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A Texas leafcutter ant (Atta texana) carries a leaf down the trunk of a yaupon holly (Ilex vomitoria). Leafcutters are fascinating components of our fauna that use the leaves they harvest to cultivate a fungus that will feed the colony. I had a blast photographing these guys last weekend. Caro spotted a line of ants working this yaupon in a setting that allowed for some creative lighting and composition.
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with Tepid, near Christchurch.. NZ. Full wall here.... www.flickr.com/photos/peacefulprogress/8291849532/in/phot...
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We're developing this new 'Street Trooper' character for street art projects, etc.
Thx everyone!
Two versions of a shot from Saint Mary's graveyard, during the Beast from the East. Whitby rarely sees this much snow and not for long as the sea air soon melts it. I thought the pictures had a spooky feel, for Halloween.
One of the biggest tow trucks I've seen and certainly the best paint job. Could not resist getting a photograph of this truck.
Here's a Fell Beast on a ruinous stand I designed for Build Better Bricks.
Learn more about this build's design/process and see more pictures of it on my blog.
Here I am again with the finished version of my Nazgûl-Dragon which I started back in July. The build is quite stable for most parts but definetly not a playset:)
Looking forward to hear your Opinion on this one!
If there is one animal which is commonly seen in many rural areas in the Philippines, it is the carabao (shown in the foreground). Known as kalabaw in Pilipino, it is a domestic swamp-type water buffalo which for the past centuries up to the present many Filipino farmers use in plowing the fields and carrying heavy loads. Thus, it is a local version of the beast of burden.
Taken at a distant village in Subic, Zambales, Philippines.
A beast made up of mostly dark crystal. Its radiation mades all beings feel pressured as it moves freely along the land. Its body and reflexes are mixed between a lycan and a raptor. Physical attacks to this beast damaged the attacker more than the beast itself.
*Steal and I'll snap your spine*
The Beasts of Bannockburn have a committee meeting as 61994 'The Great Marquess' passes with a SRPS Forth Circle special. 22nd August 2010.
Silhouette of fire
Of sparks and darkness
It heralds its presence in flame
Spirit of night
Beacon of light
A beast that cannot be tamed
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So we were lighting off fireworks and this picture I took looked vaguely like the muzzle and eyes of a bear, with a little spittle or blood coming from beneath its nose where its mouth would be, if its form were not concealed. It was more the idea than the picture itself that intrigued me. I know it doesnt have anything to it but I like it.
Chefchaouen is noted for its buildings in shades of blue, for which it is nicknamed the "Blue City".
Chefchaouen, Morocco
Goodwood: Festival of Speed: The FIAT S76, later known as the FIAT 300 HP RECORD and nicknamed "The Beast of Turin", was a car built in 1911 by FIAT specifically to beat the land speed record held at the time by Blitzen Benz. It has a 4-cylinder engine with a displacement of 28,353 cm3 (1,730.2 in3) (190mm x 250mm), and provides 290 metric hp (290 CV / 213kW) at 1900 rpm.
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You've seen this sculpture before (link below to my then colourised version). But this image is quite surreal too because of the Infra Red conversion of my Lumix compact camera.
I particularly like this image, and seeing the world through the lens of Infra Red is a lot of fun. IR is invisible to the human eye, and usually starts at the wavelength of 720 nanometers up to 1050 nanometers. So either a filter attacted to a DSLR or a converted camera can produce this result as long as the electromagnetic radiation below 720 namometers is cut out.
It's a lot of fun to try, and the result is a bit like early photography. The resolution of this camera with the internal filter is closer to those early cameras than state of the art cameras today, but this limitation is helpful in one important sense: Composition.
If we're not worried about colour and a beautiful sharp finish, then we can concentrate on trying to do what the earliest photographers did, compose with light. As Henry Fox Talbot called it, "photogenic drawing". In this case with IR light.