Thanks Sasha for viewing and commenting on my Under the Dock 3 photo. I'm sorry but this picture has no bubbles. It's a barnacle encrusted piling with rusty bolts.
Russ
Thanks Sasha for your comments on «Tubular bells».
In fact i don´t work very well with photoshop, i only work a litle bit with Paint Shop Pro.
I am not a master neather photo nor computers.
Thanks again for your comments and welcome to my galery on Caedes.
César
"The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts." Bertrand Russell
"What other reason could there be to get up in the morning except to set ourselves free."
If my comment on your work ever seems to criticise, it does not. It is always so that we may learn together.
Thanks Sasha for your comment on Writers Block... im glad you liked it.. i really did have writers block.. i was working on something for my dad and was completly blank.. so i messed around with this fractal... so this is the end product and the end to the Block that I had.. lol
Thanks for the comment on "falling up" I appreicate it and glad you liked it. And no I haven't heard of that person ..sorry )-: Thanks for the comment.
-Graceless intrusion...
Are you sanctified in your
judgment of me?
-Someone else's fate
We are deciding (abortion)
-I can see much clearor now I that I'm blind
-I used to think death was the end
-John Petrucci ...†Carpe Diem†...
My lonely image: The Eye of the Beholder's Cousin
Hello Sasha. You are correct about "What the World Needs Now"; it is in the LDS Temple Visitors Center in Salt Lake. I also found it very interesting about the statue in Europe. It seems that maybe the message is indeed relevant to us. Thank you very much for your comments.
Thanks Sasha for the nice comments on my Peppers photo. I washed the peppers before taking the pictures and didn't dry them off. They tasted as good as they looked.
Russ
Thank you Sasha for viewing and posting the nice comments on my Otter Creek 2 photo. The original slides are far superior to this upload. It lost alot in the scanning process. See my Otter Creek1 photo. It has a little better lighting.
Russ
Tks Sasha for your comments on For Signpainter. Glad to hear from you. This was taken a long time ago, and I agree that the clarity isn't as great as it could be.
JuneBug
Hey Sasha, Thanks for your comments on Rose, and the rest of my work! You have got some cool stuff going too! Have a great day, and keep up the good work.
Sasha, thanks for the comments on Buttermilk 2 and Caedes Waiting. By the way, I love your tag line on ego and stupidity. Wonderfully perceptive and right on target!
Hi, Sasha. Nice of you to comment on "Black & pink" and "My trains delayed". Black & pink is definitively a real picture, somwhat modified in Photoshop. The sky turned from grey-white to pink-white And the oak boughes just darkened a bit (they where almost black). I still think the pic stands out among others. What do you feel about pictures like "Chain", "Furrows" and "Mossy green roots"? Hope to "hear" from you later on. / Arne
I'm glad you liked my black and white magnolia image, Accidental Beauty. Magnolias in the southern U.S. are pretty common, and I've always taken them for granted, but since I shot this image I've quite fallen in love with them. I'm glad you like them too.
"Let a man listen to his dream so he may hear the story of all men and let him say as he did
when he was a child: this is true; it does not matter what they tell me."
-William Wantling
Thank you Sasha for your comments on "White Caps" and "Fountain & Flowers" I'm glad you liked them. It's good to know I'm not the only one with airplane window problems ;-D
Hi Sasha! Thanks for taking time to comment on some of the works in my gallery. You asked how Rachael did the dark background on "Enhantress." It is all shaded in with pencil, then she took a kneaded eraser and pulled out the highlights of the trees and branches. Have a great day.
Hey Sasha...thanks alot for stopping by to see A Very Cool Patio...yes, you're right..snow can give us some unusual images at times...sometimes it's very pretty and sometimes it's just plain sloppy...thanks again. : Pat.
Hi Sasha , nice of you to comment my ice princess. There is a difference in the tone, but I don´t find that difference irritating. I did not excpect to make the bronze statue look like a living girl in your age. I imagine her skating on an ice in a park partly lit up from the right and the light on her make that difference. Maybe it´s possible to make some more work on it..I would appreciate any suggestion from you, Sasha. Thanks.
But words are things, and a small drop of ink, falling, like dew, upon a thought produces that which makes thousands, perhaps millions think and smile.
Art is everywhere, except it has to pass through a creative mind.
"The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts." Bertrand Russell
Thank you Sasha for viewing my Mystery image and posting a comment. The secret is that it is India ink dropped into a fish tank filled with water with the lighting on the background paper. The image was in B&W and was scanned into Photoshop, rotated 180 degrees, given a sandstone texture and added some color.
