View allAll Photos Tagged Bracket
Fungi of beechwood: The Lumpy Bracket (Trametes gibbose) growing on live beech tree (Fagus sylvatica). It was quite high up and this is the best top view I could manage. I noticed it during my last visit to the woods couple weeks before but didn’t have time to stop and get a closer look. Lansdown, Bath, BANES, England, U.K.
I try to give ID where possible but often it is not an easy task in the world of fungi without special examination, and I am not a mycologist. So, if you feel that ID is incorrect, please do correct.
A beautiful morning in Moraine lake of Banff national park in Canada. I did three pictures bracketing and exposure blending in post production.
Thank you all who fave and comment on my photo'/video's,much appreciated.And thank you all for looking.
Even on rainy days there are still interesting objects to photograph.
Can anyone identify this bracket fungus? It's on a dead spruce stump.
Great egret Miami, Florida, USA.
No post-processing done to photo. Nikon NEF (RAW) files available. NPP Straight Photography at noPhotoShopping.com
Yet another visit to the Crossrail bridge, Canary Wharf. It's not easy finding a different angle on this well-photographed location.
Oxford Brookes University, Headington Campus. Architects McLaughlin & Harvey.
All rights reserved - © Judith A. Taylor
More architectural fragments on my web site : Fine Art Mono Photography
Bitter Bracket - Postia stiptica Lower (fertile) surface with tubes and pores; watery droplets are exuded mainly from margin region and from the pores. Very bitter taste. It may turn ochre-brown when old. Usually on felled trunks and large fallen branches of conifers; very occasionally on the timber of hardwood trees.
Usually in woodland I try to eliminate as the sky or as much of it from the frame. The obvious reason for this is that inevitability the sky, no mater what the day is like will blow out the highlights, as the dynamic range is too much. Sometimes to capture a scene you need to include a big lump of sky. You can’t really use a ND grad as it will darken the intruding branches and foliage, so you need to either bracket the scene or reduce the exposure. Given the great DR latitude of our modern camera more often than not from a 3 frame bracket I only use 2 or in the end go with the darkest one.
B&P RISI heads North through the Mt. Jewett control point in Mt. Jewett, PA.
Was glad to finally be able to photograph these signals in clouds, as under normal operating times, this shot would be completely backlit,
my thoughts on the laowa 65mm:
www.aarondesigns.org/Laowa-65mm-f28-2x-2to1-SuperMacroLens/
shot with a fujifilm x-s10 and a venus optics laowa 65mm f/2.8 2x macro lens
66108 heads 4D47, the 13.40 Inverness Freight Sidings DRS to Mossend Up Yard around the curves and past the bracket signal just south of Dunkeld and Birnham Station, on the Highland Line, Tuesday 18.4.23
Edition 2 of the Phoenix Journal is now available to view via the following link:
Blushing Bracket (Daedaleopsis confragosa)
29 August 2018, Cuttle Pool Nature Reserve, Warwickshire Wildlife Trust, Temple Balsall
Sous l'œil attentif,
Fleurs révèlent leurs secrets,
Beauté infinie.
Under attentive gaze,
Flowers unveil their secrets,
Infinite beauty.
After a 2 year Absense, Bewdley South bracket has returned over the Spring. With 2999 back and this not possible last year. This had to be done
View from underneath showing the pores. Not sure of the ID of this species? See photo (1) also. Spotted at the JFK Arboretum.
NS 127 is southbound on Nº2 Track by Spring at Atlanta, Georgia with CBFX SD60M 6023 followed by a NS C44-9W and LTEX SD60M in October 2018.
Two dilapidated bracket fungi attached to the trunk of a casuarina tree. Even the forest's decomposers have their day. Image captured by Currumbin Creek near the estuary.
Growing on the side of a fallen and decaying log, this Smokey Bracket Fungus forms an abstract covering across the bark.
As seen Nov. 1st.
Relocated this Nov. 13 and its striking white edge was dark
The wood it is on is only 3.5 - 4" in diameter.