View allAll Photos Tagged Crops

Heifers graze a cover crop in Montana. August 2013.

Kaka in flight, UpperDam, Zealandia

This shot is cropped and tweaked in Luminar Neo.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Not the alien kind. Wheat fields just south of The Dalles, Or, near sunset.

Defeats the purpose a bit, but this is a crop from the thin exposure. You can see I've missed the focus by about 6 cm.

This could operator error, camera error, the model moving or all three!

DoF calculators seem to offer no good advice here...

Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 picture sample images

Panoramic crop of the picture below in the stream. That's it! Done with this now, they can knock it down ;)

 

On Black

Genus: Anemone

Species: patens

A member of the Ranunculaceae family, which is Latin for little frog. This plant is found in many areas of the tundra however this one happens to be growing in my garden in Westphal, Nova Scotia, Canada

Crop duster from the airport where I learned to fly the doodle bug. Yeah, these guys are insane!

A cropped page from Larry Lessig's book: Free Culture. Also available at www.free-culture.cc/

 

Cropping done by the bkrpr software from bkrpr.org.

Note: while this picture is under the CC-BY-SA license, the book itself is only available under a CC-BY-NC, meaning that commercial uses of the contents are prohibited

For Blythe&licca body by AntiqueBag©

A crop duster is a small aircraft specifically designed for aerial application of pesticides and fertilizers over farmland. These planes typically fly low to the ground, usually between 10 and 15 feet, to effectively spray insecticides and other chemicals.

www.billhunterphotography.com

Crop duster seen between Oakland Acres and Newton while traveling on Hwy 6.

GOJRA: A farmer harvesting wheat crop on his filed. NNI photo by Tahir

Cereal rye cover crops that has been drilled into corn stalks the previous Fall on Darrell Steele farm in Washington County, IA.

 

Please Credit: NRCS/SWCS photo by Lynn Betts

An agricultural aircraft is an aircraft that has been built or converted for agricultural use – usually aerial application of pesticides (crop dusting) or fertilizer (aerial topdressing); in these roles they are referred to as "crop dusters" or "top dressers". Agricultural aircraft are also used for hydroseeding.

Crop, 2011

Installtion of 12,000 stacked pencils topped with acrylic paint on gallery wall

approx. 150 x 150 inches

 

This Flickr Set documents the installation of Myers' Crop, 2011

 

visit exhibition webpage

 

Pelavin Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition of new work by Timothy Paul Myers, titled The Ontario Ration. In celebration of Pelavin Gallery ’s thirty year anniversary, in January 2011, Myers bases this exhibition on a found business ledger chronicling the last thirty-years of an egg farmer named Myron B. Johnson, circa 1899-1929. This will be Myers first solo exhibition at the gallery.

 

Repetition and the use of unlikely materials—two prominent themes in Myers' work—continue to be displayed in this exhibition, as Myers makes use of hundreds of pages from a thirty-year business ledger of Myron B. Johnson, circa 1899-1929; one-thousand trading cards, circa 1900s-1930s; and one-hundred-thousand stacked pencil pieces individually topped with a single drop of acrylic paint from the artist's palette of over one-hundred-fifty hand-mixed colors.

 

For more information, please visit pelavingallery.com

In this photo i focused on the moss, but there were many fallen trees and branches that diminished the focus of the picture so i made sure to crop out those distractions.

Crop, 2011

Installtion of 12,000 stacked pencils topped with acrylic paint on gallery wall

approx. 150 x 150 inches

 

This Flickr Set documents the installation of Myers' Crop, 2011

 

visit exhibition webpage

 

Pelavin Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition of new work by Timothy Paul Myers, titled The Ontario Ration. In celebration of Pelavin Gallery ’s thirty year anniversary, in January 2011, Myers bases this exhibition on a found business ledger chronicling the last thirty-years of an egg farmer named Myron B. Johnson, circa 1899-1929. This will be Myers first solo exhibition at the gallery.

 

Repetition and the use of unlikely materials—two prominent themes in Myers' work—continue to be displayed in this exhibition, as Myers makes use of hundreds of pages from a thirty-year business ledger of Myron B. Johnson, circa 1899-1929; one-thousand trading cards, circa 1900s-1930s; and one-hundred-thousand stacked pencil pieces individually topped with a single drop of acrylic paint from the artist's palette of over one-hundred-fifty hand-mixed colors.

 

For more information, please visit pelavingallery.com

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