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The Clifton Suspension Bridge is a suspension bridge spanning the Avon Gorge and the River Avon, linking Clifton in Bristol to Leigh Woods in North Somerset. Since opening in 1864, it has been a toll bridge, the income from which provides funds for its maintenance. The bridge is built to a design by William Henry Barlow and John Hawkshaw,[2] based on an earlier design by Isambard Kingdom Brunel. It is a grade I listed building and forms part of the B3129 road.

 

Pahvant Butte is a butte formed by a dormant volcano in the west-central portion of Utah. It is located in the Sevier Desert in the Pahvant Valley. This part of Utah was once covered by a huge inland freshwater sea known as Lake Bonneville. Pahvant Butte volcano erupted under the icy waters of the lake causing the hot lava to solidify in the interesting "drip" formations forming the Lace Curtain. Millard County, Utah.

 

To see more of these interesting formations check out my album.

Drone view of a small motorboat pulled up onto a rocky beach in the San Juan archipelago in the Salish Sea.

 

Website: edmundlowephoto.com/

  

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Grand Canyon National Park

South Rim

Arizona, USA

 

I'm always amazed at how the Grand Canyon can look so different with the season, time of day and cloud cover.

 

The Grand Canyon was formed over 5 to 6 million of years by the erosion caused by the Colorado River. Many visitors are surprised with the cool rim temperatures, but with the South Rim at an elevation ranging to over 7,000 feet, winter snow averages about 60 inches a year. The North Rim elevation is about 1,000 feet higher and receives an average of 144 inches of snow a year and is closed from mid-autumn to mid-spring.

 

The photo was taken during the afternoon with the warmer light of a late autumn day. I am often amazed at just how much the light difference from season of the year, time of day and the clouds influence the colors viewed from any location within the park.

  

The canyon is more than 200 miles long 12 miles wide and a mile deep. The national park is visited by about 6 million people a year. On a clear day, like this one, it is possible to see for 100 miles and the distance across to the North Rim seems to shrink.

There are always visitors at the South Rim of the park, but during the winter season, it is possible to find overlooks with few or no other visitors. One can find a sense of serenity when viewing a scene like this especially when viewing it alone.

 

On a sad note, while millions of visitors respect the beauty of the work of Mother Nature, on this trip, we saw that a few felt compelled to use markers on some of the safety walls and leave behind messages, initials, etc.

 

Nikon D850

Nikon 24-70 f/2.8 VR at 40 mm

1/320 sec at f/6.3 ISO 64

Single capture

November 16, 2021

© 2021 Ronald Drewnowski - All rights reserved. Any unauthorized use is prohibited.

Kingsburg, Ca.

Kingsburg Historical Park

 

Back in the corner of a barn stuffed full of all manner of junk, I've discovered this setup. It's a table with a couple of formed pieces of metal with holes throughout that I imagine steam goes through. And, then, there are all these forms for different sizes and shapes. I've never seen one of these setup anywhere.

Pale shadow

Sensible objects

Intelligible world

Super-Takumar 50mm/f1.4 (8 elements) + Raynox DCR-250 on Pentax K-1. Shot wide open. Color grading in Lightroom

Mystery Dance - it said on the radio this weekend that the RSPB was part formed in response to GCGs being almost wiped out for the milliners trade - fortunately the demand for hats is now restricted to posh gels at Ascot and those decorative head wounds favoured by mothers of the bride - I think the technical term is a fascinator (fascinating why someone would want to look a prat in public?)

Medical Research Centre, Adelaide - South Australia.

They're all around us, textures, those lines and patterns, seemingly purposeful, sometimes random.

 

Look closely in nature and you'll find them everywhere, they draw you in, sometimes they are impossibly perpendicular. Here is an example of textures that at a cursory glance make no sense, how could this monolith possibly form naturally with lines that are virtually opposite those a mere few feet below them. Bry will give you the precise explanation, it'll blow your mind, time scales and natural evolution of the landscape which one can barely comprehend. Nature is awesome.

 

10 exposures went into this image, 4 for the sky and 6 for the foreground, shot with an h-alpha modified Nikon Z6 and Tamron 35mm f1.4 on a Sky Watcher Star Adventurer tracking mount. Foreground exposures are 2 minutes at f2 and ISO 1600, sky exposures are 2 minutes at f2 and ISO 800.

Mais ce n'est qu'une Impression . . .

C'est limité à 30 Km/h, et parfois, il y a les jumelles.

 

fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zone_30

 

Pour le thème du mois de mai,

*** Parfois, il faut y mettre " des formes " . . . ***

 

fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ralentisseur_%28route%29

 

Merci pour vos visites et vos commentaires.

Ce(tte) œuvre est mise à disposition selon les termes de la Licence Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International.

 

Yesterday we took Jessie to her first ballet class. Does she have good form or what? :) Proud of my girl.

