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Blanche Bunnell

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Aug 5, 2024, 2:31:12 AM8/5/24
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PlanetPhoto is a boutique photography studio in beautiful Litchfield County, specializing in editorial style portraits of high school seniors, teens and contemporary magazine style portraits of men and women. Planet Photo can assist you with personal branding images and headshots for solo entrepreneurs or small businesses.

Janet will help you style and plan your unique portrait photography session. We can shoot on location around Litchfield or Fairfield County or in our well equipped studio in beautiful New Milford, CT. Updating portraits can be a daunting process for some, but Janet will guide you every step of the way.


Are you in high school and feel like you have something to share? Are you outgoing, fun, and do you want to influence the people around you to be better people? Do you want to be part of the conversation? Your voice can be heard locally and nationally through our regular group and concept shoots.


I have always been interested in documenting spontaneous moments of everyday life, no matter where I am. Combining my vision as a fine art photographer with my instincts as an experienced photojournalist, my aim is to create images that will transport you geographically, move you emotionally, and honor the rich and diverse tapestry that is our small planet.


A Photo booth rental will delight your guests. Your goal is to throw a party they will never forget. At Photobooth Planet, our mission is to create and capture memories that you and your guests will enjoy for a life time.


After twelve years in business, we have provided photo booth rentals for thousands of weddings, birthday parties, and corporate events. Our special sauce is in offering visually-appealing, one-of-a-kind photo booths that will enhance your unique vision and set your event apart.


Wedding photo booth rental is our specialty at Photo Booth Planet. We offer a photo booth for almost any size celebration. Our open-air photo booth rental makes for fun group shots. Our enclosed, classic booths have more of an intimate and nostalgic vibe, and our antique VW Photo Booth buses are in a class of their own.


Polar Coordinates will wrap your image around a focal point on the top center point of the image. You can see the line created in the center of the image is where the two edges of the photo line up. One way of fixing this is to take a panoramic photo, mirror it horizontally, and then perform the steps above. That way you will get a symmetrical planet.


Below is a photo I took with my Nexus 4 using photosphere, and then turned into a tiny planet in Photoshop. The gif shows you how I fix stitching mistakes, add highlights, shadows, and some overall touch-ups.


The CIFOR-ICRAF photo competition welcomes participants aged 18 or older. You are encouraged to use the photography equipment with which you are most comfortable. Employees of CIFOR-ICRAF are not eligible to enter.


Competition organizers reserve the right to use all photos submitted through the competition for CIFOR-ICRAF materials and exhibitions during CIFOR-ICRAF events. Contributors will be given credit when the organizers publish or use their pictures. Contributors do not have permission to use the photos they submitted for commercial purposes.


CIFOR-ICRAF retains the exclusive right to determine the eligibility of entries. CIFOR-ICRAF also reserves the right to disqualify contestants in the case of suspicious activity throughout the voting period. Fraudulent activities will be monitored and may result in exclusion.


All entries will be reviewed by a panel of judges selected by the CIFOR-ICRAF team, who will select at least 30 photos from all eligible submissions received during the competition period. Finalists will be chosen based on the following criteria:


Look no further than the amazing winners and finalists of the 2022 CIFOR-ICRAF Photo Competition. These talented photographers captured the beauty and significance of forests in unique and inspiring ways, showing us all just how to protect their richness through the power of photography.


The world is an interesting place, and we all have something to say about it. Some of us write, paint, sculpt, construct, speak, shout, sing, dance, draw, film, or photograph about our world and our place in it. Photography can be your voice, it can be your relaxation, it can be your key to exploration, it can be your career.


21_21 DESIGN SIGHT holds an exhibition, "NEW PLANET PHOTO CITY - William Klein and Photographers Living in the 22nd Century -" from February 23, 2018. We welcome the photography critic and art historian, Toshiharu Ito, as the exhibition director. Ito is the author of many books about photos and art and he has also worked on the planning of exhibitions.


It will soon be two centuries since photography was invented. An astronomical number of photos have been produced in this period of nearly 200 years, along with innovations in technology and networks, drastic changes have occurred in their forms of expression, their production techniques, and the relationship between the creator and the recipient.


