View allAll Photos Tagged Affectionate."

Affectionately known as Bug Light. It is only 24-ft tall located at the Portland Breakwater, it is the only one of its kind in the world. built in 1875

A candid photo of a little girl who is cuddling a stuffed toy monkey, taken in Subic, Zambales, Philippines.

Affectionately known as Crab's due to the angle of the cylinders , 42765 on a special photographic evening near the end of the locos ticket at the time in June 2003

Australian Kelpie with a touch of labrador, farm dog and family pet in Blayney, NSW, Australia.

Affectionately known as the Big Orange the 747SP was i believe a rare visitor as the airline mostly used the larger B747s

Photo scanned from a slide.

This young and affectionate puppy was on his/her way home.

Italian Greyhounds (Iggys) are small, sleek, elegant toy sighthounds known for being affectionate, playful, and dainty, resembling miniature Greyhounds with delicate frames, long necks, and slender legs, thriving as companion dogs that love to cuddle but also have bursts of speed and need regular exercise, though they are sensitive to cold due to their thin layer of flesh and hair. Despite their delicate looks, they are surprisingly fast and agile, needing playtime and mental stimulation.

Trim Circumnavigated

 

Faithful and affectionate

Never to be left alone

In our ordinary life

Forever trying to make it

 

Read more: www.jjfbbennett.com/2020/09/jingili-circumnavigated.html

 

One-off sponsorship: www.paypal.me/bennettJJFB

Affectionately referred to by locals as "The Bean"

Every since she adopted me in Bulgaria, where she had been living on the street, Sundae has proven to be a very affectionate friend who loves to sit on a chair next to my chair where she can cuddle and stay connected.

Known affectionately to the locals as strawberry chickens, the lesser and greater flamingos of Walvis Bay and Sandwich Harbour were one of the highlights of our tour on this part of the Namibian coast.

 

The Wellenweber Antenna, affectionately called "The Elephant Cage" by the troops.

 

Wikipedia: The Wullenweber (the original name introduced by Dr. Hans Rindfleisch was Wullenwever) is a type of Circularly Disposed Antenna Array (CDAA) sometimes referred to as a Circularly Disposed Dipole Array (CDDA). It is a large circular antenna array used for radio direction finding. It was used by the military to triangulate radio signals for radio navigation, intelligence gathering and search and rescue. Because its huge circular reflecting screen looks like a circular fence, the antenna has been colloquially referred to as the elephant cage. The term wullenwever was the World War II German cover term used to identify their secret CDAA research and development program; its name is unrelated to any person involved in the program.

Cheeks, A Very Introspective Manx Cat

I came home tonight and there were a couple of crows on my telephone wire making noise. I looked up and they were being affectionate to each other. I took a photo but it wasn't the best quality. I came back outside after dinner and having a shower and they were back together on the other side of the road still being affectionate with each other. I got a better photo but after I took their photo they flew away. It was really nice to see and made my evening a little bit more enjoyable.

What we affectionately call "The Batmobile" is my Father-in-Law's 2006 Mercedes AMG CLS 55. It has a 469 HP 5.7 liter V8. It's top speed is electronically limited at 155 MPH.

 

While at his house, I noticed the cooling fan was making a funny noise and would not shut off. He called Mercedes and they came right out and disabled the fan. The Batmobile is scheduled for service tomorrow anyway, so I'm sure they'll fix it there.

 

These aren't particularly good photos, but I had the camera on-hand for my daughter's birthday party and couldn't resist snapping a couple of pics.

Two female elephants carress affectionately at the National Zoo in Washington, DC.

Two female elephants carress affectionately at the National Zoo in Washington, DC.

www.popville.com/2019/02/random-reader-rant-and-or-revel-...

With the distance from my home in Stevensville, Montana to the National Bison Range in Charlo at somewhere around 90 miles,

I get my bison-visit-and-photo-session fix at the local Bitterroot Bison Ranch here in Stevensville. Not that the National Range,

with a herd of some 400-600 isn't worth the drive. It most certainly is, with both very dramatic scenery and an up-close-and-personal bison experience nearly guaranteed. If you're ever close to it, put off the visit to the local duck pond and make your way over and into Bison World for sure.

