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Certain area

Arranged datum

Demarcation

This little harvest mouse couldn't decide whether the yellow bit of the flowers would make a tasty snack.

Invite you to share the wonderful music.

Taiwanese Folk Song:The One I Long for and Adore

Beautiful violinist:Liang Chien-Wen

Composer:Ang It-Hong

Arranger:Shih Cing-Ru

Performance venues:Taichung City ChungHsing Hall

www.youtube.com/watch?v=gsIHPWob6Po

走過、經過、聽過、這一次千萬不要錯過~

邀請你共賞回味美妙的樂曲

台灣民謠:思慕的人

美麗的小提琴手 : 梁茜雯

作曲:洪一峰

編曲 : 石青如

表演場地:台中市中興堂

音樂網址同上

 

: You’re Mine (Lola Marsh)

 

Oh, oh, whoa oh-oh, uh-oh

Oh, oh, whoa oh-oh, uh-oh

You're mine

Oh, oh, whoa oh-oh, uh-oh

Oh, oh, whoa oh-oh, uh-oh

You're mine

Featuring: Salt & Pepper

 

Salt & Pepper Kylie Set – MAINSTORE

Hood and No Hood Versions

Legacy / Perky , Lara / Petite

 

SALT & PEPPER MAINSTORE

SALT & PEPPER FLICKR

SALT & PEPPER FACEBOOK

SALT & PEPPER INSTAGRAM

SALT & PEPPER MARKETPLACE

 

-----------------------------------------

Credits

Unedited Gyazo Here

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。.:*・°☆.。Thank You! Happy Shopping!! 。.:*・°☆.。

 

A variety of flowers from my garden this summer arranged on black velvet.

One of my attempts at the "Macro Mondays" theme "arrange items in a row".

 

Because I’m on vacation, I had to edit this on mobile. Not quite what I‘d usually go for, but I must say at least options are getting significantly better.

 

Shot with a Noritsu "38-60 mm F 4-4.8" (enlarging) lens on a Canon EOS R5.

 

HSS!

The redness had seeped from the day and night was arranging herself around us. Cooling things down, staining and dyeing the evening purple and blue black.”

- Sue Monk Kidd

.295

Sponsored by: The WareHouse Sale

 

Utopia I VCLab I Amitomo I Reverie I Keikumu I Unholy I Miss Chelsea I K&S and much more!

 

More info here D E A D's blog

 

Song

Gezeigt, wie vorgefunden. Keine Bílddrehung. Natürlich die üblichen sonstigen Bearbeitungen. Es muss nicht immer horizontal sein :-)

 

Often, the direction is decisive for the impression.

For the "Looking close... on Friday!" topic "Combination of Soft & Sharp"

 

I was cutting geranium flowers to make an indoor display ... and the combination of scissors and petals seemed to fit the topic 😊

Shot with the Helios 44-2 on a Sony NEX-6

Have a happy weekend, and stay safe!

 

Macro-Looking Close: Here

Still Life Compositions: Here

Helios 44-2 and 44-M set: Here

Geraniums and Gentians set: Here

Crazy Tuesday theme Knolling

 

I'm not sure if I've got it right but hopefully this falls into the catergory of knolling - the stems are, afterall, in parallel to each other. Arranging the dry flowers and deceased insects and trying not to get shadows in the image has certainly driven me crazy! At least I can bin all the old flowers now. Happy Crazy Tuesday 😄

These images arranged in a composite are from my recent Blue Ridge Parkway workshop. I've included two images of males along with the female. The singing pose shows a typical southern Appalachians male showing some black on the dorsal aspect. The other male shows a dorsal aspect devoid of black which is more typical of birds from the northern part of the range. The southern males also tend to have a more prominent white handkerchief. This eastern warbler shows the largest difference between female and male plumage but all birds except for the most immature females also show a white handkerchief. First fall males if found early enough in that season will sometimes show a white supercillium and a white lower eye arc similar to that found in the female. I find that incredibly interesting.

The “line_up“ is a paperwork series I developed since 2010. The “liners” are made out of paper (Din A3/A4),

oil paint and graphite. The theme is the hermetical laws of polarity and movement. There is no ending and no beginning in any direction, just an endless movement. You have the possibility to arrange the papers like you want and that makes it an endless playground for my photo-work and the eyes of the viewers.

Yanomano

The mountain harebell (blue), sulphur flower (yellow) and Fendler's Ceanothus (white) were arranged in a pleasing way on Flagstaff Mountain, near Boulder.

 

Thanks to Bill Bowman for identifying Fendler's Ceanothus.

‘Autumn leaves’………A collection of climbing hydrangea leaves that got frosted the other night, hand picked & arranged on the tabletop - natural window light. Keep cosy & stay Covid safe (again) Alan:-)……

 

For the interested I’m growing my Shutterstock catalogue regularly here, now sold 57 images :- www.shutterstock.com/g/Alan+Foster?rid=223484589&utm_...

©Alan Foster.