Leading 20th century photographer William Klein had a decisive influence on modern visual culture with his expression that went beyond genres such as photography, movies, design and fashion, and his works capturing the cities of the world, including New York, Rome, Moscow, Tokyo, Paris, etc.


In this exhibition, we introduce the city vision of Klein by a multi-projection, and the Japanese and Asian photographers trying to examine the cities and people of the 21st century with a fresh perspective and greatly transcend the frames of conventional photos. Please take a look at this new adventure in visual communication which attempts to depict the heartbeat of future photo cities toward the 22nd century.


To enter the competition, please review the full competition rules, simply upload photos through the reporting tool [accessible from your MySCP dashboard which you see in the upper right of the screen] with the full name of the photographer, their e-mail and a caption that describes the image (i.e. location, name(s) of individuals depicted, description of the activity, etc.)


A minimum of 7 winning photographs will be selected. Depending on the number and quality of the images received, additional winners may be selected. Both shortlisted and winning photos are likely to be considered for future One Planet network publications and awareness-raising campaigns.


"These discs around young stars are the birthplaces of planets, but so far only a handful of observations have detected hints of baby planets in them," said Miriam Keppler of the Max Planck Institute in a statement.


The star has been named PDS 70, with its corresponding new planet dubbed PDS 70b. In the image, the planet is shown to the right of the dark center of the image as a bright point, said astronomers. The center of the image contains a coronagraph which blocks the bright light of the central star.


An analysis shows PDS 70b is a giant gas planet with a mass a few times larger than Jupiter. The planet has a surface temperature of around 1000C. By comparison, the hottest planet in our solar system, Venus, reaches a temperature of 462C.


Panoramas are one of my favourite ways to show off a scene. They contain so much interest and detail that they practically beg you to explore them. This little tip adds an extra pinch of creativity, turning standard panoramas into miniature planets that really have the "wow" factor.


The technical name for this technique is "stereographic projection" but don't let the name put you off - it's very simple to do and only takes 5 minutes. I'll be using Photoshop in this example but you can do it in most graphics programs, including GIMP, which is free.


The viewing angle - 360 degree panoramas work best because their edges line up perfectly, making for a seamless planet photo. Narrower angles can work but you might need to do some work to match colours and textures where the edges meet.


Image width - The aspect ratio (width divided by height) of your photo affects how smooth the planet looks. Wider images tend to produce smoother planet surfaces, while narrower panoramas give more height variation. Both can look great.


The ground - The bottom of your photo will be squashed together to form the centre of the planet, and this can lead to some extreme distortion. As with the sky, a flat colour or simple texture such as grass, sand or water looks best.


This might sound like a lot of criteria to meet, but you'll find that the majority of panoramas will be suitable. If in doubt, give it a go - breaking the above "rules" can sometimes lead to weird and wonderful effects that you wouldn't have got otherwise, so don't be afraid to experiment.


If you're struggling to find a suitable photo then there tons freely available under the Creative Commons licence, such as this selection on Flickr. I'll be using the following photo which you can download here if you want to follow along.


If you'd prefer your planet to be a different way round, now is the time to rotate it. This will leave white corners, but you can fill those with the same colour you used for the gradient. Re-crop your image and you're done!


Creating little planet photos is extremely easy once you get the hang of it. You can produce some fantastic effects by experimenting, so don't feel you have to stick rigidly to the above instructions. If you come across any interesting variations then please share them in the comments.


It's the second image of Uranus that the JWST has captured this year. The first, released in April, was a two-toned affair composed of imagery captured at infrared wavelengths of 1.4 and 3.0 microns. This new image adds extra wavelengths, specifically 2.1 and 4.6 microns, to give a much more complete overview of the seventh planet from the sun.


The new JWST Uranus image doesn't just show the planet, however. Uranus' aforementioned rings shine bright in infrared light, and the JWST's optics have even resolved the elusive, diffuse inner Zeta-ring. Many of Uranus' 27 moons are also on display; the cropped view shows some of Uranus' smaller, fainter moons including some embedded within the rings, while the wider view shows Uranus' five large moons: Ariel, Miranda, Oberon, Titania and Umbriel.

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