View allAll Photos Tagged Flaming

This is what happens after you have seen the Flaming Lips.

 

Bumped into these guys in my local on m way back from a shoot.

 

Better large Press L

                                                                

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Flaming Gorge from the campgrounds well above on the South end. Notice Kristy in white on the platform in the upper left... look closely.

Flaming Cliffs of Bayanzag, where a lot of dinosaur eggs were discovered by Roy Chapman Andrews in 1922.

 

Les "falaises ardentes" de Bayanzag, où beaucoup d'œufs de dinosaures ont été découverts par Roy Chapman Andrews en 1922.

More flaming steel wool shots, this time in or near the lake :). That orange blob in the background (to my son's left) is the moon rising.

 

Strobist info: I had the flash on trailing edge sync and on camera at 1/2 power and zoomed to 58mm.

I spent the night camped just on the Wyoming side of the border at the Flaming Gorge national Recreation Area.

Oh yeah.. this is my favorite.. besides the other ones :))

Tucked away at the edge of an old quarry this tree stands out amongst all the others. It is the most beautiful display of fall colour I've ever seen. This photo does not even do it justice. I imagine Moses might have seen something like this on top of mount Sinai.

How to draw skulls - hubpages.com/_flicker/hub/How-To-Draw-A-Skull

Flaming skull drawing inverted on the computer.

The Flaming Gorge Dam is a concrete thin-arch dam in the Flaming Gorge of the Green River, a major tributary of the Colorado River, in the U.S. state of Utah.

 

One of the largest dams in the American West, Flaming Gorge Dam forms the Flaming Gorge Reservoir, which extends 91 miles (146 km) into southern Wyoming, submerging four distinct gorges of the Green River. The dam stores water for the Colorado River Storage Project, which stores and distributes upper Colorado River Basin water. The dam's hydroelectric power plant generates 151.5 MW.

 

Situated in Flaming Gorge, a canyon of the Green River named by John Wesley Powell, the dam was built and is operated by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. Groundbreaking for the structure began in 1958 and was completed in 1964. The completed structure is 502 feet (153 m) high and 1,180 feet (360 m) long, with three hydroelectric generators.

 

With no fish ladders, elevators or any means of passage for aquatic species, the dam has severely hurt native species. By creating a standing-water pool on a sediment-laden river, the dam has caused the lower Green to lose its sediment load and decrease in temperature, further hurting the native ecosystem.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flaming_Gorge_Dam

 

This photograph is being used in Water: Utah's most precious resource, an educational desktop background program installed on state owned public computers in school districts, Universities, and public offices and created by the Utah Water Research Laboratory at Utah State University in Logan.

 

You can see all the photos and their captions as used in the project here.

 

Project photo credits page: uwrl.usu.edu/utahwatereducation/photocredits.html

The Animus Art Collective’s installation, Flaming Cactus, transforms ordinary streetscapes through the use of vibrantly colored zip ties affixed to street poles. Originally installed at FIGMENT 2011 on Governors Island, the installation brought its playful energy and whimsy to Astor Place in Manhattan.

The zip ties, once wrapped and locked around the street poles, have tails of excess material. These tails create the effect of cactus needles sprouting from the trunk of the street poles.

 

In an interview for the Figment Project, Animus co-founder, Preston Dane said, “Our hope is to show that adding art to a community or space doesn’t require a lot of resources, formal education, or even money. Creativity is something we’re all capable of.”

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Artervention

Flaming Cactus by Animus Art

Presented with Figment Project

Lafayette Street and 4th Avenue, Manhattan

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.animusart.com/

 

Flaming Cliffs of Bayanzag, where a lot of dinosaur eggs were discovered by Roy Chapman Andrews in 1922.

 

Les "falaises ardentes" de Bayanzag, où beaucoup d'œufs de dinosaures ont été découverts par Roy Chapman Andrews en 1922.

My son is a flaming marshmallow (for Halloween that is)

  

Lots of flowers on this Flaming Katy (Kalanchoe blossfeldiana) which is native to Madagascar.

 

Also called Christmas kalanchoe, florist kalanchoe and Madagascar widow's-thrill.

Another picture of the Flaming Cliffs of the South Gobi Desert in Ömnögovi Province of Mongolia.

 

Shot with Sigma DP1

I love how I don't really get any of the girl's faces, even though some of them don't have their masks pulled down. Girl #1 is looking down, so we get the alein head and Girl #2 has the flashlight in front of her face, so it just looks like the alien is looking up.

The Flaming Lips under the redwoods at the Henry Miller Memorial Library in Big Sur. September 11, 2012. Thank you FolkYeah!

October 9, 2025 - Flaming Pumpkin Photo Shoot at Tuttle Cameras in Long Beach, CA.

Here's a crop of the IC 434 nebula around the star Alnitak, the eastern most star in Orion's belt. To the east of it is rather large and beautiful Flame Nebula. To the south you can see the Horsehead Nebula, a dark nebula that intrudes into the rich hydrogen-alpha region of IC 434 in the shape of horse's head.

