This page is intended to provide simple links to some of my photographs and movies. You may view them but not use or copy them - I reserve copyright.
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| The London Eye and Dali Exhibition |
20071225 - A Journey on the M40
My first YouTube video: Exterminate! Daleks invade Shropshire
Aerial Photography and Google Earth
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| This site contains a huge number of pictures, many of which are to be found at Tight Fit Theatre. The vast majority there and all here were taken by me with a number of different cameras, the images finding their way into my computer by different means. I have placed them on this site in the hope that they may be of interest to, or enjoyed by, others from all over the world. Welcome.Here's the very latest addition by way of a test: stop frame animation (474K). |
Karting
Some photos of the Junior Yamaha 2001 season.
Sunsets for your desktop
Click here to see some sunsets and pick one to use as your "Windows Wallpaper". Instructions.
Stereoscopy
Click here to see a stereoscopic image of our garden with your own eyes and a piece of paper!
Panoramas
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![]() My backdrop image. A view from Chinnor Hill (1360 x 1024 95% Jpeg, 268k) |
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Instructions - making wallpaper
If you have a Windows 'Pee Sea' and want to use one of the images you find here as your desktop 'Wallpaper' then all you have to do is find the image you want and it should be displayed in your browser's window. Click on the image with the right button and there should be a menu option 'Make Wallpaper'. If you have RISC OS, click 'Menu' over the picture and save the image as a sprite to somewhere convenient. Drag the file to the Pinboard and from its menu, choose 'make backdrop'.
I have written a few simple routines which allow a number of images to be carouselled on the RISC OS desktop. Tell me if you want to know how to do it. (Please use the envelope below to contact me.)
Tip - sending bitmap image files (pictures) as email attachments.
To minimise file transfer time - and your phone bill - when you want to send an image file, try reducing its size first. Open the Image file in a half-decent editor (it doesn't have to be the latest version; often good image editors are given away on magazine cover discs). Try 'Save As' from the 'File' menu. Save as PNG, TIFF or JPEG. With a PNG or TIFF save, make sure it's a 'compressed' format; with a JPEG set the accuracy to 95% or less (75% is about the lowest you should go). Compressed PNGs and TIFFs use loss-less compression: the file can be reproduced /exactly/ as the original. JPEG files use lossy compression: detail is lost with each save though it's often hard to tell. A fax or a scanned document would normally use a loss-less format, photographs can usually lose 'invisible' detail(!) to JPEG compression.
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