View allAll Photos Tagged EYE

Eye contact

Creek Park Dubai

Taken with my old powershot, can you see me?

Dark-eyed junco

 

DJH04047-Edit

Took by my brother

Standing eye to eye - Oog in oog - Roe deer in the wild

Ojo de Carolina

Red-eyed Vireo

Vireo olivaceus

Verderón Ojirrojo

Familia (Family): Vireonidae

Taxonomía (Taxonomy): SACC

 

Lugar (Taken in): Medellín, Colombia

© Wilmer Quiceno

 

Instagram: @wilmer.quiceno

heres some detail of a female western blue bird eye.

she and her guy are building a nest inside an abandoned mud swallow nest above my studio window.

strobist: 430EX below camera left fired via cactus wireless triggers. tungsten desk lamp camera right at eye level with subject.

 

editing wise -used a few adjustment vignettes (curves and colorised hue) then used hue layers to bring out the pupil and viens -finally a bit of dodge and burn

Se me ha metido un bokeh en el ojo.

(Sin edicion)

An Emporer goose (Anser canagicus) taking a chance to get some shut eye. Taken at Arundel WWT

  

A Macro Mondays submission on the topic "eye". This is the eye of a fly.

Press L.

 

The eye, moviemuseum in Amsterdam

i was thinking alice in wonderland-esque in my head...not really happy with the result ...i think its the angle of my eye and where its sitting on the flower

Barred owl in Oregon.

Xuhui IKEA

_

Kodak colorplus

Nikon FM

Another picture of the Blue banded bees that roost on my passionfruit vine every night, sometimes there is 2or three of them other nights there has been 7 or 8.

There was 4 of them tonight. I managed to get a decent picture of 2 of them together

Well worth a closer look View On Black

Details of an Asian elephants eye

the eye building in Bristol, England. processed with cs6, silver exfex pro 2 . used selective gradient masks from 3 different shots- high key, low key and neutral to create the shot

Dark-eyed Juncos are neat, even flashy little sparrows that flit about forest floors of the western mountains and Canada, then flood the rest of North America for winter. They’re easy to recognize by their crisp (though extremely variable) markings and the bright white tail feathers they habitually flash in flight. Dark-eyed Juncos are among the most abundant forest birds of North America.

Surrey BC Canada

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