©Alan Foster. All rights reserved. Do not use without permission.……

 

"The line_up is a paperwork series I developed since 2010. The“liners” are made out of paper (Din A3),

oil paint and graphite, the theme is the hermetical laws of polarity and movement. There is no ending and no beginning in any direction, just an endless movement. You have the possibility to arrange the papers like you want and that makes it an endless playground for my photo-work and the eyes of the viewers."

Yanomano

Arranged in perfect symmetry, a quartet of Utah Railway SD40s highball the siding at Wildcat on the road to Wattis Plateau to load 84 coal empties on Sept. 26, 1992.

The proposed replacement plan for the "repeel" of the Affordable Care Act in America - "an apple a day keeps the doctor away"!

 

For Macro Mondays - "It's A-Peeling To Me"

Also "Red" for 52 in 2017

In case you think I have arranged this scene, I did not!

Found this little guy in a backyard in Leipzig with the cable attached coming out of the container on the left.

 

© Markus Lehr, 2016, www.markuslehr.com

I can't sleep tonight

Close my eyes, I see your light

The skies, they speak at night

  

Tell me I need to find my sight

 

Right in sight some hide from you

Your bright eyes still like the view

I can't find what's right to do

All this chemistry

All this chemistry that's me & you

 

Me & You

That's me & you

Me & You

All this chemistry that's me & you

 

Don't know why we feel this way

But why should we complain

The clouds and ways look so arranged

They will meet for us to kiss

 

Hold my hands, I touch your face

I'll keep you near, if you keep me safe

You say you care, I feel the same

You made your mark on me, that's not hard to see

 

Right in sight some hide from you

Your bright eyes still like the view

I can't find what's right to do

All this chemistry

All this chemistry that's me & you

 

Me & You

That's me & you

Me & You

All this chemistry that's me & you

 

Me & You

Me & You

Me & You

All this chemistry that's me & you

Me & You

All this chemistry that's me & you

“Arranging a bowl of flowers in the morning can give a sense of quiet in a crowded day- like writing a poem or saying a prayer.”

― Anne Morrow Lindbergh, Gift from the Sea

The steam crew readies J. Neils Lumber Co. #5, a Shay locomotive built in 1929 by Lima Locomotive Works, as the sun sets for a special night of operations on May 22, 2021 at the Illinois Railway Museum. Night operations are rare at IRM, usually only held during Labor Day Weekend and Museum Showcase Weekend. After cancelling all special events early in the season for 2021 and all of 2020 due to the Covid pandemic, the museum arranged for this special event to boost attendance during one of its traditionally slower weekends.

Tarin des aulnes et queue leuleu de fourmis, je n'ai pas pu résister à fusionner ces deux images prises au même endroit à deux dates différentes.(je me suis un peu affranchi de la règle de l'échelle)

Die tagaktiven Tiere halten sich in der Regel am Boden auf. Sie ernähren sich von Pflanzenteilen. Bei Gefahr sondern sie zur Abschreckung von Feinden aus ihren Kniegelenken ein gelbes Wehrsekret, das den Giftstoff Cantharidin enthält. Die Käfer werden 11 bis 35 Millimeter lang. (wikipedia)

 

Thanks for visiting!

32× 22㎝

①pressed flower

②make a painted paper with pastel,and ink.

③arrange flowers on the paper.

④flow the Bond liquid.

⑤cover with transparent cellophane.

⑥dry completely.

⑦peel off carefully.

Easy!!!

When I travelled to Cornwall in 2017 I arranged the trip all to capture one image. I hoped to capture many more images when I was there but the whole point of the trip was that I had a picture in mind and wanted to have a go at capturing it. This posting is the closest I got to capturing that image but alas as is so often the case it is just not what was in my mind’s eye.

 

The angle of the shot is right taken low facing southwest towards the mount, the line of the causeway is pretty much everything I wanted leading nicely to the main subject and the water was just about at the right depth. However, I got three very important features of my shot wrong.

 

1. I didn’t go at the right time of year for the angle of the sun to be correct. I thought I would be able to put the sun in frame with the mount and get better colour in the sky but at that time of year the sunset is way around to north.

 

2. I didn’t plan for the time of the tides and the water rises pretty damned fast when the tides starts to come in.

 

Finally the 3rd problem was that I was there on a bank holiday weekend with record high temperatures. It was lovely and warm, which I wasn’t complaining about, and unfortunately the number of tourists taking advantage was incredible. I swear at least a thousand people streamed past me whilst I was trying to get this shot.

 

When you visit the mount there are warnings about the time of the next tide. I had assumed, foolishly it appears, that by the time the tide was coming in all the visitors would be back on dry land and I could take my shot undisturbed, but no. It turns out that it is a tradition during the summer months that visitors to the mount will wait for the tide to cover the causeway and then wade back to shore. So my shot here is a long exposure trying desperately to force the camera to ignore anything that moves and make all the tourists disappear. It didn’t work perfectly but given how many people there were it did a pretty good job.