 

I caught this intimate moment while at the local version of Bisonville here in Stevi on a very cold November afternoon

some years ago. And, having just come across the image in the files while looking for something else, I thought you might want to get in on the intimacy yourself, just for the fun of it. And it

was fun to catch a special moment like this, even with fingers half frozen and with barely any feeling in the nose on my face.

Speaking of nosy.

  

A mother Sambar deer (Rusa unicolor) with its fawn was sensing the situation as they became too close to myself to their comfort. But fortunately they happily accepted my presence and continued their feeding on young grasses by the road. The shy baby looked quite adorable, very affectionate to its mother always hiding behind her, But the real problem with this shot was that they were against the light. Fortunately the Nikon prime made them look fascinating against the beautifully lighten green and yellow backdrop bokeh. Pics was taken from Bharatpur, Rajasthan, India.

Wherever King Kieran goes, all are captivated by his indomitable spirit. How can you not love a cat who lives for adventures away from home.

 

Taken at Centennial Park beside beautiful Puget Sound in Seattle, WA USA.

 

2019May9Kieran15ElliottBayParkEd

@Yokohama

 

ZENZA BRONICA S2 + Nikkor 75mm F2.8 + ILFORD PANF PLUS 50

 

View On Black

We affectionately referred to this leopard as Mr. Grumpy, as he did not tolerate our company without making his displeasure known. He was kind enough, however, to give us some nice poses before finding a place to himself in the forest. (Panthera padres). (Sony a9iii, 70-200 f/4 lens at 197mm, f/4, 1/1000 second, ISO 3200)

flickr explore / interestingness #6 on March 22, 2007

dedicated to my dear flickr-friend Sly's!

 

...

Designed for stacking efficiently in docking stations the G1 is more often affectionately referred to as the 'brick'.

The love of a cat is eternal,even if it puts its tongue in my mouth!😂😂😂

The Sphynx of my artist friend Elena Conti is very affectionate.

Australian Kelpie, farm dog and family pet in Blayney, NSW, Australia.

In Affectionate Remembrance of Henry Morley who died at Chittering Brook on the 6 December 1876 aged 74 years.

 

One of the oldest settlers who successfully contended with the early difficulties of the colony. Was universally esteemed by his neighbours and deeply mourned by his relations and immediate friends.

 

Also Sarah his wife. Died August 2 1884 aged 79 years.

 

Now that's a epitaph. Although I can't confirm it I suspect he was related to Charles William Morley after whom the suburb (Morley) is named.

WASHINGTON NC: An old building in the old city of Washington NC. Known affectionately as "Little Washington" by so many in North Carolina, the local residents are a bit sensitive about this nickname pointing out that Washington NC existed before Washington DC, or BIG Washington. Consequently, the townsfolk refer to their town as "The ORIGINAL Washington."

 

OK, I checked on the dates each city was founded. Sure enough, "Little Washington" was founded in 1776 while, uh, the other one was founded in 1790.

Introducing Fenelope D. Miniature, or Fendi.

Affectionately known as "Vera' by us locals who are lucky enough to reside in the vicinity of her regular flight paths, Avro Lancaster FM213 VR-A took to the skies once again on Friday, after a long, enforced layoff due to... well, you know, that stoopid shit that has affected us all in the past year and a half, or so. Anyway, I follow the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum (the good folks who operate, look after and generally wait on her hand and... umm, wing and tail) on Twitter and saw she was taxiing out for her long-awaited return. Quick, switch over to my Flightradar24 app to follow her route and sure enough, she starts heading my way. Grabbing Karen from her work desk, handy dandy iPhone camera in hand (I swear, I think the thing takes better photos than my Nikon), we rushed outside, me screwing my camera into the tripod and then... well, one of the most invigorating sounds one is bound to hear in these parts (to me anyway), the roar of her diesel engines filling the sky.