 

She loved the class. It's a once a week class for an hour each Saturday. It's a ballet/tap class, so we have to pick her up some little tap shoes too. She immediately took a liking to one of the other little girls in the class and ended up followed her around and partnering up with her.

Many thanks to everyone for your views, faves and supportive comments. These are always very much appreciated

 

www.paolopaccagnella.com

 

www.fluidr.com/photos/ph_p_ph

 

All rights reserved. © ph.p.photography .

 

All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use. Absolutely no permission is granted in any form, fashion or way, digital or otherwise, to use my images on blogs, personal or professional websites or any other media form without my direct written permission. This includes but is not limited to Pinterest, Tumblr, Reddit or other websites where one's images are circulated without the photographer's knowledge or permission

Qué verdura tan original y hermosa. Desde hace muchos años esta pieza que parece que ha sido traída de Venus ha estado llamado la atención a la gente en tiendas y mercados, y no me negaréis que sus formas parecen de otro planeta. Una pasada. Que sepáis también que esta geometría tan peculiar se llama geometría fractal, y es demasiado irregular para ser descrito en términos geométricos tradicionales. Pero bueno, es de aquí, y se llama romanesco o romanescu (Brassica oleracea). Esta verdura es de la familia de las Brassicaceae, del grupo itálica. Pero para que nos entendamos es un híbrido entre el conocido brécol y la exquisita coliflor. Leo que fue creado en el Scottish Horticultural Research Institute hace ya más de treinta años.

 

En España, el romanesco se empezó a conocer en los años 80, pero no en todos los mercados. Hoy por hoy el consumo sigue siendo más escaso que en otros países, y creo que esto debería de cambiar pronto ya que el romanesco presenta unas cualidades nutricionales muy buenas, y creo que puede ser algo que comer divertido para los niños. Posee además mucha fibra, vitaminas (algo más que la coliflor), sales minerales etc, pero destaca su vitamina C. También su contenido en ácido fólico (folatos), potasio y fósforo. El resto lo componen esos compuestos azufrados maravillosos, que son medicina para nuestra salud y que contienen todas las coles (es lo que provoca ese fuerte olor al cocerlas).

 

El color verde que posee, al igual que el brócoli, lo aporta la fotosíntesis con la luz solar, que incide directamente en la flor de la planta y le hace obtener ese color tan maravilloso.

 

Esta romanescu es riojana, me la regalaron en Calahorra

 

Workers harvest the colorful tulip flowers in this fertile agricultural area of western Washington state.

 

All my photographs are © Copyrighted and All Rights Reserved. None of these photos may be reproduced and/or used in any form of publication, print or the Internet without my written permission.

Boulder strewn section of beach.

These were formed by splashing water along the edge of the Ottawa River.

Celles-ci ont été formées en éclaboussant l'eau le long du bord de la rivière des Outaouais.

street art, auf Bauzaun

impressions @ siding track

 

* color-version:

flic.kr/p/2pRESDe

Canon A1 / Ilford HP5+ / Ilfotec DD-X

Watson Lake is one of two reservoirs at the Granite Dells, in Prescott, Arizona, that was formed in the early 1900s when the Chino Valley Irrigation District built a dam on Granite Creek. The City of Prescott bought the reservoir and surrounding land in 1997 to preserve it as recreational land.

 

219a 2 - TAC_7966 - lr-ps

Lake Koman | Albania

This was part of a much larger berg at Jokulslaron in Iceland, I lay down on my stomach and shot it with a 70-200mm lens.

 

Just beautiful

Mitt bidrag till Fotosöndag 2020-08-23 på temat form. Ännu en "klassisk Magnus". Inget planerat under veckan blev en snabbt genomförd idé på lördagen när den dök upp i huvudet. Skönt att alltid ha en kamera i fickan nu för tiden.

The thought forms in the soul as clouds form in the air. (Joseph Joubert)

 

Vosges

 

www.flickriver.com/photos/philippe_haumesser/popular-inte...

www.facebook.com/philippe.haumesser.9

 

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I set off form the great ocean road 2 days ago with the main goal of getting a shot of this iconic pier over the next 7 days or so before I duck back to Sydney for a few days.

 

From about lunch time today I had my eye on the forming clouds just hoping they would hang around until sunset. They didn't, they rarely do. However this set rolled over the horizon and put on a real welcome to SA show.

 

Uploading late as it took me ages to align the pano, I hadn't though to re-adjust the pivot point on my pano head for the new lens. So I had to manually align then use auto blend cs5, got there in the end.

 

6 shot vert

20sec ish per shot

f16ish

cic pol

3 stop soft

5 stop solid

 

Prob needs a slight colour adjustment, (clouds need to swing a bit from that pinkish to more orange) but its late ill do it later.

 

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This is a quarter view of a 1955 Mercury D-528 concept car at The Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angeles, California. The rounded fenders were actually functional -- a spare tire was beneath one and a gas tank beneath the other.

 

I go different ways on my long walks to and from work, and noticed this display the other day. On my way home I purposely went this way again to capture this image through the window.

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