╰☆☆June☆☆╮'s photos with the keyword: 3D

Believe it or not...

19 Mar 2021 39 27 250
This is a Peony (In 3D ) On Explore, thank you

Confusion now hath made his masterpiece.

16 Oct 2019 29 28 438
Confusion now hath made his masterpiece.......A quote from Shakespeare's Macbeth. 3D ART created with Mirror Lab Pro and Picmonkey ◦•●◉✿ Have a great weekend✿◉●•◦

Saturday Self Challenge 8/9/2018

08 Sep 2018 55 45 536
On Explore...thank you.. This week's challenge is squares and rectangles. This was done in 3 stages. Stage 1. Took a photo of my front door (PIP 1) Stage 2. Cropped to just a rectangle of glass, then made into a cube with my photoshop. (PIP2) Stage 3 Used my other photoshop to make the above.

Comfrey....in the frame

04 Jul 2018 46 29 791
My husband grows Comfrey to make liquid fertilizer. Also the bees absolutely adore it.

"You can do it" Dog agility tunnel in 3D

04 Mar 2016 34 18 993
On Explore...thank you Northern Soul - KIM WESTON - You Can Do It youtu.be/RbmMvQJKCuE ................................................. ♫ ♫ ♫ ♫ ♫

Fractal art

Topsy turvy seasons

24 Feb 2016 32 16 999
On Explore, thank you.... Original photo www.ipernity.com/doc/june_antill/19877839/in/album/206635 2 very different tunes for you... ❀✿❀ Topsy-Turvy - The Mikado - Timothy Spall youtu.be/KbE0wZaXiLI

The Black Hole fractal

06 Feb 2015 30 17 1073
On Explore, thank you... Just experimenting with a 3D fractal

Raspberry pie in the sky

20 Dec 2013 28 20 1752
On Explore...Thank you very much ;-) My pink planet fractal ;-) Using the Mandelbrot method. The mathematical roots of the idea of fractals have been traced through a formal path of published works, starting in the 17th century with notions of recursion, then moving through increasingly rigorous mathematical treatment of the concept to the study of continuous but not differentiable functions in the 19th century, and on to the coining of the word fractal in the 20th century with a subsequent burgeoning of interest in fractals and computer-based modelling in the 21st century. The term "fractal" was first used by mathematician Benoît Mandelbrot in 1975. Mandelbrot based it on the Latin frāctus meaning "broken" or "fractured", and used it to extend the concept of theoretical fractional dimensions to geometric patterns in nature. Gustav Holst..........The Planets youtu.be/Nz0b4STz1lo