View allAll Photos Tagged Lady
Our backyard is full of Lady Bugs this year. We have lots of aphids so there is plenty of food for them to feast on. We also have lots of finches too which I suspect are eating the lady bugs.
Photographed with a Nikon D500, 50mm lens, 36mm extension tube and Raynox 250, Meike320 flash.
Southern Alberta, Canada.
I have always granted myself the freedom to exercise artistic license and pursue whatever brings me joy. Currently, shots from my cellphone and digital AI artwork fulfill that purpose, at least for the time being.
Flores de Rancagua - Dec 10 2023 - LR Enhanced
With her white tear-drop mark behind her eye an overall Raw Umber coloring, and a lower belly of Geranium Pink; the female Elegant Trogon is no less intriguing than her male partner. Not often comes the chance to get a close look. This day was to be the exception.
Madera Canyon Arizona
Lady Darlene is a new addition to my garden, a dinner plate Dahlia.
Many thanks to all those who view, fav or comment my pictures. I very much appreciate it.
I attended a wine tasting event with a Japanese group at a winery in Alameda, California. The winery is located on the grounds of the Naval Air Station Alameda, which closed in 1997. Next to us sat a lady in a pink dress. In the back you can see the skyline of San Francisco.
I processed a photographic, a balanced, and a paintery HDR photo from three RAW exposures, blended them selectively, and carefully adjusted the color balance and curves. I welcome and appreciate constructive comments.
Thank you for visiting - ♡ with gratitude! Fave if you like it, add comments below, like the Facebook page, order beautiful HDR prints at qualityHDR.com.
-- ƒ/8.0, 50 mm, 1/100, 1/400, 1/1600 sec, ISO 200, Sony A6400, SEL-P1650, HDR, 3 RAW exposures, _DSC2529_0_1_hdr3pho1bal1pai5d.jpg
-- CC BY-NC-SA 4.0, © 2025 Peter Thoeny, Quality HDR Photography
New York City, USA, 2024.
Press 'L' to view a larger version in an almost distraction-free lightbox.
If this still isn't large enough for you, you can also find a border-free version of this photograph here in this blog post.
There's more on www.chm-photography.com.
Enjoy!
New York City, USA, 2024.
Press 'L' to view a larger version in an almost distraction-free lightbox.
If this still isn't large enough for you, you can also find a border-free version of this photograph here in this blog post.
There's more on www.chm-photography.com.
Enjoy!
Painted Lady - Vanessa cardui
The Painted Lady is a long-distance migrant, which causes the most spectacular butterfly migrations observed in Britain and Ireland.
Each year, it spreads northwards from the desert fringes of North Africa, the Middle East, and central Asia, recolonising mainland Europe and reaching Britain and Ireland. In some years it is an abundant butterfly, frequenting gardens and other flowery places in late summer.
Painted lady butterflies have a pale buffy-orange background colour to the upper wings. The forewings have black tips marked with white spots; the hindwings have rows of black spots. The undersides are pale with blue eyespots.
Painted ladies do not hibernate in Britain; instead they migrate to and from northern Africa. They can arrive in early spring, but late May and June are more usual. They are fairly common across Britain, numerous in some years.
Females lay their small, green eggs on a range of species, such as nettles and mallows, but thistles are the general favourite. When the caterpillars hatch they begin to eat the underside of the leaf. As they grow, each constructs a tent of folded leaves fastened with silk.
Caterpillars pupate and remain suspended in a large tent of leaves until the adults emerge in August and September. The whole British population dies or emigrates to Africa in the autumn.
Caterpillars are black, speckled with tiny white spots and have a yellow stripe down each side. They are covered in spines.
A late season visitor from Europe, the Painted Lady (Vanessa cardui) is always a welcome sight in the English countryside. A jewel resting upon the wild purple Devil's-bit Scabious (Succisa pratensis) in a late summer meadow.
