View allAll Photos Tagged Face

For Macro Mondays - Matchstick

 

When I put this image on the computer screen I saw a 'face' in the head of the upright match.

 

Happy Macro Monday!

♫ ♪ Click here ► to play ♪ ♫

 

I ain´t gonna feel sorry for myself

Even though I got the winds of doubt on my breath

So laddie pick up your musket now

A strong man don´t need no loaded bullets somehow

Am

Thousand scattered are pieces burning in my skin

 

But if u call for me you know ill hear your voice

If u bleed for me

I know you made the choice

I will stand by you

every time that u may fall

I believe it´s true together we are tall enough

To Face Brave

   

taken @ sunny studios

 

pose used ;- katana kill

Wikipedia: The grey-headed woodpecker (Picus canus), also known as the grey-faced woodpecker, is a Eurasian member of the woodpecker family, Picidae. Along with the more commonly found European green woodpecker and the Iberian green woodpecker, it is one of three closely related sister species found in Europe. Its distribution stretches across large parts of the central and Eastern Palaearctic, all the way to the Pacific Ocean.

 

Conservation status: Least Concern

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grey-headed_woodpecker

Wünsche Euch einen schönen Montag :-))

The Flame-faced Tanager is one of the most spectacular members of the diverse and exceptionally colorful genus Tangara. Living up to its common name, the forehead begins as a deep glimmering red, shading into a brilliant yellow on the nape and sides of the head. This "flame" contrasts sharply with the jet black back. The Flame-faced Tanager is a common member in mixed species foraging flocks in the canopy of humid montane forest from the Andes of extreme southwest Venezuela south to central Peru. It forages exclusively along mossy branches and occasionally peering at the underside in search of arthropods. There are three subspecies of the Flame-faced Tanager, described based mostly on minor differences in plumage. The species is typically found from 1000-2600 m and is most numerous above 1500 m. The IUCN Red list assesses the Flame-faced Tanager as a species of Least Concern; however, the population size is declining due to habitat destruction. Thus, the Flame-faced Tanager should become the focus of future studies.

 

Have a Peaceful Saturday!

 

Thanks a lot for your visits, comments, faves, invites, etc. Very much appreciated!

 

© All my images are protected under international authors copyright laws and may not be downloaded, reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without my written explicit permission. All rights reserved. Please contact me at thelma.gatuzzo@gmail.com if you intend to buy or use any of my images.

 

My instagram if you like: @thelmag and @thelma_and_cats

 

"The face is the soul of the body."

Quote - Ludwig Wittgenstein

 

Another face on the wall, maybe you see it too ;-)

SHE

 

My dear friend Anke reminded me of this beautiful song - an ageless song.

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=ajjdY070VU4

  

"A change in the weather is sufficient to recreate the world and ourselves."

 

Marcel Proust

 

While staying near Hilo, Hawaii, I dashed outside after a rain shower. I didn't expect to see small flowers with faces. They looked a bit cranky, so my encounter with them was brief.

We were having a donut snack at the famous Kenilworth bakery in Queensland when this honeyeater flew on to the next table top and eyeing our donuts.

 

No, we did not feed it. It stayed just long enough for me to get a quick shot.

 

The Blue-faced Honeyeater is a large black, white and golden olive-green honeyeater with striking blue skin around the yellow to white eye.

 

The crown, face and neck are black, with a narrow white band across the back of the neck.

 

The upperparts and wings are a golden olive green, and the underparts are white, with a grey-black throat and upper breast.

 

The blue facial skin is two-toned, with the lower half a brilliant cobalt blue.

 

Juvenile birds are similar to the adults but the facial skin is yellow-green and the bib is a lighter grey.

 

This honeyeater is noisy and gregarious, and is usually seen in pairs or small flocks.

 

It is known as the Banana-bird in tropical areas, for its habit of feeding on banana fruit and flowers.

 

Many thanks for your visit, comments, invites and faves...it is always appreciated...