 

I may not have obtained the image I wanted but it has given me a taste of what could be and not that I need it but it gives me an excuse to visit Cornwall again

 

Hestehov / Coltsfoot ( tussilago farfara )

The ancient Parish Complex consists of a series of buildings constructed from the 11th–12th centuries up to the 18th century, arranged around a central courtyard: the old parish church, the bell tower, the parish house, the chapel of the confraternity, and the former town hall. The courtyard, which was originally a cemetery, is accessed through a porticoed wing (built in 1768), which once served as a market and public notice board. The Church of the Assumption (Parrocchiale dell’Assunta) has Romanesque origins and was renovated in the first half of the 17th century, when the current façade replaced the original apse. The bell tower is also Romanesque (pre-1307), though only the lower two levels of the original structure remain.

In the background the Monte Lera (3335 m) on the left, and the Croce Rossa (3566 m) to the right.

 

Image part of the project Valli di Lanzo

 

www.flickr.com/photos/mborgare/albums/72177720325034066

 

L' antico Complesso Parrochiale è costituito da una serie di edifici costruiti a partire dai secoli XI-XII fino al secolo XVIII e disposti attorno ad una corte centrale: l’antica chiesa parrocchiale, il campanile, la casa parrocchiale, la cappella della confraternita e la vecchia sede del municipio. Alla corte, anticamente sede cimiteriale, si accede attraverso un’ala porticata (1768), che fu sede del mercato e dell’albo pretorio La parrocchiale dell’Assunta è di origine romanica e fu riadattata nella prima metà del Seicento, quando la facciata attuale prese il posto dell’antica abside. Anche il campanile è romanico (ante 1307), ma della costruzione originaria sono rimasti solamente i due piani inferiori.

Sullo sfondo il Monte Lera (3335 m) a sinistra, e la Croce Rossa (3566 m) a destra

 

Immagine parte del progetto "Valli di Lanzo"

 

www.flickr.com/photos/mborgare/albums/72177720325034066

 

I caught Clara doing her flower -arranging this morning.....

©johnbleakleyphotography #JohnBleakleyPhotography

Copyright: © 2025 john bleakley photography. All rights reserved. All images protected by Pixy. No unauthorised use.

  

After a sunrise shoot high above Settle which never materialised (the sun that is), I arranged to meet up with Flickr buddy miketonge for a sunset shoot in nearby Chapel Le Dale. Well the sunset although very pretty was not th worldie we were hoping for, and so we both packed up our kit to head down Ingleborough before nightfall. But wait for it, turning 180 degrees revealed an incredible sight, BOOM, both Ingleborough and Whernside were shrouded in moisture rich clouds creating a stunning view the like of which neither of us had witnessed, certainly not from this POV, and so we descended well satisfied with this surprise bonus shot to add to our collections. Great to meet up again Mike!

 

Portrait shot with the Olly on this occasion.

I arranged them like this...

which do you prefer, colour or b&w?

I like them both for different reasons...

THANX, M, (*_*)

 

magdaindigo.blogspot.com/

Golu doll display arranged in steps celeberated during the festival of Navarathri in Southern India. It is customary people invite their friends and relatives where in invitees enjoy the treat for their eyes and stomach.

Knolling: a process of arranging similar objects in parallel or at 90 degree angles as a method of organisation.

 

Knolling is the theme for this week's Macro Mondays. I used Sapphire Grapes I bought at the farmers market. And a flower for contrast. Happy Macro Monday/ HMM

Do you see the two lighter pine trunks arranged in a V shape on the left side of the picture?

In a perfect world (for the photographer), the setting sun would now be visible in the middle of this V. But since nature is flawless and not perfect, a thick, dark cloud blocks the view at this point.

And even though I knelt behind my camera for at least 20 minutes, staring into this V, it felt like this cloud didn't move a meter. This meant that the sun didn't have a chance to show itself again that evening on Hrubá Skála.

And so we now have the great advantage of nothing (well, almost nothing, because the clouds already look quite impressive) distracting us from this interesting tangle of roots, pine needles, and cones, which I was already thrilled about when I stepped over them.

In the end, what's meant to happen always happens. And not just in the world of photography.

 

Seht Ihr die beiden helleren V-förmig angeordneten Kiefernstämme auf der linken Seite des Bildes ?

In einer (für den Fotografen) perfekten Welt würde in diesem V jetzt die untergehende Sonne zu sehen sein. Doch da die Natur vollkommen ist und eben nicht perfekt, versperrt eine dicke und dunkle Wolke an dieser Stelle den Blick.

Und obwohl ich für mindestens zwanzig Minuten hinter meiner Kamera gekniet und in dieses V gestarrt habe, hat sich diese Wolke gefühlt keinen Meter bewegt. Damit hatte die Sonne an diesem Abend auf Hrubá Skála keine Chance sich noch einmal zu zeigen.

Und so haben wir jetzt den großen Vorteil das uns nichts (naja fast nichts, denn die Wolken sehen ja schon recht imposant aus) von diesem interessanten Gewirr aus Wurzeln, Kiefernnadeln und -zapfen ablenkt, von dem ich schon begeistert war, als ich darüber gestiegen bin.

Am Ende passiert eben immer das, was passieren soll. Und das nicht nur in der Welt der Fotografie.

 

more of this on my website at: www.shoot-to-catch.de

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