Russ
Hello Sasha. Thanks for your lovely comments on "Making Ready". I'm pleased you liked it.
The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and all science. He to whom this emotion is a stranger, who can no longer pause to wonder and stand rapt in awe, is as good as dead: his eyes are closed.
Albert Einstein
But words are things, and a small drop of ink, falling, like dew, upon a thought produces that which makes thousands, perhaps millions think and smile.
Art is everywhere, except it has to pass through a creative mind.
About "Tile-Infinite"... Gosh, I don't really know how I got it to look that way. I just constantly tinker with the colors, filters, and zoom until I find something that catches my eye. I save the picture, and close FE. I think it's kind of neat how each one of them is unique like that -- much like a fingerprint. Keep plugging away at it; you've already got a very nice collection of pics, so you know as much as I do about FE. Hope to see some more from you! -Mikey
Thank-you for your kind comments on Nucleus of Life and what a compliment you gave me on 'View From A Room' - I really appreciate your input, and generosity.
Thank you for commenting on Youghiogheny Falls. Much appreciated.
(The name, I'm assuming, is from an Indian tribe that had lived around here -- just like Allegheny and so on. It's actually pronounced "Yok-a-gain-ee.")
Thanks for the kinds words on Another Cheetah Shot. I agree the jeep was in the way but my son was leaning out of the car window to get the shots he got before the beautiful animal walked away. He did get a good one as it walked into the veld think I called that one Cheetah :) Auline
Hello Sasha. Thanks for leaving your idea about Spillway Fowl. I tried adjusting the gamma as you suggested, and the photo details came out a lot more clearly. What I was after with the dark look was what Pierre mentioned - the "Contre-Jour" effect. I can see your point, though that it is too dark. Hmmmm... I'll work on it.
Thanks Sasha for your comment on Turtle Circle. The happy face just kind of happened on this one. Sometimes I am zoomed in close and don't realize what the image is turning out to be.
Thanks for your input on my image, "Water Droplit on Aspen Leaf" Since you are the second to express a view about the left side of the image I think that I will have to rework it and see if I am happier with it.
Bob
Very nice of you Sasha to viewv this almost forgotten picture of mine (Jasmine flowers) You flatter me..! Did you feel that wonderful jasmine scent...lol..? I actually made a rework on this picture a few days ago , to brighten it up a bit. Don´t know if I will post it. Seems that it isn´t neccesary after your coment, Sasha, thanks.
Hey there! Thank-you for your lovely comments on "Hexafield" - I'm glad you noticed the water drops, this image is actually 3D modelled to get that effect. I also loved your description of 'Milly' - very fitting, Mystic! I like it, cheers.
thanks for commenting on snow dune. yes it was really grainy, and cold (-35 c) and windy. i like the curve aswell, but i dont so much like the grain of the snow as it kindof distracts
Hey Sasha, thank you for the great words and the outstanding high vote on; 'Collourfull'. It's really appreciated and it's a realy honour. And ofcourse I don't mind it you use this picture for your own personal use! And it will be a great honour if it's hanging in your bedroom... I don't know what to say, just; Thank you!
Thanks Sasha! I'm glad that you found my Playground Climber interesting. Thanks for your nice comments. I was just trying out my new camera and its features.
Russ
Thanks, Sasha, for chacking out and commenting on "Fairy Flame". I'm glad you like the image and am curious to know if you have specific suggestions about adding detail to the edges. My ears are open. :)
Sasha, thanks again for checking out "Beauty at the Center". I took another picture of a different lily at the other end of this pond - it's a little other worldly as the water looks like gray froth and the lily is purple. Perhaps I'll post that one as well...
"What other reason could there be to get up in the morning except to set ourselves free."
If my comment on your work ever seems to criticise, it does not. It is always so that we may learn together.
I´m pleased to see you found my baket with delicious Säfstaholm apples, Sasha! I have several shots of it, but I guess it´s a good composition with the colors of the apples also on the door and wall. Thanks for your comment.
thanks sasha for the second look, i do this all the time on this website and others, sometimes you have to look more than twice to get the click of the camera, hago...
Photography is not a trade - it is an art. It is more that an art.
It is a solar phenomenon,
where the artist collaborates with the sun.
deLamartine 1855
Thank you immensely for your thoughtful comment on "Beautiful Weed." I am honored that you gave it a perfect score... I'll upload some more from that same shoot, others were quite good as well. Thanks again. :)
Hey Sashs cool railroad tracks. lol But thanks for your comments on This is a flower, I know Ramen noodles my wife eats them three times a week. Have a good day. Dwight.
