Looks edible, but somewhat dirty perhaps. This could also be equally well something horrible too. Cross-section of lungs of a person who got some coloured candies into their throat and choked in the result .. Yours always optimistic SAM
I am thinking it has to be a sculpture of some sort. I think it is a very good capture with good texture and I allso think it will do very well in the contest.
My thanks to all who leave comments for my work and to those of you who like one enough to make it a favourite. To touch just one person that way makes each image worthwhile. . . . . . . . . .. . . . "The question is not what you look at, but what you see" ~ Marcel Proust
I much appreciate all the comments I receive about my images, but please excuse me if I don't always reply. My interest in Caedes is exceeding my time available!
Those non-symmetrical oblong shapes with the lighter colored edges must be the open ends of the more flat, light- to medium-blue shapes, so that means those shapes are hollow. Some are open, some are not. There appears to be a gelatinous surface inside the open ones, and they have what look like spores on the outside. I think they may be organic and possibly aquatic. I used to be a scuba diver and remember seeing underwater plants, sponges, even some corals that look a lot like this. As for the bright yellow, orange, and green irregularly rounded shapes... molds or egg sacs? I've been doing pretty well with figuring out many of the submissions for this contest but I'm really not sure about this one. I give a 9 for color and a 7 for suggested creepiness. It would make an interesting screen but I can't dance to it. What? You never watched American Bandstand back in the 50s and 60s?
Then again, it's possible it's a sculpture. While most of it is organic in shape (but not really color, unless this is a lost episode of "Star Trek"), just below the main cluster of yellow and orange globules there is a flat dark gray area running about half-way across the photo, plus another 5 or so small spots of the same flat gray material scattered about, almost like a base that all these shapes were attached to. There's also two square-edged light shapes below that same cluster that are definitely not globular in character. In fact they look a little bit like pieces of double-sided tape. Hmmmmm.
But... again, then again... it could be the inside of the head of one of brothers-in law. I've always had my suspicions about the way he thinks.
Ah well, you've promised to tell us so we'll just have to wait. Good luck in the contest.
If you've ever wanted to make a difference but found it hard to believe that one person could... check out the Kiva Team Caedes discussion thread and discover that anything is possible.
Definitely a intermelofractialis, caught in peak season too. But it could use a few of those green round dipludots top left as well just to balance the composition. Great colors.
I much appreciate all the comments I receive about my images, but please excuse me if I don't always reply. My interest in Caedes is exceeding my time available!
Thanks one and all for voting on my image, and many congratulations to the other finalists and especially the overall winner! Okay, my image is.... the inside of a giant walk-in model of a human cell. You can see the endoplasmic reticulum in blue and some organelles in other colours embedded in the cell wall. The model is on display in a museum in Hamburg, Germany (where, incidentally, photography was freely permitted). So now you know! But I am impressed with the ingenuity of the other suggestions.
I much appreciate all the comments I receive about my images, but please excuse me if I don't always reply. My interest in Caedes is exceeding my time available!
My thanks to all who leave comments for my work and to those of you who like one enough to make it a favourite. To touch just one person that way makes each image worthwhile. . . . . . . . . .. . . . "The question is not what you look at, but what you see" ~ Marcel Proust
People aren't going to remember the things you do. They're going to remember how you made people feel. Be kind, gracious, and appreciative. Dan Winters - Photographer.
Yours always optimistic SAM