View allAll Photos Tagged Flashier,
Advice from a woodpecker
Find your own rhythm.
Peck away at obstacles.
Be colorful.
Carve out a place for yourself.
Make your voice heard.
It’s ok to be flashy.
Use your head.
My textures plus JixiPix Pastello
Red Breasted Sap Sucker
This beauty spends a lot of time in our Mt. Ash tree and is quite the poser when I point the camera at him.
Enjoy and thanks so much for coming by!
An old favorite spiffed up a bit. This was one of the first photos I was halfway happy with when I ventured away from 35mm to digital. Unfortunately I had the camera set for low resolution and there isn't much of a file to work with. I don't normally do much alteration to my photos, besides bright/contrast and a little color correction. What you see is what you get for the most part, but I'm fooling around with a few oldies to improve my rather mediocre Photoshop skills.
Même sous la grisaille, on peut trouver de la couleur !
Roitelet triple bandeau, jardin botanique, Tours
A roseate spoonbill shows off that amazing pink plumage in a flashy fly-by.
My sincere thanks to all who spend the time to view, like or comment on my photos. It is much appreciated!
© 2022 Craig Goettsch - All rights reserved. Any unauthorized use without permission is prohibited.
I was down at Greenway near the water, when this American Goldfinch dropped in for a portrait before moving on.
"Autumn is a second spring when every leaf is a flower."
- Albert Camus
Flashy maple leaf getting ahead of the autumn color-changing crowd.
Photo was taken off of West River Parkway along the Mississippi River in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
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Allen's Hummingbird
Selasphorus sasin
Member of Nature’s Spirit
Good Stewards of Nature
© 2016 Patricia Ware - All Rights Reserved
A Teeny-Tiny Crop
Rio Grande locomotives worked in a tough operating environment along numerous grades, through canyons and tunnels. SD50 No. 5504 was particularly clean (even the snow plow) as it lead train No. 772 between Mesa and Lehi, Utah the morning of June 23, 1988.
I can't say that I've ever encountered such a brightly coloured dahlia before. It most certainly grabbed my attention while visiting the park's garden.
Background texture from Topaz Srudio 2.
Thank you for your visit and comment, it's greatly appreciated. Have a wonderful day!
A second shot from Thursday evening at West Pentire in Cornwall.
I'll try not to bore you too much with Poppy photos, I only have one more and may save that for later in the week, but I couldn't resist posting this one.
This was taken after the sun had set and the sky lit up with a whole multitude of colours, I really wasn't expecting to see a sky as stunning as this when I arrived at the location.
This is a wider crop than the one I posted yesterday so I could get all of that wonderful sky in shot.
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As much as I appreciated comments and feedback I would request no Awards or flashy gif comments, please. They will be deleted and you will be blocked. Thank you.
Woodhouse’s Scrub-Jay may lack the flashy crest of its jay relatives, but it makes up for it with bold personality. Draped in soft blues and subtle grays, this sleek, long-tailed forager is captured with a bill full of my suet. A true jay in spirit, yet defined by its rugged adaptability—proof that while all scrub-jays are jays, not all jays are scrub-jays!
I have a caged suet feeder, designed so that only small birds can access it. To provide another feeding option, I drilled holes in a 3-inch diameter vertical branch, allowing passerines to perch on the bark and easily feed. However, scrubjays, unable to cling to the vertical surface, have found a clever workaround—they fly up and hover just long enough to snatch a bite of suet, proving their cunning, thieving nature!
Outsmarted by a bird, Tom.
Gotta love those pink feathers in gorgeous light!
My sincere thanks to all who spend the time to view, like or comment on my photos. It is much appreciated!
© 2022 Craig Goettsch - All rights reserved. Any unauthorized use without permission is prohibited.
It was odd to see this bird in late February because seeing one is usually a sign of winter coming, not Spring!
After leaving Godrevy on Thursday we headed for Lands End. There is so much to photograph there and It always looks dramatic no matter what time of day or weather.
This is a shot of The Armoured Knight, a rock formation just off the coast. I have no idea how it got its name, I can't find anything online so it'll have to remain a mystery for now.
This rock formation is very popular with photographers but I've never really shot it myself. So while I was there I decided I'd go and get my own take on it. It was difficult to get a decent shot as there was a lot of white water being churned up by the crashing waves, but I managed to catch a moment when you could make out some movement in the sea.
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As much as I appreciated comments and feedback I would request no Awards or flashy gif comments, please. They will be deleted. Thank you.