"Once you have heard the lark, known the swish of feet through hill-top grass and smelt the earth made ready for the seed, you are never again going to be fully happy about the cities and towns that man carries like a crippling weight upon his back."
- Gwyn Thomas
Hello Sasha, you are right, the resoloution was not great with that image, but it was taken from inside the van with a digital zoom, most images weren't superb. Thank you for your comments on Who Goes There? Much appreciated, I am going to see about a rework for him.
JuneBug
Hey Sasha, thanx for your funny comment on Dreamcatcher
you have so many people thanking you for commenting, it took me almost forevr (jk) to get down to write my own thanx!
Thanks again.
Sasha, your comment on "Introducing Miss Poppy" meant alot to me. Thanks very much! ;) I appreciate that you acknowleged jmar's original photo as well. ;)
Thank you for the comments on "Inspired," the little rural chapel in Oregon. The thought occurred to me too - how many fried chicken/potato salad Sunday afternoon socials took place on that lawn; how many weddings, how many final goodbyes. A lot of history there... Steve
There's an emptiness inside her and she'd do anything to fill it in. Though it's red blood bleeding from her now, it's more like cold blue ice in her heart. She feels like kicking out all the windows and setting fire to this life. She could change everything about her using colors bold and bright, but all the colors mix together...to grey. ~*DaveMatthewsBand*~
Hi Sasha, and thank you for your comments on "False Spring" and "Passionate couple" - it's always a pleasure to share with such appreciative people :-)
I hold it true that thoughts are things; They're endowed with bodies, breath and wings:
And that we send them forth to fill the world with good results, or ill.
That which we call our secret thought speeds forth to earth's remotest spot, leaving it's blessings or it's woes like tracks behind it as it goes.
We build our future, thought by thought for good or for ill, yet know it not.
Yet so the universe was wrought .
Thought is another name for fate.
Choose then thy destiny and wait, for Love brings Love and Hate brings Hate. - Henry Van Dyke.
Hi, thanks for comments on Hair Lights. The sun can make nice high lights in peoples hair but I guess it's abit silly for wallpaper, but thanks for looking.
Hello Sasha, so nice to hear from you again. I know what you mean about the importance of the negative space in an image. Tks for your comments on What Lurks in the Darkness!
Much appreciated.
JuneBug
Hi again, Sasha ! I´m happy to see your nice icon on two of my orchid shots. Number 7 is the most striking one, I agree. B.J did a great job with some of them too. I`m pleased to see you enjoy this series. Thanks!
hey Sasha.. thnx for the comment on Collumbined Ver 2.. there are actually 5 versions ive done of this particular image :).. lemme know if youd like to see any of the others..
It was very kind of you to leave such a nice compliment on "Collaboration - Spring Desktop 2." Morwyn and I thank you. I hope you are having a nice day, my friend.
Thank you Sasha for viewing my Mystery image and posting a comment. The secret is that it is India ink dropped into a fish tank filled with water with the lighting on the background paper. The image was in B&W and was scanned into Photoshop, rotated 180 degrees, given a sandstone texture and added some color.
Russ
"Anything that excites me for any reason, I will photograph; not searching for unusual subject matter, but making the commonplace unusual."
Edward Weston
Hi Sasha,
Thanks for yor lovely comments on my Enchantress drawing (in nmsmith's gallery) Its the picture of a woman in a flowing dress holding a lantern in front of a very full moon. You asked if the background was actually all shaded in. Yes, it is. All graphite pencil...a 6B, I think. I can tell you this... when I was done I actually had a large blister under the writer's callus on my right had because of all the pressure I had to use. Again, thank you.
Rachael Smith (aka Lokie)
"Beauty is in the eye of the beholder."
"Doubt that the stars are fire, doubt that the sun doth move, doubt truth to be a liar, but never doubt I love. " ~Shakespeare (Hamlet)
Thanks for commenting upon Poppies to be. I took a peek at your poppy bud and .. yes .. I will have to try another shot when there is some variation in the background colour. I also want to get the blooms themselves and am bracing for the challenge of those reds ...
Hello Sasha, Thanks very much for the kind comments on "Floating Beauty"... I'm very glad you like it. I liked the shadow too, strange, isn't it? Thanks again :)
~*~Therese~*~
Hi there Sasha ! Thanks bunches for stopping by Nursery Rhyme & leaving such great comments there. I really appreciated it & I'm so glad you liked it !
Lauren
hello Sasha, thanks you very much for such a comprehensive comment on London Revisited: peace and quiet. i'm happy to have found out what you think about the shot and that you liked most of it. thanks a lot again!