View allAll Photos Tagged ORGANIC
I never had watercress before. Apparently you buy it living, root ball and all (see black blue in the background).
Pano-Blender with a closeup of some icicles laid over it.
Worth a trip wearing ChromaDepth 3D g;asses!
Sorry for the lack of comments... kind of busy these days... ♥☻
New blog: "Pasta with low fat spicy lentil bolognaise", This is a delicious low fat vegetarian bolognaise sauce recipe. Try it with rice, lasagne or even with baked potatoes.…
Here is the recipe
Thanks for looking... catch-up soon :-)
Previous blogs
Currently most of the farmers are forced to go for chemical methods but found this Lone Farmer using organic methods in de hills of Nilgiris for his potato fields
Organic garden cucumber. I thought about and wondered why I pretty much switched to food and it's because I wanted to get better at composition and then hopefully graduate to storytelling. I'm definitely not there with the storytelling here but I like the composition.
The majestic Wedge-tailed Eagle in SA. This handsome fallah/sheila was perched on this mound just beside the road. I got out the car and carefully approached this predator hoping it wouldn't have a go at me. I got to within about 10 m. It then had enough of me and took off. It flew a couple of passes, all the while keeping a close eye on me, and then settled on another mound not too far away. Amazing looking birds.
I actually got too close for my big 200-600 mm lens which resulted in a couple of clipped wings. I used my OI (organic intelligence) and Affinity Photo and grew the wingtips back on 😉.
Maple seeds which make wonderful toy helicopters for the Smile on Saturday group, topic: shades of brown. Happy Saturday.
The Church of Saint Joan of Arc (French: L'église Sainte-Jeanne-d'Arc) , Rouen, France.
Design (1969): Louis Arretche.
The church of Saint Joan of Arc was completed in 1979 in the centre of the ancient market square, known as the Place du Vieux-Marché, the place where Joan of Arc was burned at the stake for heresy in 1431. A small garden, Le Bûcher de Jeanne d'Arc, marks the spot.
The modern church Sainte-Jeanne d'Arc and the adjacent market halls were designed by the architect Louis Arretche, who was commissioned in 1969. The sweeping curves of the structure are meant to evoke both the flames that consumed Joan of Arc and an overturned longship. Many early Christian churches were designed in the shape of an overturned boat. The market halls simultaneously resemble smaller overturned boats and fish with gaping mouths, which are also rich Christian symbols. The tiled roof echoes this theme and forms a covered walkway over the square.
Something simple and straightforward for a change ;-) Though I have a "what am I looking at?" version for the theme, too, which, again, I will probably upload later. This time I did not get that close,
because I wanted to have the "Organic" lettering in full, which is 6 cm (2,3622 inches) high. The width here is exactly 7 cm / 3 inches. It's a cotton tote bag, made from "organic cotton" (hopefully), by Swedish designer Gudrun Sjödén.
Zur Abwechslung mal was ganz Simples, Stoffbeutel aus "Bio-Baumwolle" (hoffentlich) mit entsprechendem Schriftzug von der schwedischen Designerin Gudrun Sjödén. Die Mode ist nicht ganz mein Fall, aber die Beutel sind hübsch.
Thank you for your kind comments, I appreciate every single one, and your faves! Vielen Dank für Eure tollen Kommentare und Faves!
A Happy Macro Mondy, Everyone!
Artist: Damian Michaels
Title: Organic Landscape
Medium: Miniature felt tip marker drawing on matboard
Size: 2.5 x 3.5 inches = ATC (artist trading card)
Year Created: 2007
Collection of Mason Coubez, France
Took a walk out in the back yard and garden and gathered up these small items just before it began to rain. I had more items to display but had to choose these few because of the size limits. This was difficult to set up because it seemed when I placed a new item down one of the others would move. It was like playing "pick up sticks" trying to place one item down without anything else moving.
Baldwin Park, CA
I was at the yard a few weeks ago and was surprised to see these in the cart yard. Not sure what they are doing here or what is the plan for them, but they look pretty neat. Makes me wonder if an organics route is in the works.
“Organic Landscape” — Erosion patterns in a desert landscape, Death Valley.
Believe it or not, I am getting to the end of the photographs I made on this year’s winter visit to Death Valley National Park. I go every year during the cool months, sometimes more than once. When I returned at the end ofFebruary I wasn’t sure if I had gotten many keepers, but since then I have managed to find more than a few. This is a typical situation — I often don’t immediately see the potential in image files, and it takes a while to get to know them.
This photograph includes a small section with details of a portion of Death Valley “badlands” terrain. I photographed it in the early morning, before the direct sunlight arrived. The soft light and the curving shapes remind me of forms we see in living things, hence the “organic” title.
G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, “California’s Fall Color: A Photographer’s Guide to Autumn in the Sierra” (Heyday Books) is available directly from him.
Organic Pizza by Real Food in Clarke Quay Central.
Our preferences are more incline towards Japanese and Western cuisines. More food pics in my: Favorite Food Album.