Photo Contest - Into The Great Wide Open (4/4-4/10)

  • Thread starter Thread starter ZapperZ
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    photo contest
Click For Summary
SUMMARY

The "Into The Great Wide Open" photo contest invites participants to submit one digital photo that captures the essence of expansive outdoor spaces. Contest rules specify that submissions must be original photographs taken by the member, with a maximum file size of 1 MB recommended for optimal display. Photos can be uploaded to platforms like Imageshack or Photobucket, or directly to PhysicsForums. Voting will occur at the end of the contest, with the possibility of multiple polling threads if entries exceed a certain number.

PREREQUISITES
  • Familiarity with digital photography techniques
  • Understanding of photo editing tools for resizing images
  • Knowledge of online photo hosting services like Imageshack or Photobucket
  • Awareness of contest rules and submission guidelines
NEXT STEPS
  • Research best practices for digital photo composition
  • Learn how to use photo editing software for resizing images
  • Explore various online platforms for photo hosting and sharing
  • Investigate techniques for capturing expansive landscapes in photography
USEFUL FOR

Photography enthusiasts, amateur photographers, and anyone interested in participating in online photo contests will benefit from this discussion.

ZapperZ
Staff Emeritus
Science Advisor
Homework Helper
Insights Author
Messages
32,812
Reaction score
4,723
Into The Great Wide Open

This week's theme is the complete opposite of last week's Shelter in Place. This week, we are focusing on the great expanse of outdoor space. Show us a great, wide-open space of the outdoors where it feels as if you can now breath and no longer feel confined.

Contest Rules:

1. Any digital photo or digitally-scanned photo relevant to the theme will be accepted within the contest period. In case there's a gray area, or you're not sure if the picture is suitable, check with me first.

2. Size limitations: Your photo is only limited to the file size limitation set by PhysicsForums. However, your may want to consider reducing the size of your photo if the file size exceeds 1 Mb. If your file is being hosted elsewhere, I will have to see how it is being displayed here, and I may ask you to resize and resubmit if it causes problems.

3. Upload your photos to any of the photo servers such as imageshack or photobucket. Then post it the relevant contest thread and link your picture using the img command. PM me if you do not know how. Alternatively, you may simply upload your image file to PF, and then have the full image displayed in your post.

4. Only ONE picture per member per contest. Once a picture is posted, it cannot be changed other than a total withdrawal by that member from that week's photo contest. Exceptions will be made for modification to comply with the rules, such as resizing.

5. At the end of the contest period, I will open a poll and every PF member can vote for the picture they like best.

6. Note that in case we have a large number of entries, I will do the polling in more than one thread. If that's the case, you can vote in each of the polling threads. The photos will be assigned in the polling threads in the order they were submitted.

7. The photo of the subject must be something that you took directly, not via in intermediary medium, and not taken by someone else. Unless otherwise noted, a photo of another photo, painting, print, etc. does not qualify.

8. You can use a picture only once. Once it is used in a contest, it cannot be reused in another contest.

9. Please post only pictures meant for submission in this thread. Photos not meant for submission must not be posted in the contest thread. Posting of more than one photos by a member may result in an automatic disqualification from the week's contest.

Zz.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: JD_PM
Physics news on Phys.org
monumentvalley2.jpg


Looking south along US-163 in Utah, on the way to Monument Valley.

[added] Upon looking at Google Maps just now, I discovered that this vantage point is known as "Forrest Gump Hill." I'm embarrassed to admit that I've never seen that movie. :sorry:
 
Last edited:
  • Like
  • Love
Likes   Reactions: Mondayman, phinds, DrClaude and 8 others
Palo Duro Canyon State Park, Canyon, TX

Wide open - 1.jpg
 
  • Like
  • Wow
Likes   Reactions: Mondayman, berkeman, Klystron and 5 others
3N3A1778.jpg

View from Holmenkollen, Oslo.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: Mondayman, Klystron, JD_PM and 5 others
marzena_wide_open.JPG
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: Klystron, Rubidium_71, BillTre and 1 other person
lekh2003 said:
Holmenkollen, Oslo.
It looks like that area has developed a lot since I was there 42 years ago. My picture from what is probably the same location shows mostly forest.
 
open space.jpg
 
  • Like
  • Love
Likes   Reactions: fresh_42, BillTre, Klystron and 1 other person
IMG_20170126_133205001.jpg


Claustrophobia en plein air.​

Northern edge of Red Rock Canyon, Nevada. The conex holds archery targets for disabled schoolchildren. The cactus and Joshua trees are indigenous to the high desert. I snapped a series of pictures turning around at the target range for disabled at DSRPC.
 
  • Like
  • Love
Likes   Reactions: Rubidium_71, morrobay, davenn and 2 others
DSCF3910 50pc.jpg

Taken from the coastal mountain range in Chile, looking east towards the Andes. That's mist and low cloud in the valley between.
 
  • Like
  • Wow
Likes   Reactions: Mondayman, mathwonk, jtbell and 4 others
  • #10
From the tram on Mount Roberts in Juneau, Alaska.

