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Paul Milholland | all galleries >> Galleries >> Temp 4 >
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31-AUG-2014 Paul Milholland

(Even though you'll have to scroll up and down, please view it at "original" size.)

It was 7 or 8 feet tall, and maybe 12 to 15 inches deep. The closer you looked, the
more you kept asking yourself the question "How the heck did they make this thing?"

Nikon 1 V1 ,Nikon 1 NIKKOR VR 30-110mm f/3.8-5.6
1/200s f/5.6 at 30mm (80mm angle of view) iso100 w/ PL filter full exif

other sizes: small medium large original auto
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Ann02-Sep-2014 08:48
Fantastic piece of artwork, beautifully captured Paul.
Barry Ailetcher01-Sep-2014 20:01
neat piece of art lots opf work went into this
Ed Duverger01-Sep-2014 19:52
An amazing artwork.The B&W is shure the best way to show it.
Chris Gibbins01-Sep-2014 19:14
Impressive. reminds me of a similar, and even larger, structure I saw in Antibes a few years ago -http://www.pbase.com/chrisg_62/image/131625251
John S 01-Sep-2014 17:39
Wow, look at that!
John Ewing01-Sep-2014 08:14
My guess is that he used a former made of some easily-destructible material, e.g. plaster. Quite a feat.
Guest 01-Sep-2014 03:12
Beautiful creation,and very well shot
v c bacon01-Sep-2014 02:30
Great find...what a job it must have been to fabricate this intricate "egg"!
fotabug01-Sep-2014 02:25
Amazing, very creative! Well photographed!
Walt 01-Sep-2014 01:21
Quite the puzzle!
Steve Thuman01-Sep-2014 01:15
Makes a Rubics cube look simple
Bea.01-Sep-2014 01:10
Most impressive, I'd like to know where the artist started!