An Embraer 190 from KLM shortly before landing in Amsterdam

The Animus Art Collective’s installation, Flaming Cactus, transforms ordinary streetscapes through the use of vibrantly colored zip ties affixed to street poles. Originally installed at FIGMENT 2011 on Governors Island, the installation brought its playful energy and whimsy to Astor Place in Manhattan.

The zip ties, once wrapped and locked around the street poles, have tails of excess material. These tails create the effect of cactus needles sprouting from the trunk of the street poles.

 

In an interview for the Figment Project, Animus co-founder, Preston Dane said, “Our hope is to show that adding art to a community or space doesn’t require a lot of resources, formal education, or even money. Creativity is something we’re all capable of.”

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Artervention

Flaming Cactus by Animus Art

Presented with Figment Project

Lafayette Street and 4th Avenue, Manhattan

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.animusart.com/

 

Another grossly over-hyped title. This was taken at the Dahlia exhibit at the San Diego County Fair. I've never seen a dahlia that looked like this before, but the sign said dahlia, so it must be one. Signs don't ever lie do they?

 

I photographed this by holding an SB600 in my left hand and pointing it at the flower while holding the camera with my right hand. I took a lot of pictures with the flash pointed incorrectly. The flash was in TTL mode and was triggered by the pop up flash on my D90 in commander mode. One of the main benefits of having all of the light come from the flash is that no ambient light is recorded and the background goes black. If anything in the background gets lit accidentally (and that happens quite a bit), you can just paint it black in post processing.

 

Pictures I've taken over the years at our local fair can be seen here. www.flickr.com/photos/9422878@N08/sets/72157600647070312/

 

Other plants and flowers that I've photographed using strobes can be seen in my Strobe Lit Plant set. In the description, I list resources that I've used to learn how to light with off camera flash. www.flickr.com/photos/9422878@N08/sets/72157628079460544/...

A few random images from this morning walk around Bembridge harbour today.

 

Flaming Lips at Parklife

Creativity on a big screen during a live can be nice, Donahue used it this his art touch. We can see him behind the organ player, but other little movies were more hardcore: like a childbirth... The photo was taken with my half frame Benjamin Deberdt style ;)

The Animus Art Collective’s installation, Flaming Cactus, transforms ordinary streetscapes through the use of vibrantly colored zip ties affixed to street poles. Originally installed at FIGMENT 2011 on Governors Island, the installation brought its playful energy and whimsy to Astor Place in Manhattan.

The zip ties, once wrapped and locked around the street poles, have tails of excess material. These tails create the effect of cactus needles sprouting from the trunk of the street poles.

 

In an interview for the Figment Project, Animus co-founder, Preston Dane said, “Our hope is to show that adding art to a community or space doesn’t require a lot of resources, formal education, or even money. Creativity is something we’re all capable of.”

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Artervention

Flaming Cactus by Animus Art

Presented with Figment Project

Lafayette Street and 4th Avenue, Manhattan

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.animusart.com/

 

the winter collection - 5

 

this is the flaming glorybower also known as the pagoda flower. the climber when in its full bloom in dec/jan is completed enveloped in scarlet red. for years this one has been a essential in my mom's garden no matter which city.

From the Flaming Lips concert

by Chris Posey

@ Southside Tattoo & Piercing

1597 White Way

East Point-ATL, Georgia 30344

 

(404) 781-8000

 

SouthsideTattoo.net

The mountain climate is harsh and the temperature is extremely hot in the summer, the hottest spot in China with frequent temperature reaching over 50 °C (122 °F) or higher.

  

Seen in an indoor display today at UTMB Webster . Flaming Torch Flower. Billbergia pyramidalis, commonly known as the flaming torch and foolproof plant, is a species of bromeliad that is native to northern South America and parts of the Caribbean.

The Animus Art Collective’s installation, Flaming Cactus, transforms ordinary streetscapes through the use of vibrantly colored zip ties affixed to street poles. Originally installed at FIGMENT 2011 on Governors Island, the installation brought its playful energy and whimsy to Astor Place in Manhattan.

The zip ties, once wrapped and locked around the street poles, have tails of excess material. These tails create the effect of cactus needles sprouting from the trunk of the street poles.

 

In an interview for the Figment Project, Animus co-founder, Preston Dane said, “Our hope is to show that adding art to a community or space doesn’t require a lot of resources, formal education, or even money. Creativity is something we’re all capable of.”

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Artervention

Flaming Cactus by Animus Art

Presented with Figment Project

Lafayette Street and 4th Avenue, Manhattan

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.animusart.com/

 

The Flaming Lips

Performing Pink Floyd's "The Dark Side of the Moon"

Red Rocks Amphitheater

Morrison, CO August 4, 2011

October 13, 2022 - Flaming Pumpkins Photo Shoot with Tuttle Cameras at Heartwell Park in Long Beach, CA, for the annual October Tuttle Club Photo Shoot Event.

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