 

I didn't get a good shot. Not prepared enough, too shaky, whatever... anyway, I cropped her up, added some sky interest and a few more trees for perspective and voila! This my friends, is what we got.

The Collie breed originated from Scotland where they were used as a hardworking sheepdog. They are still used today to work/herd animals on farms. The Collie was first registered by the AKC in 1885 and was grouped as Herding. The Collie is intelligent, loving, affectionate and social. This breed is great with kids because they are so mile mannered. They make great watchdogs and protectors

Thanks for your faves and comments!

Red squirrel is standing on an airplane

Marina City, affectionately known as "the corn cob", is a mixed-use residential-commercial building complex in Chicago, Illinois, United States, North America, designed by architect Bertrand Goldberg. The multi-building complex opened between 1963 and 1967 and occupies almost an entire city block on State Street on the north bank of the Chicago River on the Near North Side, directly across from the Loop. Portions of the complex were designated a Chicago Landmark in 2016.

 

The complex consists of two 587-foot (179 m), 65-story apartment towers, opened in 1963, which include physical plant penthouses. It also includes a 10-story office building (now a hotel) opened in 1964, and a saddle-shaped auditorium building originally used as a cinema. The four buildings, access driveways, and a small plaza that originally included an ice rink are built on a raised platform next to the Chicago River. Beneath the platform, at river level, is a small marina for pleasure craft, giving the structures their name.

Known affectionately as the "Hamburger galaxy", this is an edge on spiral galaxy that is part of a small group of galaxies called the "Leo Triplet"

 

Its probably had gravitational interactions with the other 2 galaxies in the group which has resulted in a warping of the plane of the galaxy as seen towards the left hand edge.

 

Deeper images show a tail of stars from the right of the galaxy trailing off towards some of the other members but its just too faint here.

 

Cold galactic dust and hydrogen clouds are well seen edge on here, along with the glow of the galactic core and a peripheral blue edge from spiral arm stars.

 

In a way , not unlike the view we get of our Milky Way galaxy.

 

There is even a small, faint dwarf galaxy seen just above NGC3628, just like one of our own Magellanic cloud galaxies.

 

LRGB subs x 8 processed in PixInsight. Ive started to use selective colour masks which is working well for enhancing galactic cores and spiral arms whilst leaving everything else untouched. Used a little TGVDenoise just at the end for noise reduction in the background.

 

These are some test images from the new System 5 scope at Grand Mesa Observatory, Colorado.

 

The system is:

 

Scope:

William Optics 12.5" Ritchey-Chrétien w/ 0.8x Reducer

Aperture: 317.5mm

Focal Length: 2032mm

Focal Ratio: f/6.4

 

Camera:

QHY600M 16-Bit Mono CMOS

Filters: LRGB, Ha, Oiii, Sii (by Chroma)

Pixel Size: 3.76 x 3.76

The roses (from Latin pink) are the planting plants of the Rosaceae family. The genus encompasses between 100 and 250 species.

This vehicle is affectionately know as "Teddy" after non-other than President Teddy Roosevelt, who the original owner admired. This car was manufactured in Canada and the original owner lived across the border in Minnesota.

 

This picture here was taken at the present owners estate, Stone Haven, a home build in the 1800's and restored and now part of the National Register of Historic Places. Another story in itself.

 

The present owner was told about the car from a friend who knew the original owner and the car was sold knowing that it was going to see a new life.

 

There was a team of "Hooligans", as they are affectionately called, who over the past 8 years have assembled and reassembled Teddy several times. Modifications, improvements, and innovations seem to evolve over time. The project was really a labor of love that has brought a group together that will be friends forever.

 

I feel privileged in just a small way to be taken in by this group and to photograph this marvel of a car. Bonds are formed in different ways and Teddy has been a bond that has brought an amazing group of people together. More pictures to follow.

Texture kk_rainyday courtesy of Kim Klassen with Grateful Thanks

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