Twilight Photos
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rodzep posted a photo:

Taken by: Ma. José Arduengo
Megan_Christine posted a photo:

November 19, 2009.
Yeah, I'm one of those crazy teens that's obsessed with Twilight.
Jin Elfan posted a photo:

I won’t soothe your pain
I won’t ease your strain
You’ll be waiting in vain
I got nothing for you to gain
kern.justin posted a photo:

View Large on Black at www.thewindypixel.com!
With the exception of a morning trip to the Chicago Botanical Gardens, (here, here and here), I’ve not been able to collect many new photographs over the past few months. My posts here on tWp have relied primarily upon older, archived photographs. I made it out yesterday morning with Mike to do some photography for one of the first times in months. The twilight and sunrise were beautiful, and followed by the requisite coffee.
This photograph was taken in some (forgive my crassness) urine-smelling alley on Goose Island. It isn’t the pine-perfumed pristine mountain sides of Montana, but it’s good to be out there in the elements shooting again. As you can tell, the gradient of rosy sunrise made for such a dramatic moment.
kern.justin posted a photo:

View Large on Black at www.thewindypixel.com!
As I’ve mentioned before, taking a photograph of the Chicago skyline from the planetarium can be low-hanging fruit. There are a million of these panoramas out there, and it’s hard to compete with the greats. I posted one panorama very early on in this blog’s existence that I was pretty pleased with. I also feel that this one has its charms. It was taken on a warm summer night out on the Adler Planetarium’s campus. Compare the warm feel of this one to the chilly world of “Chicago the Graphic Novel.” Now that the cold November air has begun to pour in from the great white north, I remember fondly the feeling of the warm summer breeze out by the lake. The sea wall surrounding Adler is understandably busy during the summer months, the whole city stretched out before you, the water lapping at the cement, it’s a great place for a reflection.
This image was taken with an 85mm lens and stitched together from about eight separate frames to produce this panorama. The image is large enough that I had to compress it just to fit it on flickr :) . Click on the image below to go to my flickr page and then click on “All Sizes” above the image to see it in its full resolution – TONS of detail!
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