View allAll Photos Tagged Mops
just soap in a purple bucket, and here is your personal galaxy !
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Happy Monochrome Bokeh Thursday ;o)
One from the archives, taken at Leith Hall gardens on a windy October day. I had no idea what it was I'd shot, and I've finally realised it is the remains of clematis flower heads! This year I bought more clematis plants, and some of the varieties produce these curling mop tops ... so at last I know!
Hope you had fun with Halloween - it was quiet here and too cold for many of the young ones to be out in the dark. So we had a welcome, restful evening after a manic start to the week.
B/W Tinted and Mono Here
My Clematis set: Here
Yosemite, California
Sedges growing along the edge of the Merced River. They form distinctive grassy clumps that call to mind the mop top hairdos of the early Beatles.
Sometimes nature can be really strange. I have no idea what this is, but I loved the way it looked when backlit, especially with the setting sunlight hitting the river behind to create that bokeh.
7 Days With Flickr - Flora (Fridays)
A stack of 7 focus points at a single exposures level against matt black paper, with 2 LED studio lights.
Aquilegia (common names: granny's bonnet or columbine) is a genus of about 60-70 species of perennial plants that are found in meadows, woodlands, and at higher altitudes throughout the Northern Hemisphere, known for the spurred petals of their flowers. The genus name Aquilegia is derived from the Latin word for eagle (aquila), because the shape of the flower petals, which are said to resemble an eagle's claw. The common name "columbine" comes from the Latin for "dove", due to the resemblance of the inverted flower to five doves clustered together. The Colorado Blue Columbine (A. caerulea) is the official state flower of Colorado. Large numbers of hybrids are available for the garden, since the European A. vulgaris was hybridized with other European and North American varieties. Aquilegia species are very interfertile, and will self-sow. Some varieties are short-lived so are better treated as biennials.
Newly fallen leaves and one crazy Schnauzer equals a mop top hair design. Regardless of how she looks, Lucy had a great time today !
The hogger on this Missouri Pacific local seems to approve of me being here. Different times for sure. We're in Benton, Illinois in July of 1974.