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Chilly girl age 6 wrapped in sweater while sipping orange juice thru a straw at a sidewalk cafe. Rawa Mazowiecka Central Poland
The historic tugboat 'Brent' permanently berthed at high tide amongst 'the beast from the east' ice and snow that plagued the United Kingdom during the final days of February and early March 2018 on Hythe Quay on the River Blackwater Estuary in the town of Maldon in the County of Essex (UK).
The former Port of London Authority Tugboat 'Brent' was built in 1945 and has been preserved at Maldon Hythe Quay since 1971.
Like all discerning historic tugboats, Brent has a website www.steamtugbrent.org/ and a cat flic.kr/p/iTHeuM
My Maldon and the River Blackwater Estuary album flic.kr/s/aHsk7cnJ7a
Photograph taken by and copyright of my regular photostream contributor David and is posted here with very kind permission.
Fox River Grove - Illinois
Shot with Canon 60D & Rokinon 8mm
I'm finally understanding how to use this fisheye - make sure to keep the horizon line in the center, and avoid straight lines on the edges to elimate most distortion
© 2014 Ben Kennedy
For my video; youtu.be/qS8rCLo2DGM,
Near freezing temperatures
cattle enjoying a sunny winter morning
Yellow Jacket, Colorado, United States
Yellowjacket Pass is a 7,785 ft (2,373 m) elevation mountain pass in Archuleta County, Colorado in the United States.
Cute little guy gave me heck when I pulled up next to him in the drive. Really cold day - I think he needs some mittens!
Cold Feet?
This male cardinal standing in snow reminded me of an interesting question posed by one of my contacts Vidterry - How can birds stand in the snow without getting frostbite.
2014_01_25_EOS 7D_1440 v1
2010/107 - 04/17 at 21 :05 UTC. Open-cell and closed-cell clouds off Peru, Pacific Ocean
Resembling a frosted window on a cold winter's day, this lacy pattern of marine clouds was captured off the coast of Peru in the Pacific Ocean by the MODIS on the Aqua satellite on April 19, 2010. The image reveals both open- and closed-cell cumulus cloud patterns. These cells, or parcels of air, often occur in roughly hexagonal arrays in a layer of fluid (the atmosphere often behaves like a fluid) that begins to "boil," or convect, due to heating at the base or cooling at the top of the layer.
In "closed" cells warm air is rising in the center, and sinking around the edges, so clouds appear in cell centers, but evaporate around cell edges. This produces cloud formations like those that dominate the lower left. The reverse flow can also occur: air can sink in the center of the cell and rise at the edge. This process is called "open cell" convection, and clouds form at cell edges around open centers, which creates a lacy, hollow-looking pattern like the clouds in the upper right.
Closed and open cell convection represent two stable atmospheric configurations — two sides of the convection coin. But what determines which path the "boiling" atmosphere will take? Apparently the process is highly chaotic, and there appears to be no way to predict whether convection will result in open or closed cells. Indeed, the atmosphere may sometimes flip between one mode and another in no predictable pattern.
Satellite: Aqua
NASA/GSFC/Jeff Schmaltz/MODIS Land Rapid Response Team
To learn more about MODIS go to: rapidfire.sci.gsfc.nasa.gov/gallery/?latest
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center is home to the nation's largest organization of combined scientists, engineers and technologists that build spacecraft, instruments and new technology to study the Earth, the sun, our solar system, and the universe.
Cold oot side.....messing a round with the prime lens,marbles and a torch,this is the result.Thank you for looking
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved. Louis Laliberté Photographie
Shaler High School Stadium
Glenshaw, PA
I often walk the track at this high school stadium when I go to the public library nearby. I got there after dark one evening in winter and was glad I still had my point-&-shoot camera in my pocket. When I was leaving, I walked behind the bleachers and saw these drink machines.
I loved how the glow of the lights of the machines colored the surrounding area. This platform is at about chin level, so I was able to hold the camera steady on the platform, thus getting a low point-of-view and a good night shot without a tripod.
Cold, Warwick, Rhode Island; © 2025, T. P. Hazard; SOOC
Shot with Fuji X Weekly’s Cyanotype film simulation recipe