One a Week - Week 35
Ich habe nie gesehen, dass du so hinreißend wie heute Abend ausgesehen hast,
Ich habe nie gesehen, dass du so funkelnd scheinst, du warst erstaunlich,
Ich habe nie so viele Leute gesehen, die an deiner Seite sein wollten,
Und wenn du dich zu mir drehst, verfliegt mein Atem,
Ich hatte niemals so ein Gefühl,
So ein Gefühl von totaler und völliger Liebe, wie ich heute Abend habe.....
A pungy-a Chesapeake Bay schooner (the only one in existence) built in 1985-1986 and launched in 1986. On the Choptank River, Cambridge, Maryland.
The pungies were fast sailing schooners who delivered perishable items around the Chesapeake Bay (in the 1880s to early 1900s). The Lady Maryland is painted in the traditional pungy pink and green.
Model : Mi Băng singer - BOB band
Hair & Make up : Angel Nguyễn
Stylist : me
Costume : QA Gala Collection
Location : Dist. Go Vap, HCM city
Saigon, Vietnam 2010
HWW warm sunshine here this morning we had painted lady, small tortoise shell , small white butterflies in the garden.
& just a bit of subtle dandelion bokeh.
A wet meadow pasture never gets quite as pure grass boring as a better drained place.
For me she is the star of the low meadow.
Cardamine pratensis
Bob Dylan - Sad-Eyed Lady of the Lowlands
I love this tree, I have so many photos of it and I love to sit and watch as the sea and sky change around her.
Took this at the Nieuwe Meer (Lake) hoping to get some good reflective shots, it was an extra bonus when the lady came along the bridge and stopped with her dog, which I cropped out of the frame, used selective color for more effect, happy with the outcome.
Created for Rubys Wax Lyrical Challenge 40
Female Dancer by Succhi.
Male dancer by vishstudio-- fav.me/d86af5n.
Background by Gwendolyn-1 at DeviantArtStock.
Thank you to everyone for your views, faves, and comments!
Won 3rd place--July 2016!
Won Build Your Rainbow monthly contest September 2016!
D610
150mm f2.8 1:1
Sin filtros
1/50s - f/5.6 - ISO400
Ver Fondo Negro | View On Black
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Always happy to run across one of these weird little beasties. This one was walking around in an emerging gerbera daisy...
No idea who she was but i thought she would make a good photo.
Plant sales area at Little Moreton Hall.Cheshire.
National Trust Property.
15 8 16
Chaffinch - Fringilla coelebs
Ben Lora Cafe Benderloch - Scotland.
As always I extend my thanks and appreciation to all those who view, fave and comment on my photos.
DSC_6238
The original Lady Nelson dates back to 1798, and apparently met an untimely end at the hands of Malay pirates in 1825. There is quite a large article in Wikipedia if you would like to read more. This replica was built in 1988 and is used as a sail training ship. It was built in Hobart from Tasmanian-grown timbers including blue gum keel and frames, celery-top pine deck, and Douglas fir lower masts. The spars are American-grown Oregon.
There is a second replica which is strictly a land based ship and it is right here in my home town of Mount Gambier in South Australia where it forms a tourist attraction for people calling in at our visitor information centre.
This shot was originally taken sometime between 2006 and 2009 in Hobart, Tasmania.
Original colour slide was taken around 2007 with a 3D World medium format stereo film camera using Fuji Provia 100 colour slide film. Scanned with a Canon R10 with RF24-240mm lens and Nisi close up attachment.
I have posted this before, but thought I would try my newer Canon R10 camera and lens for a higher resolution scan.
This is another view of Lady’s tower the local landmark on the Fife coast near Elie. My last shot from a few days ago was going for an unusual angle looking upwards from inside the tower. In this case the view is the traditional perspective from the bay to the north of the tower.
I chose this shot because the combination of the brooding and stormy looking clouds out in the Firth of Forth gave a nice contrast to the warm tones of the tower stone and the yellow algae catching the soft light of the evening sunshine. The foreground rocks are of the same material and provide a nice tone to link the parts of the image together.