges in 1966, but rival Boeing-2707-100 already could take that many passengers and more, with better aerodynamics and less noise pollution. Boeing emerged the sole winner of the government contract.



(images courtesy of Lockheed)
Note: Space helmets on cute stewardesses were all the rage back then. See our previous article Glamour in the Skies for some Braniff helmeted uniforms, designed by Emilio Pucci.
Boeing 2707-100: growing longer and sleeker...
With engines now in the tail section (removed from under aircraft's body due to safety concerns), "Boeing 2707" still featured variable geometry wing and a distinctive two-hinged "droop-nose" - added for the best visibility during takeoffs and landings (its extra joint ensured better ground clearance). A new name reflected the fact that the plane's speed was Mach 2.7. It was decidedly bigger airplane, too.




Boeing 2707-200: almost there...
New 2707 had a tailed delta wing all over again - ironically, just like the rejected Lockheed entry. By October 1968 it was decided to abandon the variable geometry wing due to overwhelming technical problems. However, 2707-200 again grew in size, reaching (some say) truly monstrous proportions. To me it looks more like a futuristic "dream come true".


Delta Airlines Artist Conception of swing wing 2707 design
Size comparison:

(images credit: Boeing)
Boeing 2707-300: already 2 years behind schedule...
The new design was smaller, seating "only" 234. Two prototypes were approved by President Nixon in 1969, and it was projected that SST would dominate the skies, rendering all other subsonic aircraft obsolete.


Length: 306 ft (1968) 318 ft (1972)
Wingspan: (1968) 174 ft extended 106 ft swept
Cruising speed: Mach 2.7 or 1,800 mph
Weight: (1968) 675,000 lb
Passengers: 300
Altitude: More than 60,000 feet
Power: Four GE4 turbojets
Range: Transpacific, 4,000 mi


(images credit: Hiller Aviation Museum)


(photos courtesy: Ben Wang via Airliners.net)
Soon, however, the project began to gather adverse publicity. The biggest complaint was "environmental/ noise pollution", such as sonic booms and reduction of the ozone layer. These concerns surprisingly gained a lot of weight in the government, with supersonic flights over land in the United States eventually completely forbidden. Also, at speeds above Mach 2.2 the aircraft would encounter "skin friction effect" and its body will have to be built out of either stainless steel or titanium, significantly increasing the price. The government (troubled by the Vietnam war) decided not to spend additional millions of dollars and completely cut the funding in 1971.
According to Wikipedia: "The SST became known as "the airplane that almost ate Seattle." Boeing was a major economic force in the region, and was stretched so thin that a billboard was erected that read, "Will the last person leaving Seattle - turn out the lights?"
Extreme costs in operating supersonics brought the whole idea to an unfortunate end, with the beautiful Concorde resting in a museum, and the skies dominated by sluggish, yet fuel-efficient subsonic jets. The dream still remains only a dream... but consider one interesting fact: when the government withdrew the funds for SST program, money (over a million dollars) poured in from American schools & kids. Well, children's enthusiasm could not save the project either.
"The High-Speed Research (HSR)"
program was canceled by NASA in 1999:


(image credit: NASA)
"Concorde" resides in a museum (appropriately in Seattle):




NOTE: one of the most glamorous flights of French Concorde was during the full solar eclipse in 1973 - as a flying scientific laboratory.
This page has a few more pictures.

(image credit: NASA)
But it's not the end of the story:
-------
Meanwhile in the remote & mysterious Russia...
TU-444 keeps the dream alive, and then some.
The Soviet Tu-144 was the first commercial SST aircraft flown (built almost entirely with KGB & military technology). It was withdrawn after a short time due to crashes and problems, but not before making Europeans and Americans accelerate their own projects. Today, Tupolev Aircraft Design Bureau seems to keep the project alive and plans to come up with next-generation Supersonic Transport -
Tu-444. Have a look:



