View allAll Photos Tagged DeepRed

Garnet gemstones cluster along the length of a handmade bracelet with filigree bronze beads interspersed between.

Diamond cut deep Red Garnet silver stud earrings,crimeajewel.jpg

On my way up the hill towards home, I was stopped in my tracks by the amazing sight of this single Ruby Red Iris poking up through the leaves of a hydrangea bush. The rich colour and purple sheen seemed alight, even in the pouring rain.

"Notre Dame" Paris 1953 Zeiss Contax IIIa with deep-red filter near infrared Ilford spx200 film

Leica M Monochrom typ 246 + Ernst Leitz Gmbh Wetzlar Summar 42mm f/4.5 + Leitz Rh (deep red) A36 filter

I've got several different kinds of coreopsis blooming right now, but this dark red variety is probably the most striking of all of them.

The Painted Desert, Route 160, Arizona, USA

 

50mm

Minolta SRT 101 + Rokkor-X 50mm f1/.4 lens + Film

Leica M Monochrom typ 246 + Nikkor-Q.C 5cm f/3.5 (Tessar) LTM + Leitz Rm (deep red / infra-red) E36 filter

Leica M Monochrom typ 246 + Leitz Elmar 5cm f/3.5 LTM + Leitz Rh (deep red) A36 filter

Christmas time flowers around the house. I can't believe Christmas is already a week away.

 

Reggie Ballesteros Photography:

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Leica M Monochrom typ 246 + Ernst Leitz Wetzlar Summitar 5cm f/2 + Leitz R.h (deep red) filter

Leica M Monochrom typ 246 + Ernst Leitz Gmbh Wetzlar Summar 42mm f/4.5 + Leitz Rh (deep red) A36 filter

in this 'American Flag' Sunrise ~ Deerfield Beach, Florida.

Leica M Monochrom typ 246 + Carl Zeiss Jena Sonnar 8.5cm f/2 (1933) + Zeiss Ikon 967/7 R20 (deep red) filter

Leica M Monochrom typ 246 + Ernst Leitz Gmbh Wetzlar Summar 42mm f/4.5 + Leitz Rh (deep red) A36 filter

Love the FRESH eggs from our cochan chickens...THe banan's organic and the Portuguese Sweet Bread from my Mother in Love all the way from Gustine..a 6 hr drive...

Leica M Monochrom typ 246 + Ernst Leitz GmbH Wetzlar Hektor 13.5cm f/4.5 + Leitz Rh (deep red) A36 filter

Wupatki National Monument, Route 89, Arizona, USA

 

50mm

Minolta SRT 101 + Rokkor-X 50mm f1/.4 lens + Film

Leica M Monochrom typ 246 + W-Nikkor.C 3.5cm f/2.5 + Leitz Rh (deep red) A36 filter

Oohh, la, la, getting ready for the chilly air to swoop in...

 

This is a handknit chunky yarn crimson-colored hat. The bottom edge of the hat is a taupe/grayish-brown colored yarn.

 

The fit is loose and slightly slouchy at the top.

 

The button is handmade and made to match the stitching along the edge of the hat.

 

Measurements:

Bottom edge circumference: 19"

Button: about 1.75" diameter

 

Easy care: Hand wash or machine wash cold. Lay flat to dry.

 

For more info., visit www.squirrelywhirls.etsy.com

Thanks for looking!

Virginia creeper or five-leaved ivy (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) is a woody vine native to eastern and central North America, in southeastern Canada, the eastern and central United States, eastern Mexico, and Guatemala, west as far as Manitoba, South Dakota, Utah and Texas.

 

It is a prolific climber, reaching heights of 20 to 30 m in the wild. It climbs smooth surfaces using small forked tendrils tipped with small strongly adhesive pads 5 mm in size. The leaves are palmately compound, composed of five leaflets (rarely three leaflets, particularly on younger vines) joined from a central point on the leafstalk, and range from 3 to 20 cm (rarely 30 cm) across. The leaflets have a toothed margin, which makes it easy to distinguish from poison-ivy, which has three leaflets with smooth edges.

