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Atop a Saguaro Cactus in Saguaro National Park.

Castelluccio di Norcia

Stairs at Tate Britain

My tulips didn't last long so I had to get a photo before they were done

 

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Another shot taken @ Sausalito Art Festival....I liked the way the metal sculpture looked against the sky....

 

This is another collaboration pic, shot by me and processing by Sean (thanks! :-))

We saw and heard a lot of Curve-billed Thrashers in SE Arizona this month before we got anything close to a photo opportunity. I was starting to wonder if we would ever find one that was willing to pose but this one gave us satisfaction. I’m sure a photo of it on the ground would be more representative of how I usually see this species but you have to admit, the cactus was a nicer setting.

  

www.texastargetbirds.com

 

_MG_5613-web

 

Toxostoma curvirostre

 

The curves and curls of the waves and water lines in this blue light created a soft, serene mood . A different kind of beauty at St Ives.

Australian Pelican. Philip Island.

Here comes my work for week 31. it's a souvenir of my holidays in italy .... Hope you like it :-)

Here goes, another Shark Eye Seashell for today's MM escargatoire.

The most beautiful of the woods ... Lady's-slipper acaule. La plus belle des bois. HMM!

Looking Close...on Friday - Single Flower Petal

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without explicit permission.

© All rights reserved

Morant’s Curve is named for Nicholas Morant, a staff photographer for the Canadian Pacific Railway. For 44 years, he crisscrossed the country on passenger trains. He photographed hotels, steamships, trucks, airplanes, oil wells, and mines, for the CPR. He chronicled the times, writing for the company magazine as well as photographing developments on the railway. Wouldn't that be a great job! His photos have been used on the backs of $10, $50 and $100 Canadian bills.

I love this building although it's quite tricky to photograph. These glossy bits aren't easy.

 

All comment pictures are also clickable

Post sunset glow. This is reasonably close to matching my memory colour of this scene. In fact, my memory is of more purple shadows but I feel that wouldn't look believable.

The Imperial Sand Dunes offer many opportunities to capture light and shadow. On this late afternoon there were dune buggies racing across the dunes leaving countless tracts and curves in the sand.

 

Thanks for stopping by

Interior of the Ouroboros sculpture at the National Gallery of Australia in Canberra

Miles Davis - Sketches Of Spain

Gracias xelemendez por poner música a mis imágenes

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Thank you very much for your visits, faves, and kind comments

Muchas gracias por vuestras visitas, favoritos y amables comentarios

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it's snow...not sugar ;-)

Arizona desert near Green Valley.

a telephoto shot of 6233 on wardle curve with the returning cheshireman excursion

photo by joy beresford

at the kunst rondell near the messestadt ost station, architecture and motion collide in a quiet choreography. the massive curve of the structure wraps around the figure, a silhouette in mid-step, frozen in a moment of quiet determination. light cuts across the metallic facade, tracing sharp, geometric lines that contrast the softness of the figure’s movement.

 

the space feels monumental yet human – a balance between the overwhelming scale of the architecture and the fleeting presence of a person walking through it. the shadows stretch long, the curves cradle the light, and the figure disappears into the moment, leaving only the interplay of shapes and reflections behind.

 

this is more than a photograph. it’s a scene where stillness and motion coexist, where concrete and light tell a story of presence and transition, and where the human scale meets architectural grandeur.

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