View allAll Photos Tagged Remnants
The tallest of a small stand of Teasel - invasive but not aggressive - submit. They will disappear in the next snowfall.
Remnants of a weather battered wharf.
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Florabella Textures
My texture created withDistressed FX Plus and iColorama.
The skeletal remains of Hydrangeas offer beautiful shapes and textures to photograph long after the flowers have faded away.
Have a great Flickr day! Thank you for your comments, faves, invites and awards!
Of Dunstanburgh Castle - and of Storm Corrie.
!'m having a go at this year's 100 x with Northumberland being my 'X'.
100 x 2022 - Northumberland - 1/100
Padiham, Lancashite
This is a beech sapling overlooking a pond with the reflections of the surrounding trees.
This is a dress I designed and made recently out of some quilting fabric. It also has matching cushions. I will be doing a shoot using it.
I have created a new facebook page here for behind the scenes and other stuff. You can become my fan if you like.
"Please be careful with me. I'm sensitive and I'd like to stay that way."
**All photos are copyrighted**
Hop-A-Long is back today, much to the chagrin of the little birds, as you can see on his talons
taken from my back deck just now
Winter is an exercise in remembering how to still yourself, then how to come pliantly back to life again.
~ Ali Smith
Remnants of Fall most of the leaves have fallen and are accumulating in different areas but still adding some color, found in North Carolina.
So this is another composition of this iconic place called Crystal Mill and probably the last. Don't want to wear out a good thing. I like the fallen down boards around it, its hard to tell what they were at one point but it adds another layer of interesting texture.
🎶 GOTHIC STORM - REMNANTS OF PEACE
“I see the world being slowly transformed into a wilderness; I hear the approaching thunder that, one day, will destroy us too. I feel the suffering of millions. And yet, when I look up at the sky, I somehow feel that everything will change for the better, that this cruelty too shall end, that peace and tranquility will return once more.”
Anne Frank
Thinking of a beloved family member who is no longer with us. Will always cherish memories of the last moments spent together.
Thanks to everyone who takes the time to view, comment or fave this image
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Remnants of an old pier, the only visual remains of a once booming, Salmon canning industry.
Dating back to the turn of the century.
Washington (State)--Point Roberts
Well over a hundred years ago, this would have been a busy fishing port.
Today, we can only imagine the sights of the heavily loaded fishing vessels tied up alongside this pier, and the hardworking employees bustling the catch of the day, up and down the pier.
On the horizon you will have left USA waters and entered Canadian waters, BC Canada
On a closer look you may see the perched Seagulls
~C
Taken just prior to the Canadian/USA borders closing. We have family with a cottage in this location
Point Roberts is a pene-exclave of the United States on the southernmost tip of the Tsawwassen Peninsula, south of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. The area, which had a population of 1,314 at the 2010 census, is reached by land by traveling 25 mi (40 km) through Canada. It is a census-designated place (CDP) in Whatcom County, Washington with a post office, and a ZIP Code of 98281. Direct sea and air connections with the U.S. are available across Boundary Bay.
Point Roberts was created when the United Kingdom and the United States settled the Pacific Northwest American-Canadian border dispute in the mid-19th century with the Oregon Treaty. Both parties agreed the 49th parallel would delineate both countries' territories, but they overlooked the small area that incorporates Point Roberts (south of the 49th parallel). Questions about ceding the territory to the United Kingdom and later to Canada have been raised since its creation but its status has remained unchanged.
Wikipedia
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Happy Clicks,
~Christie
** Best experienced full screen
The West Coast was once covered with forest and much of it still is. Where it's been cleared for farming you often see trees such like this standing in isolation in the middle of paddocks -memorials to the forest that was once there.
Kimball County, Nebraska
This was once a pretty substantial house - it seems odd that the west facade is blown open - it was a masonry wall. Must have had a serious structural problem; maybe two many windows for the blasting west wind. To the right you can see the foundation remains of what was likely a large barn.