View allAll Photos Tagged Reaching
- www.kevin-palmer.com - This lightning storm moved over top of me on Warren Peak. I was hoping it would strike the radio tower, but it's probably a good thing it didn't.
87-0036 C-5M 9th AS / 436th AW Dover AFB [Delaware] AMC USAF, Reach 386 holding for departure on taxiway Golf at Stansted.
I liked the way the light played with pattern, texture and colour. It seemed to be moving and shimmering.
“I’ve learned that every day you should reach out and touch someone. People love a warm hug, or just a friendly pat on the back.”
~ Maya Angelou
Thanks Julie (farmerjulie) !
www.flickr.com/photos/roosterfarm/
Thanks Stephanie (Lú) !
www.indicommons.org/2009/11/24/caroline-tamtamas-photosho...
My summer Moonflower garden is my favorite place to me in the early morning, since the flowers are still open and reaching to the moon in the sky.
Did a little playing around with self portraits today. Not sure which I like more so couldn't decide yet which will be my 365 photo for the day. Day 49 of 365
I wanted to have a whole arm reaching out but it looked more natural just having the hand coming out.
instagram: eeriecarlos
It's a cold, windy day here in Michigan, which better matches this photo than the spring day when it was taken.
The Hope Reach pier on 25th May 2001 with Andrew Barclay 0-6-0 diesel hydraulic ‘871’ (W/No.510 built in 1966) shunting bolster wagons to be loaded with imported billets. In the foreground is a reminder of the ship-breaking activity once commonplace here. This Barclay survived when the mill closed and is now at the Quinton Rail Technology Centre at Long Marston near Stratford-upon-Avon. The Queenborough Rolling Mills and wharf, interconnected by a charming ramshackle branch line skirting the Hope Reach on The Swale, harked back to a bygone age, but sadly this historic Isle of Sheppey backwater closed as recently as February 2013. The rolling mill was established in the mid-1970s to re-roll used rail track into 6-20mm rebar. During the 1990s the mill was further upgraded to produce merchant bar products. After acquisition by ISTIL (UK) in 1999, the works was fully upgraded and subsequently concentrated on producing merchant bar from imported billets, for the U.K. and European markets. Following sale to Russian-based company Estar in 2008, the railway was sadly soon to close, in April 2010. The wharf area was of particular interest, with a pier on The Swale, built in 1896 for coal shipments. When the works was in the ownership of Settle Speakman Ltd, this area had been used for Shipbreaking and the scrapping of railway locomotives and rolling stock. It is noteworthy that four Bulleid ‘light Pacifics’ were disposed of here by scrap merchant Lacmots, who rented the site from Settle Speakman & Co. Ltd. This company worked the wharf at Queenborough using a fleet of four-coupled saddle tanks, three built by Peckett and one by Andrew Barclay. These locos shunted the scrapyard and undertook scrap metal transfer to the rolling mill.
A scan from a medium format Fuji 100F transparency taken with Mamiya 645 ProTL fitted with a 45mm lens
© Gordon Edgar - All rights reserved. Please do not use my images without my explicit permission
2 down, 4 more to go. I would have uploaded him sooner, but I changed his main armor color three times, and I had to want for the sculpted piece to harden. For the armor piece, I used the Collectible Minifigures, Space Miner. I'm still working his gun. I'll be working on Kat and Jun next.
Telok Blangah HDB Estate, Singapore
I always adhere to a few rules of land/cityscape photography. One of it being arriving early on location and loitering around until late because you never know when nature's epic light show will come reaching out for you.
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The sprawling fronds of a Sword Fern reach out towards the rushing spring meltwater of Gorton Creek in Oregon's Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area.
Canon 5DM3 | Canon 17-40mm f/4 | Circular Polarizer
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"Reaching out for something to hold
Though it seems I laugh when I can’t find
What I’m searching for
And I still believe that you know
What I’m looking for
Though it seems I laugh when I can’t find
What I’m searching for
And I still believe that you know" - Nero - Reaching out
Among my flight photos over the playa, the oblique views give a truer sense of the depth of the dendritic channels. I can't explain the differences in color. They alternate left to right, and even within the brown ones there are white branches. It's not a matter of depth else the brown ones would turn white at the tips. The pre-erosional surface appears uniform across the branches. If you have a theory, let me know. Perhaps they represent different years of formation; in the center, the brown channels appear to overlay the white ones with different source material. At right and left, the situation appears reversed.
I'm that speck at top right, having hiked a mile into the playa.