View allAll Photos Tagged Layered
⧼ .Sponsors. ⧽
• ASCENT - Clover Piercing
• Lowe - Face Words
• Lowe - Beanie Unisex
• Rokins - Rain Set
• +Fatal+ - Chastity Corset
✦
⧼ . extras. ⧽
• tsuki. - holly set
• WRAITHWOOD - Killian earrings # Swallow gauged XL/S/P
*. My Others Plataforms: linktr.ee/theducrot
I particularly loved this scene because it not only shows the layers of the sunset but the horses added a nice foreground element.
Bur oak with layer of leaves in background.
"Thus, he who owns a veteran bur oak owns more than a tree. He owns a historical library, and a reserve seat in the theater of evolution."
-Aldo Leopold, A Sand County Almanac
This bur oak sits on a ridge overlooking a small small marsh in LaCrosse, Wisconsin.
GND4 filter Cokin.
Featured as photo of the week at "The Unforgettable Pictures" group. Dec. 2009.
www.flickr.com/groups/theunforgetablepictures/discuss/721...
Bratanesque picture of the day 12/1/2010
www.flickr.com/groups/bratanesque/discuss/72157623200990732/
1st place winner at the 8th "Hall of fame" contest of the group "!Wonderland! Landscapes".
www.flickr.com/groups/wonder-land/discuss/72157622927276757/
2° place winner at the 63rd batch admin choice Platinum peace award
www.flickr.com/groups/1030588@N24/discuss/72157617171250656/
Featured on the breathtakinggroup.blogspot website
Even small waterfalls are to be seen everywhere in the "Valley of the Waterfalls". Note the layered landscape!
For a high resolution full screen view of my photos, please visit: www.pictographica.net
UPDATED: 30th November, 2017
Minnehaha Falls, Chattahoochee National Forest - Rabun County, Georgia
Falls Branch cascades over layers of rock at Minnehaha Falls.
©2022 Nature's Spectrum, For consideration only, no reproduction without prior permission.
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
I'd like to believe that that second, higher layer of clouds were nocilucent clouds, but no way - there was still too much daylight for that.
Countless layers in this rock face. Once upon a time they were horizontal....... hard to imagine the forces it must have taken to deform it so much. Think the rock is a type of slate.
If you have the time please look as large as possible.