A red-orange flame on the water (Victoria's Hair). Or her hallucination of Edward.
a red/orange Fire- which happens to be Victoria's hair
she saw edward
Edward Cullen's sexayyy self :)
It most likely means you or your friend is in distress or it could mean your friend is suffering Nearly all dreams refer to the dreamer rather than to the person whose image is seen in the dream. In this example, the drowning friend represents the dreamer's own feeling of being overwhelmed. This might refer to being "flooded with work" or perhaps to a mortgage that is "under water," or even "drowning in sorrow."
a pre-image is an image before and image is an image after
It is an idiom meaning that you are so desperate that you will hang on to anything, even if it is obvious that it won't help you. The image is of someone drowning, clinging to tiny straws or wisps of hay, even though they couldn't possibly hold the person up.
The procedure done before processing by correcting image from different errors is preprocessing.this has to be done before image enhancement
The cast of The Image Before Us - 1986 includes: Ted Stidder as Narrator
It was a breakthrough because you could show real pictures instead of describing something. Before the invention of the camera the only way to capture real images was through painting. The camera allowed images to be caught without a framed image. A painted image and a photograph are a construct of an image, depending on the creator, but a camera, think of all that could capture: in real time. A camera is there!
The answer to the riddle "What is taken before you get it?" is "a picture." You take a picture before you actually get to see the developed image. It's a fun play on words that highlights the process of capturing an image before it can be viewed!
The dream seems to be a literal depiction of the common phrase, "in a whirl," meaning that one is caught up in so much activity that one feels as if one is spinning. That image combines with a "pool" of water, suggesting total immersion, perhaps even being "over one's head" in so much work/events/etc. that one is dizzy or drowning.
Leprechauns are a type of fairy from Irish folklore. It was thought to be good luck if a person saw or caught a Leprechaun.