Photoshop Kelly Naylor Photoshop Kelly Naylor

The Tao of Max


The Tao of Max © Kelly Naylor 2008

The Tao of Max © Kelly Naylor 2008

Max was my daughter's dog. He was born the same year she was, and came to live with us when they were both 5 years old. He lived to be 15, which apparently is a really long life for a Sheltie. And up until the last week or so, he still thought he was a puppy. While he was still with us, it used to crack my daughter up with I would do crazy Photoshop things to his pictures. (Personally, I think the Photoshopped wackiness with the cats was even more hysterical, but that's just me.) I like this particular manipulation because it's calm. And Max wasn't generally calm. The juxtaposition pleases me.

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Photoshop Kelly Naylor Photoshop Kelly Naylor

Sisters


Sisters © Kelly Naylor 2007

Sisters © Kelly Naylor 2007

Digital space art... because I can't go there (wherever there is) and take a photograph. Sister planets around a star... maybe it's Vulcan and T'Kuht, out in the 40 Eridani system. Sure! I can say it's whatever I want, right? So, I present to you the first photograph of the planet Vulcan, and its sister planet, T'Kuht. (All hail the Great Roddenberry and Bjo Trimble.)

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Photoshop, Collage Kelly Naylor Photoshop, Collage Kelly Naylor

Cat on Zorbis


Cat on Zorbis © Kelly Naylor 2007

Cat on Zorbis © Kelly Naylor 2007

This is a digital collage, something else that is a whole lot of fun. I don't take as much time to have Photoshop fun as I used too. I think I will make time for that. This picture just plain makes me happy.

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Fractals are one of my several obsessions.  It pleases me to share them with you.


Colors, Shapes, Infinity

Benoit Mandelbrot...

coined the term "fractal" in 1975.

Many important spatial patterns of Nature are either irregular or fragmented to such an extreme degree that... classical geometry... is hardly of any help in describing their form. ... I hope to show that it is possible in many cases to remedy this absence of geometric representation by using a family of shapes I propose to call fractals... or fractal sets. [Mandelbrot, "Fractals," 1977]