Hi, I'm Marilyn. Â I've been posting here on RR for a few years now and thought it was time to update my profile. Â It's been wonderful learning so much from the amazingly talented people here. Â I've had the chance to meet many in person and some have become great and good friends. Â Starting with a Kodak Brownie camera when I was about 7 or 8, moving up to Instamatics, Polaroids, then the Pentax K1000 that really got me on the way, I've been looking at the world thru a lens for a long time. Â Got the bug honestly; my dad was a photographer and gave me the gene!! Â Digital changed the world and I jumped in with both feet. Â You would've gone thru 100's of rolls of film in one day the way we can shoot and delete all day long. Â Progess...it can be awesome sometimes.
At any rate, RR rocks, the talent is over the top and I'm just gonna keep on shooting!!
Thanks for looking and keep those cameras rollin'!!
peace.....marilyn
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Comments (16)
awjay
excellent my friend
durleybeachbum
Quite exciting!
Staticon
This works so well. Its almost a shame you have explained what it really is. I thought the kite was a satelite on a tether of some kind. :-)
bmac62
You reeled me right in with this image...just like your son must have reeled in his kite that day. Striking...what are all those spots in front of my eyes;-)
frankman
the day the earth stood still Great image!!
auntietk
Wow! Way cool!
sharky_
Interesting photo...UFO ;) Aloha
Faemike55
Very cool capture
MrsRatbag
Well done, this is a great image indeed!
bazza
Super cool shot Marilyn!!
Chipka
The funny thing about supernova explosions is that after a bit, they start to form an hourglass shape, with a hula-hoop in the middle, and if you look at this photo, you can actually see where that shape would begin to emerge as the star-gunk blown out into space at near the speed of light would start doing that supernova stuff...and of course, with your son's kite flying just to the left, this has the appearance of really snazzy long-range probe feed, and the kite actually contains a sensor-packet that measures all of the crazy stuff that happens around the expanding, pre-hourglass supernova. And well...as you can tell, this shot has quite an effect on me and I have to say that I love it. The colors are fantastic, and I love the shapes and the wonderful, complex patterns. And now you've got me thinking of supernovae, and intrepid explorers/photographers getting in as close as Nature allows, and then "surfing" the supernova shock front, staying just ahead of all of the stuff that would fry them instantly. Of course, radiation shielding would be pretty high, and that just adds to the excitement. Okay, enough meandering around. I'll shut up now, but before doing that, I'll say one more time that I love this image! It's deliciously spectacular.
angora
wow? awesome!!
jocko500
wonderful looking
evielouise
WHOA``````````````a artist collection maybe??GREAT
wysiwig
Stellar work, Marilyn. Take out the string for the kite and you have a satellite or spacecraft. Darken the sky a bit and suddenly you're in deep space. The dust specs look like stars. Here is my version: http://www.renderosity.com/mod/gallery/index.php?image_id=1933587&user_id=4105&page=19&member&np
danapommet
Amazing what we did with our older cameras.