 

Peaceful Sunday

 

2018 12 31

 

[- Outfit -]

☑ Okinawa Winter/New Year Festival

Kimono & Umbrella: asia aka:):kokorotayori

 

☑ Kustom9

Hair: [monso] My Hair - Darling

 

Hand Tattoo: CUREMORE / SCAR TISSUE / Fermented @Gacha

Mask: Le Morte - Creature Mask - Fat Pack Right ( CLOSED )

 

[- Decoration -]

☑ Okinawa Winter/New Year Festival

Shrine: [MRS]Shinto shrine ( Special price 20% OFF )' MARUSHIN '

Stone: [MRS]Komainu

 

Foxs: {-Maru Kado-} Skull head Fox_black

Hand: 13_{-Maru Kado-} Halo-Hitogata Black @Gacha

 

Blog...~ le soleil ~

 

For more information have to blog <33

Thanks so much for your time !!

Thank you for always having lots of Fav ♥

Many thanks to you !! ♥

love it ♥

Red Cow Farm, Moss Vale, NSW.

Abstract Floral Face

 

[Dedicated to CRA (ILYWAMHASAM)

 

😄 HaPpY Sliders Sunday 😄

 

Photo of a Nasturtium

post processed to the max:

enhanced saturation, conrast and colour temperature, then framed it - ready to upload for the

 

Sliders Sunday Group

 

Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ200

ƒ/4.0

4.5 mm

1/800 Sec

ISO 100

If you face the light,

shadow will always be

behind you

 

(Sukant Ratnakar)

It's perched on the buds of a milkweed. This past summer I saw many more of these than in the past few years. Fingers crossed that this trend continues. Happy Monday!

 

Thank you for your visits and comments, they're all very much appreciated. Have a great week!

Common Gum Tree Shield Bug (Poecilometis patruelis)

 

This one was happy to pose for a photo session today.

The North Face of Annapurna I (8,091 m), the 10th highest mountain in the world. First climbed by a French expedition lead by Maurice Herzog and Louis Lachenal, who summited on the 3rd of June 1950 just before the monsoon storms arrived.

 

I took this shot just after sunrise, leaving a village called Ledar alone and hiking towards Chulu West to around 5,000 m altitude in order to see over the valleys seperating me from the Annapurna Massif. It was my first view of Annapurna I of this trip and it felt incredible to finally see the mountain about which I had read so much. Although I was so high and surrounded by ice, the sun was incredibly hot, the silence punctuated only by the cracking and groaning sounds of the seracs of Chulu West (6,419 m) so close behind me.

 

I appreciate your feedback and comments! If you wish to contact me for any reason feel free to send me a Flickr mail or message me on any other social media and I'll reply as soon as I can.

 

If you like this or any of my other images, prints are available from my site at www.stewmillerphotography.com.

 

Instagram: www.instagram.com/mightystew/

Twitter: twitter.com/StewMillerCLIMB

Taken in the wild at Erongo Wilderness Lodge... a near endemic species.

 

Erongo Mountain

Namibia

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Hairy Mary Caterpillar (Anthela varia)

 

I came face to face with this Caterpillar while looking for insects today.

 

Thanks to Rod ( www.flickr.com/photos/ozzrod/ ) for the ID.

“The face is a picture of the mind with the eyes as its interpreter.”

Another amazing day at Face Rock Beach in Bandon, Oregon.

This baby with the fuzzy face is the tiniest of the deer visiting us this year. She is so curious; always looking in the windows for our cats. The other day, she had a confrontation with a stick frozen in the ice. I think she thought it was a snake.

"Oeps, you spotted me….now I can't hide anymore …….

…………………...

…. oh well, let's start this new week then…….

….and…..ehhh...

how does your Monday face looks like ?”

°•Lelutka Zora Head 3.0 EvoX

 

°•Glam Affair Eloise Velour Sunkiss Skin Tone [Lelutka EvoX] - New Uber Event July Round

 

°•Tram 0630 Hair

  

💄💋

 

°•Glam Affair Facebook

 

Wat Phra That Doi Kham ~ Chiang Mai Province, Thailand

 

Nikon D5100, Tamron 18-270, ISO 500, f/6.3, 65mm, 1/640s

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