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Photography F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 13 3:04 pm)
These sort of sea creatures are absolutely fascinating and so very beautiful....I wish I could touch and hold them.
I am, therefore I create.......
--- michelleamarante.com
I was able to collect these and a lot more in "Marmaris" and other places close to it during the summer holidays that I was able to have... Marmaris is a touristical and very old town that is situated at the south-west corner of Anatolia, where the Aegean and the Mediterranean coasts of Anatolia (Turkish Republic) meet... Dear Brian, proceed as you please... :) I wonder what you will come up to... Dear Michelle, I can assure you that handling these shells is an amazing experience......yet, stressful a bit as these shells are so very delicate and brittle...
These are amazing, I can see endless images coming out of these. the crop on the left in 3 is a really beautiful image in itself.
"You need chaos in your soul to give birth to a dancing star...." (Nietzsche)
Dear Artemia, even the very first image that I've posted concerning these echinodermal shells was a direct scan...
From my experiences of directly scanning nearly every object that was in my reach and that was suitable to lay on a scanner, I knew that the scanner light provides such fine diffuse lighting, and the effect is even more dramatic when you make your scans against a dark background provided by turning off the lights of the room that you're making the scan...
Rest is ideas, careful placements, and post work (if necessary)...
Well, I hope I didn't disappoint you with the simplicity of the technique that lead to an image that you liked quite much... :-)
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Dear Brian and Michelle asked me about the nature of the shells that I've scanned recently, and here is a brief explanation along with some other scans... I do not know the exact name for the shells that I've scanned, but they are a species from the phylum "echinodermata" that also includes sea potatoes, sea urchins, sea biscuits (Brian says that mine might also be sea biscuits) and sand dollars as shelled creatures, and sea cucumber and starfish as shell-less species... And know, here comes a sea potatoe (heart urchin)...