View allAll Photos Tagged Pink
What I did when I wasn't pilfering Iris Sunday evening. Went to the next house with my camera... It was fairly dark at the time but challenging conditions can make dramatic results on occasion so I thought "Why not?"
1. Pink petals 2, 2. Pink petals 10, 3. Pink petals 4, 4. Pink petals 6, 5. Pink petals 1, 6. Pink petals 9, 7. Pink petals 8, 8. Pink petals 3, 9. Pink petals 5
Created with fd's Flickr Toys.
We went round to a friends house today. Her dog managed to jump her fence the other day straight into the road :o( So Paul was helping to put up some baton and plastic chicken wire, to give the fence some extra height.
These beautiful pink roses were in a vase on her side, so I had to photograph them.
Dark Pink Flowers - Small little flowers with a long stem growing out of some, all a light pink to a darker pink, surrounded by healthy green leaves and a dark background.. To Download this image without watermarks for Free, visit: www.sourcepics.com/free-stock-photography/5280-dark-pink-...
365 Days of Colour ... February ... pink.
These tress are out in flower throughout the area. Each tree is totally covered in pink. I think they are tibouchina.
My niece, Hannah, came over today so we could take some photos of her. She was so animated in her "everyday" outfit that I couldn't resist taking photos of her playing with the pink basket. Of course, by the time Mommy got her changed into her "pretty girl" dress, Hannah was about done with the whole modeling thing.
I brightened her eyes in Photoshop to make them pop a bit more. Other than that, this is Miss Hannah, in all of her glory!
Revebjelle (Digitalis purpurea) vokser vilt i kyst- og fjordstrøk på Sørlandet og Vestlandet nord til Trøndelag. Blomstene er purpurrøde, men kan i sjeldne tilfeller være rosa eller hvite. (Source: Wikipedia)
Digitalis purpurea (Common Foxglove, Purple Foxglove or Lady's Glove), is a flowering plant in the family Plantaginaceae (formerly treated in the family Scrophulariaceae), native to most of Europe. (Source: Wikipedia)
© Aslak Tronrud 2005