View allAll Photos Tagged PATCHES!
Stirred a soapy water solution in a sink and took a macro of the patch of soapy bubbles ( < 1 ½“ x 1 ½“ )
😄 Happy Macro Monday 😄
[Dedicated to CRA (ILYWAMHASAM)]
Taken Nov 24, 2022 for the group
Macro Mondays #Bubbles
Gigaset GS290
ƒ/2.0
3.5 mm
1/100 Sec
ISO 282
I spotted these summer beauties, not by just their colour but also by their heavenly scent.
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This barn appears to have been patched up many times over the years. The roof, the sides, the additions. It all makes for a unique look. The dusting of snow adds a nice touch as well!
Harrison County, Indiana
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(I'm back from a short break - slowly trying to catch up!)
It is that time of year and the pumpkin patches are busy with families getting out to enjoy our lovely fall weather. I had to get out early yesterday to get a couple of shots before the crowds descended. Maan Farm Market, Abbotsford, B.C.
Having completed a brief stop after cresting the summit at Sand Patch, Pennsylvania, four second-generation geeps get a westbound pig train moving.
Cicindela campestris, commonly called the green tiger beetle is a widespread Eurasian species of tiger beetle. It is the type species of the large genus Cicindela. Adults are typically 12–15 millimetres (0.47–0.59 in) long. The elytra and thorax are green, varying in tone from light to dark, spotted with cream-coloured patches, and in bright sunlight are somewhat iridescent. The eyes are blackish; the legs are brown with whitish hairs. The antennae are long and straight, not clubbed.The adults are sun-loving. They live in places with dry soils (sandy or chalky), mostly between May and October at the latitude of Britain. Like other tiger beetles, they run fast on their long legs and are most often seen on bare ground, in Britain typically on heather moorland. They can fly fast, making a loud buzzing noise. It can run at speeds of 60 cm per second.
Both boxcars seen here are patched for Conrail. The white one is former LV while the other is obviously former NYC (thus former Penn Central).
These are cars I weathered and patched and I'm running them on a friend's railroad for his first-ever open house.
This weekend we were treated to patches of ice on Georgian Bay. The inner harbour had the large geometric ice shapes near the ships. This section of the harbour had these soft mounds of snow covering thin ice. By Friday, it will be all gone again.
An eastbound Union Pacific coal train exits the Moffat Tunnel at East Portal, Colorado, on October 2, 2008. The lead locomotive is a former Chicago & North Western GE AC4400CW that is now patched and renumbered UP No. 6718. The strange off-center yellow patch and UP logo on the nose is allowing a peek at the famous C&NW ball and bar logo.
Yorkshire Dales National Park
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