View allAll Photos Tagged Barely
We don`t have our tree up yet but, here`s some Christmas Tree Bokeh I had put aside from last year.
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i've been so wrapped up in projects and life and everything that i feel like im barely hanging on... just barely breathing and coming up for air.
i am so excited to share with you all and interview i am in for a fashion blog/ezine! check it out here ! super exciting news and i was really honored to be asked :]
i was out shooting for my project again today, which was super hilarious. saran wrapping people is...funny. i am really tired now and need to sleep!
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Well, this one is definitely not SOOC, as the white balance has been heavily mistreated in post-production and it's barely light painting, as the light sources are static during the whole long exposure.
But I still like it, because, well, SMOKY BACKLIGHTS ! :)
Model: me
Lights: Vincent Gerber
Trigger: Lionel Deltour
Light painting session with Vincent Gerber, Lionel Deltour, Sylvain Horne & Roger
And yet, though the soul is homeless and vulnerable, in deserts and clouds, it is most importantly ‘at home’ in so far as God has made Himself a home in human life and death, and passed before us on the way we are called to go. Christ is the root of our security and our insecurity alike, promise and judgement, end and beginning, the burning bush, the Paschal lamb, the rock and the tabernacle, present as a sign of hope at every stage of our painful journey out of bondage and across the wilderness.
- The Wound of Knowledge Christian Spirituality from the New Testament to St John of the Cross, ROWAN WILLIAMS
This is a Mocker Swallowtail. It was not very cooperative, preferring to perch in areas that were nearly impossible to access. As in, finding an opening in the plants clear enough to get a shot, and then having to get down on your knees - in public.
If butterflies could laugh, I know this one had a good belly laugh over my antics in trying to get a shot. Not "the" shot we're always after - just "a" shot... any shot.
Barely seen in the Cecil B Day Butterfly Center, Calllaway Gardens.
© Cynthia E. Wood
www.cynthiawoodphoto.com | FoundFolios | facebook | Blurb | Instagram @cynthiaewood
Barely got to the lake in time to get some shots in. I wanted to get to the waters edge, but the sun was dropping fast, so I stopped the car, got out and started snapping. It's been a hectic week, worked 84 hours in the last seven days. So I've been running on empty when it comes to taking pictures. Oh well, one more day and then back to a normal rotation at work.
Barely visible with all the new foliage. Impossible to see any activity going on inside it. The hawks are still very busy in the area.
I usually enjoy assembling a number of different elements to create an image, but I actually found it quite relaxing keeping the process very simple for a change. I may even do more. :)
This is a small Victorian milk glass button from the late 19th century. It's standing on a narrow strip of linen ribbon.
For this week's Looking Close... on Friday group theme, Minimalism on White Background.
Taken with Lensbaby Velvet 56.
Saturn's shadow stretched beyond the edge of its rings for many years after Cassini first arrived at Saturn, casting an ever-lengthening shadow that reached its maximum extent at the planet's 2009 equinox. This image captured the moment in 2015 when the shrinking shadow just barely reached across the entire main ring system. The shadow will continue to shrink until the planet’s northern summer solstice, at which point it will once again start lengthening across the rings, reaching across them in 2019.
Like Earth, Saturn is tilted on its axis. And, just as on Earth, as the sun climbs higher in the sky, shadows get shorter. The projection of the planet's shadow onto the rings shrinks and grows over the course of its 29-year-long orbit, as the angle of the sun changes with respect to Saturn's equator.
This view looks toward the sunlit side of the rings from about 11 degrees above the ring plane. The image was taken in visible light with the Cassini spacecraft wide-angle camera on Jan. 16, 2015.
The view was obtained at a distance of approximately 1.6 million miles (2.5 million kilometers) from Saturn. Image scale is about 90 miles (150 kilometers) per pixel.
The Cassini mission is a cooperative project of NASA, ESA (the European Space Agency) and the Italian Space Agency. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, manages the mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington. The Cassini orbiter and its two onboard cameras were designed, developed and assembled at JPL. The imaging operations center is based at the Space Science Institute in Boulder, Colorado.
For more information about the Cassini-Huygens mission, click here.
From the night of the aurora, there is a fence post in the lower middle of the frame. If you zoom in, you may be able to see a few wires extending from that post.
HFF
©AnvilcloudPhotography
© This photograph is copyrighted. Under no circumstances can it be reproduced, distributed, modified, copied, posted to websites or printed or published in media or other medium or used for commercial or other uses without the prior written consent and permission of the photographer.
Our dock was still above water at sunset today but it looks like it might be underwater by morning. We are getting heavy storms tonight and the river north of us is so flooded they are letting lots of water out down our way. Many people will with lower level homes will evacuate. We are about 20 feet above the waterline. Our lower yard IS already engulfed in water. The neighbors' docks are already underwater. Ours just happens to be about 6 inches taller . . .
The southern coast of Hawaii's Big Island is downslope from the Mauna Loa volcano, and the last 30 years worth of eruptions have covered the entire coastline in lava so fresh it glitters in the sun! Most of the coast was covered with pahoehoe lava so runny that you can see it peeling up in places, because the top layer of basalt is barely an inch thick.
Volcanoes National Park, Hawaii. October, 2022.
©joanne mariol 2016
iPhone 6 + iColorama + Snapseed + Phonto
Read about the process for this image here: bit.ly/1QwBbsx
Escudilla Mountain was badly impacted by the 2011 Wallow Fire. This one aspen was the only one in this grove with a bit of life to it.
I was out fat tire biking with my brother on the ice-covered marsh when the wind was doing what it could to push the bikes right out from under us. The forecast was for 70 mph winds coming off the mountains into the surrounding area. I would say the forecast was spot on when wide studded tires biting the ice can't keep you upright.
After finishing our bike ride in a more sheltered spot I grabbed my camera gear so we could head out and see what we came across. Just opening and closing the car door without it getting warped or smacking me was considered a success. Using a tripod or even standing up to take photos was not an option. I did try and those attempts failed. This is one of a few that came out at a spot I was able to crouch down and rest my elbows to secure the camera enough to get a clean photo.
- www.kevin-palmer.com - I sat at this overlook waiting for a rainbow to come out as a thundershower passed. It did, but just barely.