DSCN5109.JPG

Zz.
 
  • Like
  • Wow
Likes   Reactions: davenn, Klystron, Rubidium_71 and 3 others
  • #11
Helping @morrobay again this week to post his entry, since his Internet connection is hindered right now with the COVID-19 measures in his area of the world:

morrobay said:
Jomtien Beach
Jomtien Beach from MorroBay.jpg
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: davenn and BillTre
  • #12
jtbell said:
It looks like that area has developed a lot since I was there 42 years ago. My picture from what is probably the same location shows mostly forest.
Well, definitely. I also feel that Norway simply didn't have the resources or technology back then to actually build significantly into such a steep incline. But of course, finding oil changes things :P

Also 42 years ago, that's impressively long ago, before even my parents were born.
 
  • Informative
Likes   Reactions: Klystron
  • #13
kuruman said:
Palo Duro Canyon State Park, Canyon, TX
{...snip}
Palo Duro Canyon was famous in song and story even before Texas became part of the United States. The canyon figures heavily in Larry McMurtry's prequel novels to Lonesome Dove. The Comanche hunt game and graze their horses in the canyon. The Texas Rangers scout the Comanche and hide in the canyon cliffs.

Before the Comanche, Kiowa and Kickapoo tribes; long before the Spanish arrived; First Peoples hunted the abundant game animals also leaving their mark in the Palo Duro.
 
  • Informative
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: kuruman and berkeman
  • #14
ZapperZ said:
From the tram on Mount Roberts in Juneau, Alaska.

That's very familiar. Really enjoyed our cruise stop there last year
 
  • #15
49747736693_4beee51578_b_d.jpg
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: Mondayman, davenn, Klystron and 3 others
  • #16
dsc00027.jpg
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: Mondayman, davenn, Klystron and 2 others
  • #17
mt. jupiter evening.jpeg

Olympic peninsula seen over Hood canal.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: Mondayman, rsk, davenn and 4 others
  • #18
mathwonk said:
Olympic peninsula seen over Hood canal.
Very welcome soothing image. Thank you. :smile:
 
  • #19
I am glad you liked it. I feel the same. That sight makes me think of Psalm 121: "I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence comes my help..."
 
  • #20
I grew up on the Great Plains, so I'm used to open space. But the great expanse of the Pacific Ocean was something else.
IMG_0929.JPG
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: morrobay, Klystron, berkeman and 5 others
  • #21
I remember a long discussion years ago, perhaps on PF, as to the perceptible differences between still photos of sunset on the West Coast versus morning on the East Coast. Artists described differences in hue, intensity, glow and many other painterly terms. Physics and EM folk agreed on the differences, citing temperature and atmospheric gradients of volume, moisture, mixing, etc. underlying the exquisite colors and shapes.

Notice the distinctive purple cylindrical cloud to the far right. I often reproduce such clouds in my sunset seascape paintings to the consternation of some viewers unaware of these backlit dense extended shapes.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: Mondayman
  • #22
Mondayman said:
I grew up on the Great Plains, so I'm used to open space. But the great expanse of the Pacific Ocean was something else.View attachment 260276
The Pacific is amazing. The noise of it is just so powerful, that roar, unlike any other sea/ocean I've experienced.
(I'm not near the Pacific normally, just happened to spend a couple of years in a country with a pacific coast. Unforgettable and I miss that noise.)
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: Klystron and Mondayman
  • #23
Klystron said:
I remember a long discussion years ago, perhaps on PF, as to the perceptible differences between still photos of sunset on the West Coast versus morning on the East Coast. Artists described differences in hue, intensity, glow and many other painterly terms. Physics and EM folk agreed on the differences, citing temperature and atmospheric gradients of volume, moisture, mixing, etc. underlying the exquisite colors and shapes.

Notice the distinctive purple cylindrical cloud to the far right. I often reproduce such clouds in my sunset seascape paintings to the consternation of some viewers unaware of these backlit dense extended shapes.
I have a whole roll of photos of the sunset that night. The sky was blue with dark clouds; the sun broke through and shone a great bright yellow across the bottoms of the clouds. As the sun disappeared the sky turned purple, with a beautiful red reflecting across the water. It was incredible to watch, right next to seeing the northern lights in North Alberta. I wish I could submit all the photos.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: BillTre
  • #24
Final day to submit your photo for this contest.

Zz.
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 9 ·
Replies
9
Views
2K
Replies
11
Views
2K
  • · Replies 12 ·
Replies
12
Views
2K
  • · Replies 14 ·
Replies
14
Views
2K
  • · Replies 21 ·
Replies
21
Views
3K
  • · Replies 10 ·
Replies
10
Views
2K
  • · Replies 13 ·
Replies
13
Views
2K
  • · Replies 12 ·
Replies
12
Views
2K
  • · Replies 20 ·
Replies
20
Views
2K
  • · Replies 31 ·
2
Replies
31
Views
5K