(images credit: Tupolev.ru)
Some say that modern travelers are able to get anywhere on the globe within 24 hours anyway, so it's pointless trying to improve their flight times with expensive SST - but apparently people at Tupolev's are still excited by the idea of getting from Moscow to New York - and back! - in a day. The dream may live on, but the times when the governments raced each other to achieve a shared dream, are over.
Capable of transporting 296 passengers across the ocean at 2900 km/h. - 40 years ago, in 1968.
The Sixties were simply amazing times for fascinating technology development. In the automotive industry, the "American dream" of a powerful full-size car was still very much alive. In space exploration, we reached out to the Moon. In air travel, the dream of a supersonic passenger plane seemed almost certain to become reality. Witness "Boeing-2707" SST (Supersonic Transport):
(images credit: Testpilot.ru)
-------
America enters the race... Well, it was good while it lasted
It all started in 1952 with small-scale studies of SST designs by Boeing, but things heated up significantly when in 1962 the governments of Britain and France decided to join efforts in the creation of a supersonic "Concorde" airplane. The intrepid Russians also came up with the Tu-144 (no less capable, but plagued by accidents). The American government nearly panicked and responded with its own program SCAT (Supersonic Commercial Air Transport) in 1963, which got endorsement from President Kennedy himself. The race for dominating supersonic airways was on. (At that time it was believed that all future commercial aircraft would be supersonic). The goal was to produce a commercial aircraft capable of carrying 250 passengers (twice as many as the Concorde) at Mach 3 speed and a trans-Atlantic range of 4,000 miles. Such was the dream, loftier than the European projects, which energized American designers and manufacturers, almost on par with the idea of reaching the Moon.
Boeing 733 - from "delta wing" to "swept wing" design
The proposed plane would be almost twice as large as the Concorde, cost two times more and require twice as much time to build, but it would be the "American Dream" plane, the future of the world's airways (FAA estimated 500 of such planes in use by 1990)
Some initial concepts from the 50s:
Conceptual development of wing geometry (with variations on delta-wing and swing-wing themes):
(image courtesy of NASA)
The variable geometry wing already had quite a history in US (read this article), plus there was considerable data accumulated by the military in developing the XB-70 "Valkyrie" strategic bomber and YF-12 «Blackbird» spy plane. Engineers of the new Boeing plane boasted that European supersonic aircraft is based on already nearly obsolete technology, and while American model may not be the first, it will certainly end up to be the best.
Air tunnel testing of Boeing 733 model:
Some of these concepts looked like F111 fighters with variable geometry wings (a legacy from the TFX program), the others could pass for the upcoming Rockwell B-1 bomber. Some progress was being made, but Boeing did not enjoy a monopoly on SST research for long - in 1964 the government started a competition for preliminary designs: "Boeing" and "Lockheed" were chosen, but "North American" (responsible for the X-15 Rocketplane) was strangely declined. Thus, two giant corporations were pitched against each other, and the design race nicely heated up.
Lockheed 2000 - an honorable mention.
This baby was admirably full-size: some models could transport up to 300 passengers with range of 3500 miles. The Lockheed mock-up was proudly presented to the judges in 1966, but rival Boeing-2707-100 already could take that many passengers and more, with better aerodynamics and less noise pollution. Boeing emerged the sole winner of the government contract.
(images courtesy of Lockheed)
Note: Space helmets on cute stewardesses were all the rage back then. See our previous article Glamour in the Skies for some Braniff helmeted uniforms, designed by Emilio Pucci.
Boeing 2707-100: growing longer and sleeker...
With engines now in the tail section (removed from under aircraft's body due to safety concerns), "Boeing 2707" still featured variable geometry wing and a distinctive two-hinged "droop-nose" - added for the best visibility during takeoffs and landings (its extra joint ensured better ground clearance). A new name reflected the fact that the plane's speed was Mach 2.7. It was decidedly bigger airplane, too.
Boeing 2707-200: almost there...
New 2707 had a tailed delta wing all over again - ironically, just like the rejected Lockheed entry. By October 1968 it was decided to abandon the variable geometry wing due to overwhelming technical problems. However, 2707-200 again grew in size, reaching (some say) truly monstrous proportions. To me it looks more like a futuristic "dream come true".
Delta Airlines Artist Conception of swing wing 2707 design
Size comparison:
(images credit: Boeing)
Boeing 2707-300: already 2 years behind schedule...
The new design was smaller, seating "only" 234. Two prototypes were approved by President Nixon in 1969, and it was projected that SST would dominate the skies, rendering all other subsonic aircraft obsolete.
Length: 306 ft (1968) 318 ft (1972)
Wingspan: (1968) 174 ft extended 106 ft swept
Cruising speed: Mach 2.7 or 1,800 mph
Weight: (1968) 675,000 lb
Passengers: 300
Altitude: More than 60,000 feet
Power: Four GE4 turbojets
Range: Transpacific, 4,000 mi
(images credit: Hiller Aviation Museum)
(photos courtesy: Ben Wang via Airliners.net)
Soon, however, the project began to gather adverse publicity. The biggest complaint was "environmental/ noise pollution", such as sonic booms and reduction of the ozone layer. These concerns surprisingly gained a lot of weight in the government, with supersonic flights over land in the United States eventually completely forbidden. Also, at speeds above Mach 2.2 the aircraft would encounter "skin friction effect" and its body will have to be built out of either stainless steel or titanium, significantly increasing the price. The government (troubled by the Vietnam war) decided not to spend additional millions of dollars and completely cut the funding in 1971.
According to Wikipedia: "The SST became known as "the airplane that almost ate Seattle." Boeing was a major economic force in the region, and was stretched so thin that a billboard was erected that read, "Will the last person leaving Seattle - turn out the lights?"
Extreme costs in operating supersonics brought the whole idea to an unfortunate end, with the beautiful Concorde resting in a museum, and the skies dominated by sluggish, yet fuel-efficient subsonic jets. The dream still remains only a dream... but consider one interesting fact: when the government withdrew the funds for SST program, money (over a million dollars) poured in from American schools & kids. Well, children's enthusiasm could not save the project either.
"The High-Speed Research (HSR)"
program was canceled by NASA in 1999:
(image credit: NASA)
"Concorde" resides in a museum (appropriately in Seattle):
NOTE: one of the most glamorous flights of French Concorde was during the full solar eclipse in 1973 - as a flying scientific laboratory.
This page has a few more pictures.
(image credit: NASA)
But it's not the end of the story:
-------
Meanwhile in the remote & mysterious Russia...
TU-444 keeps the dream alive, and then some.
The Soviet Tu-144 was the first commercial SST aircraft flown (built almost entirely with KGB & military technology). It was withdrawn after a short time due to crashes and problems, but not before making Europeans and Americans accelerate their own projects. Today, Tupolev Aircraft Design Bureau seems to keep the project alive and plans to come up with next-generation Supersonic Transport -
Tu-444. Have a look:
(images credit: Tupolev.ru)
Some say that modern travelers are able to get anywhere on the globe within 24 hours anyway, so it's pointless trying to improve their flight times with expensive SST - but apparently people at Tupolev's are still excited by the idea of getting from Moscow to New York - and back! - in a day. The dream may live on, but the times when the governments raced each other to achieve a shared dream, are over.
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