View allAll Photos Tagged Bucket
Digital Photo 6.05x10in @380ppi
I based this photo off of the song "Buckets of Rain," more specifically, the lyrics "buckets of tears." I took this of my girlfriend who I had sit under her porch in a somewhat melancholy position, placed a bucket filled with water beneath her, and put an eyedrop on her cheek to simulate a tear. It didn't end up going quite as well as I'd hoped as the time constraint of this week combined with a plethora of other school work made it difficult for me to get everything done this week and this photo reflects the consequences. I don't think it's a bad photo I just wanted there to be more emphasis on the tear and I feel I should have taken it from a different angle.
This photo adds to my concentration through its use of a deep, emotional concept with an obscured face, along with a use of perhaps repetition in the wall in the background and the brick ground.
This looks new to me - and while I know there are 'clean' coal burning generating plants now, this is obviously for home use rather than industrial. I am curious charcoal.
You've heard of "Bubble Boy", and you've heard of "Air Pockets". That's old!
Meet the BUCKET BOY: He goes (swims) through life with a bucket of his head. The "air bucket" lets him enjoy floating in the water without being disrupted by the outside world.
ps He didn't put the bucket over his head because of the camera, he (or they, as the others also wanted to try..) just did it for the fun of it... ds
Buckets full of who-knows-what. Paint? Chemicals? Toxic waste? We didn't investigate further. Turned out to be paint; the vandals later threw the contents of these in the pool and all over the concrete out back. Nasty, sure, but c'mon, that pool wasn't exactly sparkling before. Look! More orby goodness! I wonder what that wooden brace is actually for?
DescriptionCoryanthes, commonly known as bucket orchids, is a genus of tropical epiphytic orchids. This genus is abbreviated as Crths in horticultural trade. They are native to South America, Central America, Mexico and Trinidad.
As with everywhere else, buckets of water are the main way of getting clean. They had a water pump, but we had to find someone and then ask them to turn it on; and I didn't need it that badly when I was perfectly capable of not wasting power and showering on my own.
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BOY SCOUTS / LAST FRONTIER COUNCIL: Caption reads, Brad Haeg, left, and John Jay of Oklahoma City Troop 120 hurry a can of water to the target barrel during the bucket brigade contest. Staff Photo by Jim Argo. Original Photo 05/01/1976. Published on 5-2-76.