 

The flowers are small and greenish, produced in clusters in late spring, and mature in late summer or early fall into small hard purplish-black berries 5 to 7 mm diameter. These berries contain oxalic acid, which is poisonous to humans and other mammals, and may be fatal if eaten. However, accidental poisoning is uncommon, likely because of the bad taste of the berries. Despite being poisonous to mammals, they provide an important winter food source for birds. Oxalate crystals are also contained in the sap, and can cause irritation and skin rash [1]

Leica M Monochrom typ 246 + Nikkor-Q.C 5cm f/3.5 (Tessar) LTM + Leitz Rm (deep red / infra-red) E36 filter

Leica M Monochrom typ 246 + Nikkor-Q.C 5cm f/3.5 (Tessar) LTM + Leitz Rh (deep red / infra-red) A36 filter

Leica M Monochrom typ 246 + Nikkor-Q.C 5cm f/3.5 (Tessar) LTM + Leitz Rm (deep red / infra-red) E36 filter

Leica M Monochrom typ 246 + W-Nikkor.C 3.5cm f/2.5 + Leitz Rh (deep red) A36 filter

Custom order in super cozy, warm, chunky wool/synthetic blend.

 

For more about Phydeaux Designs, please see my profile!

Leica M Monochrom typ 246 + Fed 100mm f/6.3 LTM + Leitz R.h (deep red) A36 filter

Fall color - Boulder, Colorado

Sunrise a fantastic atmosphere seen from the Haengju Bridge over the Han River in Seoul.

Taste it at its best during dinner time, get lost in its desert city centre and finish the night in one of the pompous coffee shops. Or find yourself by chance in one of the scariest location of the best Italian horror movie

Leica M Monochrom typ 246 + Fed 100mm f/6.3 LTM + Leitz R.h (deep red) A36 filter

own creation :) fruity taste

6 cl ananas juice

6 cl o-juice

6 cl soda

4 cl bacardi superior

2 cl grenadine sirup

2 cl cranberry sirup

 

pree cool the glas in refrigerator. mix/shake all exprect soda 15 s long in mixer/shaker. fill glas to 1/4 with crushed ice, give mixer/shaker content into and fill with soda.

 

enjoy it!

From my set entitled “Bleeding Heart”

www.flickr.com/photos/21861018@N00/sets/72157607186479750/

In my collection entitled “The Garden”

www.flickr.com/photos/21861018@N00/collections/7215760718...

 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dicentra

Dicentra spectabilis also known as Venus's car, bleeding heart, Dutchman's trousers, or lyre flower, is a perennial herbaceous plant native to eastern Asia from Siberia south to Japan. This species of bleeding heart can grow to 24"-36" tall and has ternately compound leaves (leaflets that come in threes). The flowers are pendulous, shaped much like hearts, produced in a raceme bearing 3-15 individual flowers, each one 1-2" long, with pink outer petals and white inner petals. The flowering season is from early spring to mid summer. The common name of this plant, bleeding heart, comes from the heart-shaped flowers which have a longer inner petal that extends below the 'heart'.

 

It is a popular ornamental plant for flower gardens in temperate climates, and is also used in floristry as a cut flower. It can be a full sun plant if in a cool area but in a warm climate, prefers semi-shaded areas. It needs to be kept moist and prefers neutral to alkaline soil with good drainage although these plants can tolerate heavy clay soil as well.

It is prone to aphids, slugs and snails, which cause damage to its leaves. Propagation is by sowing the seeds when fresh. It can also be divided, preferably in the late fall or early spring. However, contact with the plant can cause skin irritation because the entire plant is toxic, so should be handled with gloves and long sleeves.

 

Several cultivars have been selected, including 'Alba', with pure white flowers, and 'Goldheart', a relatively new cultivar developed at Hadspen Garden in England and introduced in 1997 with fuchsia-coloured flowers that drop from the stem in a row, and yellow foliage that turns lime green by mid summer.

 

David Austin rose at Kathy Brown's Garden

i tried 3 different ways to photograph my nemesis this year, still trying to capture it's amazing depth of colour

Wupatki National Monument, Route 89, Arizona, USA

 

50mm

Minolta SRT 101 + Rokkor-X 50mm f1/.4 lens + Film

Leica M Monochrom typ 246 + Nikkor-Q.C 5cm f/3.5 (Tessar) LTM + Leitz Rm (deep red / infra-red) E36 filter

Leica M Monochrom typ 246 + Ernst Leitz Wetzlar Summitar 5cm f/2 + Leitz R.h (deep red) filter

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