On Aviation and Photography:
"You haven't seen a tree until you've seen its shadow from the sky." -- Amelia Earhart
“You don't take a photograph, you make it.” - - Ansel Adams
UPDATED: September 19, 2010
Hi, My name is Bill and I am updating my homepage to reflect a wonderful event in my life...marriage, September 18, 2010, to my best friend Tara...known to many of you as auntietk here on Renderosity.
We "met" shortly after I joined Renderosity in August 2008. We share a love for photography and indeed all types of art.
We live north of Seattle and enjoy getting to share photographic excursions and information with other Renderositians ( is "Renderositians" even a word? ). LOL
As for me, it seems like I've been taking pictures all my life but I didn't get serious enough to purchase my first Digital Single Lens Reflex (DSLR) camera until May 2008. In May 2009 I upgraded from an Olympus E-510 to an Olympus E-30 with a wide variety of lenses.
My subject areas of interest include absolutely everything but with a frequent return to airplanes, cars, tanks, etc., ...or as Tara says, machines that make lots of noise;-)
If you are curious, I am pictured above in a Grumman Corsair on a taxiway of the Kansas City Downtown Airport. I used to fly and train others to fly airplanes. That will explain my frequent forays into the world of aviation. Last but by no means least, thanks to Pannyhb for introducing me to Renderosity. The moment I saw it I was hooked.
Fine print: Yes, the photo above is a photo manipulation:-)
Hover over top left image to zoom.
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Comments (11)
Faemike55
very impressive craftsmanship - wonderful art
wysiwig
Magnificent work. On my bucket list.
anahata.c
Yes! We meet Ghiberti again (after Tara's post). You've made this into a fascinating near-abstract---with the doors on one side, and the stark geometric hall-forms on the other. Such an unexpected view! It looks like you brought out the golds so they glow, like they have light in them. So, at the end of this cubist-like walkway, boom: The magnificent Ghibertis. You allowed them to become part of a larger, very modern whole. Very original composition, Bill; and we can see what it must've been like to approach these when they were first displayed. The detail must've dazzled their audience.
(I don't know Topaz, so I don't know how you used it, but whatever you did was subtle and integrated. I seem to be the only person who never got Topaz: Andrea started it, then Tara and Helle, and now it's whispering to me from behind the walls, like an Edgar Allen Poe story, and soon ((soon!)) I'll be consumed in its fiery, icy tentacles...)
helanker
How beautiful. I am glad I also saw one of them closer :) (Am going backward in my comments for a change)
durleybeachbum
Fabulous ! I saw them in Florence, on the last of my weekend breaks about 25 years ago!
jendellas
How beautiful, must be lovely to see.
X-PaX
Very nice capture Bill.
npauling
What magnificent doors these are and the Topaz has really made them glow. One would feel that they really were entering paradise walking through these. A beautiful capture. 😀
RodS
Gorgeous photo of these amazing doors, Bill! So much detail there... It's been too, too long since I've visited the Nelson. Now that I'm retired, I hope to spend some time there.
auntietk
I like the angle of your shot, showing the doors in their space. And of course that polished floor. Love it!
FredNunes
Nicely composed. This is something most would not see. Very artistic shot IMHO