View allAll Photos Tagged Fan
Gypsy Germaine at 34B Oxford St Burlesque.
This has got to be my favourite shot from the whole show. Beautiful, but then, with Gypsy Germaine, I can't imagine a photo not turning out beautiful.
Here's an image of a Fan-tailed Cuckoo I spotted a little while ago during a shoot at Morpeth, NSW; Australia.
I was fortunate that this bird perched out in the open - hope you like it!
Thanks for any comments, views or favorites - very much appreciated!
Wishing you a fantastic day and weekend ahead!
The Black Mountain West of the Brecons. There are people on the summit Cairn, just visible as a dot on the peak.
Il porto canale della città immerso nella nebbia di una mattina invernale
The canal port of the city immersed in the fog of a winter morning.
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I love the way some ducks fan their tail out over the water. Bufflehead drake, Lake Siskiyou, California
I remember the first time I clapped eyes on a Fan-tailed Raven I could not believe its shape. Ravens are usually identified by long, narrow wings and a long tail. But these have really broad wings and a very short tail giving a flight silhouette like a miniature vulture. I first saw them in Wadi Rum in Jordan about 25 years ago but they were common in the mountains of Ethiopia. But they are not especially widespread with one population in East Africa and another in the Arabian peninsula. They are quite small for a Raven with a bill to tail measurement of 48cm compared with 64cm for Common Raven, though you are not comparing like with like with such a stumpy-tailed bird. Its scientific name Corvus rhipidurus rather prosaically translates as Fan-tailed Raven. I was quite pleased with this photo as it is much easier to photograph from below, but this shows its bizarre shape from above, Although a black bird against a dark cliff isn't ideal.
Shop Window in Seville - Spain
Taken from the street through the glass.
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Abanicos en Sevilla
Escaparate en Sevilla - España
Tomado desde la calle a través del vidrio.
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***** Thank you very much for your view, comment and fave.
I invite you to visit all my photo-gallery. Thanks
I started walking up Pen y Fan at around 3 am to catch the sunrise, the light certainly didn't disappoint.
Canada's smallest street looks wide in this shot, but is in fact only about 2 meters wide in this spot and narrower than a meter in others. It is so vibrant and fun place to take a stroll at night. Looks empty in this shot because I am patient to wait out all the traffic, but it was actually bustling on a Friday night. Had a lot of fun to interacting with all the people and tourists who were passing through, many of them trying to ham it up when they saw the camera. Too bad I was doing long exposure, otherwise there would have been a lot of funny photobombs.
The top of the extinct volcano at Fanal, Madeira is host to a herd of cattle that roam freely across the plain. Minutes after this shot was taken a mist rose up over the crater lip and made it seem we were in the middle of a cloud.
• India, Kerala: Munnar •
2011 sq3669lr
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A chi assegna un award sarò ancora più grato se aggiungerà un commento.
More thanks awarders for commenting too!
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Copyright © Stefano Guadagni
Tutti i diritti riservati / All rights reserved.
Non utilizzare questa fotografia senza il mio consenso.
Do not use this photograph without my consent.
Se siete interessati a questa fotografia, contattatemi,
potrò fornire la versione ad alta risoluzione. Grazie.
If you are interested in this picture, please contact me,
I'll provide you the hi-res version. Thanks.
passionflyer@gmail.com
It's getting warmer here in Florida. This is my new fan.
The pretty girl is our Granddaughter Alyssa
This is a Panos Action that works in Photoshop and PS Elements, free to members HERE
Fan Hir is a peak at the eastern end of the Black Mountain (Y Mynydd Du) in the Brecon Beacons National Park (Parc Cenedlaethol Bannau Brycheiniog) in southern Wales. It is a subsidiary summit of Fan Brycheiniog. It falls within the county of Powys and is also a part of the traditional area of Fforest Fawr. Its Welsh name means "long peak", a fitting description, particularly if seen from the east when its steep eastern face is seen to advantage. It is about 2.5 miles or 4 km long and faces east. Its summit is 2490 feet (about 760m) above sea level. Fan Hir is separated from its higher neighbour to the north-west, Fan Brycheiniog (2633 feet or 802 metres) by a col known as Bwlch Giedd, where a path rises from Llyn y Fan Fawr via a stone staircase.