View allAll Photos Tagged Jagged
North Devon coast, variable ND filter, 4 second exposure
Shot on Olympus E-PL3 with TTArtisan 50mm f2 lens . Edited with Photopea
Jagged Ambush Bugs are among the most effective of all insect predators. They are amazingly well camouflaged, and lie in wait on flowers for bees and other flying insects; their front feet are modified into claws for grasping their prey; their bodies seem almost armour-plated to resist counter-attacks from prey insects; and they have a long, stiff, pointed proboscis with which they penetrate their prey and inject a lethal cocktail of toxins which paralyse the victims and start digesting the internal organs. Photo was taken in Kanata, ON. (Note - best viewed enlarged)
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It amazes me that water can cut through stone, removing the jagged edges, changing its shape, and making it smooth. Power is not necessarily held by the hard and resistant. Like the ocean on the beach rock, the soft, yielding, and persistant can be incrediably strong.
This is one of my new favorite places for photographing seascapes. During my first trip here, I hiked to a few spots with great views, only to end up with a mostly disappointing sunset. Determined to get a shot from this trip, I returned again before sunrise and walked down to this spot. With a small amount of color in the sky, the tide was just right for a long exposure to create this wispy effect, and contrast with the stillness in the foreground. The soft horizon is a result of waves rising above the horizon line, frequently during the exposure.
Website: www.davidshieldphotography.com/
I went to a wedding last night and I've never had so much fun shooting with those disposable cameras. Too much fun!
The prettiest jagged peaks in the world; Of course comes with free alpenglow.
Laguna de Los Tres, Patagonia, Argentina
I have this shell with a lot of points, I think it's home to the hermit crab but not sure.
Thank you for your views, faves and or comments, Happy MM
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@ all rights reserved Lily aenee
We took a drive on Saturday, January 30th to have some socially distanced and brief conversations with friends all around Essex County, ON. Though we weren't there for the snapping of the ice, we witnessed the surreal landscape of broken ice on the north shore of Lake Erie, in and around Kingsville where some of our friends live. I've never seen ice quite like this in all my years living close to Erie and Huron.
Choice #2 for Macro Mondays. This week's theme was easy because we're doing house renovations and there are a lot of jagged tools laying around...lol
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©Christine A. Owens 5.7.18
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