View allAll Photos Tagged Expression
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Candid street photography from Glasgow, Scotland. As she was two steps higher up I just loved the perspective for enhancing her subtle expression here - enjoy!
I spotted her in the crowd, and she saw me. We looked at each other and nodded. Then she stuck her tongue out.
It's an image celebrating an individual's right to self-expression. It sums up the way I often feel. Cheeky. Irreverent. Fun. Expressive. Creative. Nonconformist.
Yeshe, a six-year-old boy in front of his parents' house near the village of Aba in the Serta Golok region. In between the various ceremonies and events to celebrate the Tibetan New Year, we walked outside the village to various people and homesteads. Yeshe was here alone but neighboring friends or acquaintances were near him and talked to him and I had to do something so that he could look at me in an unbiased and natural way. He had the amulet around his neck under his jacket and the people around him folded down the collar of his jacket to make it visible. It shows the Panchen Lama, who is the highest spiritual authority for the Tibetans after the Dalai Lama.
Leica M6 (Tit.); Leica Summilux 1,4/35 mm Asph. (Ltd. Version); Fuji Neopan 400, dev. with Ilford ID-11; sol. 1 :1; scanned with Nikon Coolscan 8000ED (wich doesn't work now).
ALL RIGHT RESERVED
All material in my gallery MAY NOT be reproduced, copied, edited, published, transmitted or uploaded in any way without my permission.
Don't spam my photo thread! Comments with awards, photos or group logos will be removed!
Please have also a look to my Tibet album !
For his means of architectural expression the Russian has always borrowed the grammar of some foreign tongue and made it the basis of a language entirely his own. [St Petersburg] remains the most perfectly planned and most impressively classical city in Europe, and its beauty is a supreme monument to the individual genius of the Russian aesthetic - Robert Byron, 1933.
little fish got beautiful legs and sweet pretty face,eyes…
Every her pose and motion was so charming and hot feeling
In the winter of 2012, I was trying (yet again) to get a decent group shot of my trio at the time (Nan, Lad, and Ben). I told the dogs to Stay as I walked away, but I forgot to say an extra Stay when I knelt down. As you can see, Nan and Ben took my kneeling as an invitation to join me, while Lad, being the very obedient boy that he was, didn't move. I love the expression on Lad's face that clearly says "Hey you two, what are you doing? We were told to Stay!"
This was the reason I visited the Olympic Peninsula because I wanted to see these endemic Olympic Marmots. I had never seen them before and they did not disappoint. It was fun watching them and listening to them whistle. The hike up to see them was beautiful at 5.2Km long an elevation gain of 650Ft to the top of Hurricane Hill via Hurricane Ridge which sits at 5700Ft. At the top we had views of the Olympic Peninsula, The Strait of Juan de Fuca, Olympic Mountains and Victoria and Canada. The views of the Olympic Marmots and other wildlife and scenery was something special to see. I saw 6 Marmots on the hike and all of them were above 4000Ft. I saw adults and young and the young looked very different from the older ones as they had white faces and bellies. The one photographed here is an adult. I like their unique coat colour which has a lot of copper in it. It was fun to watch them sunning themselves on the rocks. I love his expression especially in this shot.
Olympic Marmots are endemic to the Olympic Peninsula and are not found anywhere else in the world. They are declining due to climate change and predation and have been intensely monitored since 2010. Olympic Marmots are the largest of all Marmots and show the greatest sexual dimorphism with the males being much larger than the females.
The Olympic marmot is the second-rarest North American marmot, behind the critically endangered Vancouver Island Marmot which I recently photographed.
This is the official endemic mammal of Washington State.
I took this image a few years ago but thought it would be a good time to post it. It's nice to see some facial "expressions," which seem to be increasingly rare these days.
chewing a horn while Etta & Brian hunt lizards behind him.
Daily Dog Challenge: Oops
That could be what he's saying with that expression 8o
With each passing second the landscape changes and the expression of nature's face changes once again. Pausing to take it all in, I step back to really see what is there. What strikes me are the peaks that are touched with alpenglow and the clouds that look like puffs of charcoal smoke. The blue is intense and the mist lingers on the waters edge.
It all seems distant now, quieter than a few moments ago. There is no sound except for me, and its moments like this that are the reward.
The little Mountain Blue Birds were all over the place at Strawberry Reservoir where we were camping. Love the expressions! We had a campsite overlooking one of the bays at the lake. It was so relaxing to sit and watch the fishermen in their boats on the water. Sunrise was amazing
2016/21 Expression
Mountain Bluebird
Strawberry Reservoir in Utah
☆ Comments and Favorites are always appreciated. Enjoy
the photo but please do not copy or download © images.
Thank you!