View allAll Photos Tagged Forks
...... maybe four forks! Not at all just a simple shot of a couple of forks with a little reflection!
7 Days of Shooting Week #10 - The number 2 Macro Monday .....
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As a piece of cutlery or kitchenware, a fork is a tool consisting of a handle with several narrow tines (usually two, three or four) on one end. The fork, as an eating utensil, has been a feature primarily of the West. In the American style of fork etiquette, the fork is held with tines curving up; however, in continental style, the fork is held with the tines curving down.
BRONZE Medalist - TECHNIQUE: SHALLOW DOF Daily Theme Contest - September 2009. Color Photo Award - PREMIER.
South Fork of Snake Rive Swan Valley ID.
This is a two for one location. One direction you are shooting the iconic Fall Creek Falls. Turn around & shoot upstream view of the Snake River.
Oct. 8, 2024: Route 66 in Ash Fork, Arizona. About 400 people live in Ash Fork, once a thriving Santa Fe Railroad town, which has fallen upon hard times. In 1960, Santa Fe moved the rail line away from the community. Around 1980, I-40 bypassed Ash Fork. Major fires in 1977 and 1987 destroyed much of the downtown.
Here's another view of Roaring Fork Falls in Yancey County, NC. I really like how this one turned out, I really like that rock on the left and the orange one in the water. I would encourage all of you near the mountains of NC to get out and visit this beautiful waterfall, it's an easy 1 mile round trip hike, here are driving directions: www.ncwaterfalls.com/setrock1.htm
Received a polarizing film recently and was playing around with plastics, a light box and a polarizing filter.
Westbound BNSF coal train crosses the Clark Fork River at Clark Fork Idaho.
MRL 4th Subdivision
D7A_5926ef
Cliché shots are okay as long as you label them as such, right?
I polished all my silver flatware and serving pieces today for use at a wedding shower I'm hosting in April, and decided to play with one of the place settings in my lightbox. Feeling a bit unmotivated and bored today, so it's a good day for a fallback cliché image. Ironically, with only the tips of the tines in focus, it wouldn't have mattered if the fork was tarnished ! Real silverware is so old-fashioned; I don't think many brides even choose a pattern or register anymore...
Forks on paper. (With apologies - I got the idea from somewhere on Flickr, but can't remember whose photo inspired me.)
In winter I do more still life when it is not very welcome in terms of weather at the outdoor.
I played with a fork and the backlit sun in my dinning room.
"You can go to Hell with your Well Well Well" as Ian Dury once sang...
Tripod-mounted Photoshopped composite shot in my shed & lit by a Neewer Speedlite on a stick. We're Here; Oi!!! ;-)
I switched to a series on a mellower day at McIntosh Lake. Recently, the skies cleared at the MAC and I decided to park but trek down to the lake. Another walk on a better day revealed the paths at Dawson Park for a short stroll for a badly needed break. I didn't get far because I noticed the split in the walks. Should I take the straight or the crooked path and which might pay off more handsomely? Am I the crooked man from the poem? The McIntosh loop is a crooked 3.5 miles. That's more than a crooked mile!
The crooked path leads to the tranquil pea-gravel trail along the south west of McIntosh Lake. That's the better choice. As the saw relates, when your come to a fork in the road, take it.It's sometimes hard to actually see the paths I wander while searching for interesting scenes when my feet are on them. After all, does anyone ever look down at their shoes? Apparently not mine; I bought them from WallyWorld and they are falling apart. The Mart sells product that falls apart.
This is south of McIntosh Lake on the Lake Loop. I am gathering all together into a Photo Set: [https://www.flickr.com/photos/rockypix/sets/72157657253134728]
Roaring Fork is a stream in the Great Smoky Mountains of Tennessee. Roaring Fork is volatile. While the stream presents as a peaceful trickle on any given day, it quickly becomes a raging whitewater rapid after a mild rain shower. The "roar" of the water is amplified by its echo on surrounding mountain ridges.
Your visit and comments are appreciated.
Su visita y comentarios son agradecidos.
The brilliant red, orange, and yellows of changing maple leaves mark the start of fall color in the West Fork of Oak Creek Canyon, October 12, 2016.
There are a number of reasons why West Fork is one of the most popular trails on the Coconino National Forest. West Fork is fantastic throughout the year, but in autumn, the canyon is ablaze with color. Red and gold leaves float in clear reflecting pools along the creek, under a canopy of solid color. As for the trail itself, it's an easy stroll, but you do have to cross the stream in a number of places. Usually, that involves negotiating a few strategically placed stepping stones or taking a couple of steps in shallow water. The trail is marked and maintained for the first three miles. It ends at a deep pool in a narrow spot in the canyon.
Parking is available at Call of the Canyon picnic site for a fee. This is a special fee site run by a concessionaire.
Photo by Deborah Lee Soltesz, October 12, 2016. Credit: Coconino National Forest, U.S. Forest Service. Learn more about the West Fork of Oak Creek Canyon, Trail No. 108, Call of the Canyon picnic site, and the Coconino National Forest.