View allAll Photos Tagged Reflection
You attract what you are, not what you want.
So if you want it then reflect it!
(Tony Gaskins)
Crazy Tuesday - Reflection
(photo by Freya, editing by me)
Thanks for views, faves and comments! ;-)
Don't always bother looking up, as what may be more interesting is what you may see while looking down.
Flickr Friday theme Reflection wine decanter and glass of wine in a mirror. Happy Flickr Friday. the old photographer ,;-)
After climbing Mt Owen, the highest peak in Kahurangi National Park, New Zealand, we camped by the tarns between Granity Pass Hut and the summit. We had a little bit of rain and then it fined up to a beautiful afternoon with some interesting cloud formations - so many photos were taken :)
I process my photos with Lightroom as well as Skylum's Luminar and find it easy to use with great results. Here is a link if anyone is interested in trying it out and with a $US10 discount: skylum.grsm.io/janetteasche8660
You may have noticed I quite like a reflection shot and I certainly couldn't pass up the chance of this shot at Zaandam station utilising the handy, and very shiny, ledge in the waiting room as a VIRM double deck unit 8681 rolls in with our connection to Sloterdijk. Jamie looks like he's in some kind of faceoff with himself...
The 100 Bicycles project: 100 different bicycles photographed in detail. This is bicycle number 15.
To learn more about this project see the 100bicycles group.
A flight of Canada Geese landing on water covered ice at Rondeau Provincial Park, Ontario, Canada, Dec 14, 2018.
The bay froze over the past few days then the temperatures went above freezing.
A lack of wind made for a mirror like surface.
Branta canadensis
Some migratory populations of the Canada Goose are not going as far south in the winter as they used to. This northward range shift has been attributed to changes in farm practices that makes waste grain more available in fall and winter, as well as changes in hunting pressure and changes in weather.
During the winter when the rain comes, the grassy plains flood to create small puddles. This one was just big enough to cast a clear reflection of our heritage oak tree.