View allAll Photos Tagged Combing

Cotswold Wildlife Park

Finally some good weather!

I used spot metering on the sky and focused on the comb which was Blu-tacked to the window. A slight crop, otherwise as shot.

The comb is black, is that cheating?

Booklet advertising the Tyersal Combing Company, Dick Lane Mills, Laisterdyke, Bradford.

I made this sparkly flower with red glass pearls of different sizes, Swarovski crystals, red glass bugle beads, and hundreds of large, silverlined seed beads wrapping the comb.

 

It's perfect to fix on to a veil, complementing a red or burgundy scheme, or to add a bit of zing to an evening updo.

 

The comb is 4 inches, but the twisted wire tendrils extend out to 7 inches.

This rooster is very much loved. His owners gave me the okay to proceed with with a general anaesthetic anaesthetic to biopsy samples his comb lumps. We are pending the his results.

Taken and processed with an Apple iPhone.

 

Instagram: @grahampreston

Began combing her hair...

UT Hwy 95 crosses through the Comb Wash and the climbs along Comb Ridge through a manmade gap for the road.

roma street brisbane australia 1982

 

Clearly, the hotel's free comb is hilarious!

Solforata di Pomezia - Roma

Nikon F5, 24-120 @ 35, Provia 100, 1/60 F16, hand held

Union Grove.Combs Cemetery, McNairy County, Tennessee. Memorial Day 2012

LOVE the colours of this bit of rusting farm machinery which were enhanced by the gorgeous "golden hour" light and the beautiful landscape

 

February Photo Walk in the Peak District

 

This image is published under a Creative Commons License (Some Rights Reserved). Please make sure you credit me if using my work, and if possible link back to either my Flickr stream or my website. I'd love to know how you've used my work, so get in touch and show me!!

For May daily photo, Day 31 - teeth

Alvin Ramer Super Minis on left,

Craftsmith English on right.

Real nice comb. Not perfectly straight on the bar, but okay. I love the symmetrical shape of this comb.

Vija Celmins' rather large comb on display at LACME. It was taller than me I think. :o)

 

Mind you - that's not difficult!

 

DSC_4671-1-resized

Description: Comb graves in Hayter Cemetery, Overton Co., Tenn.

 

Date: January 2, 2013

 

Creator: Dr. Richard Finch

 

Collection name: Richard C. Finch Folk Graves Digital Photograph Collection

 

Historical note: Comb graves are a type of covered grave that are often called "tent graves." The length of the grave was covered by rocks or other materials that look like the gabled roof or comb of a building. They were popular in the 19th and early 20th centuries. It is conjectured that these graves were covered to protect them from either weather or animals, or perhaps both. While comb graves can be found in other southern states, the Cumberland Plateau in Tennessee has the highest concentration of these types of graves.

 

Accession number: 2013-022

 

Owning Institution: Tennessee State Library and Archives

 

ID#: Alpine Q - Hayter Cem 18

 

Ordering Information To order a digital reproduction of this item, please send our order form at www.tn.gov/tsla/dwg/ImageOrderForm.pdf to Public Services, Tennessee State Library & Archives, 403 7th Ave. N., Nashville, TN 37243-0312, or email to photoorders.tsla@tn.gov. Further ordering information can be found at the bottom of the page at the following location under Imaging Services Forms: www.tn.gov/tsla/forms.htm#imaging.

 

Copyright While TSLA houses an item, it does not necessarily hold the copyright on the item, nor may it be able to determine if the item is still protected under current copyright law. Users are solely responsible for determining the existence of such instances and for obtaining any other permissions and paying associated fees, that may be necessary for the intended use.

 

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