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Zion detail...along the trail

Black and white forest view with Sony RX1RII

Sophia set by Rooted @ the mainstore.

Hocking Hills, Ohio

folding and fossilization

Self Portrait Sunday - January 17th, 2021 - In Nature

a section of the coastal path near Lloret de Mar

forest near Inverkip

Godolphin Woods, Cornwall

 

I'm not often in the woodland areas with the intention of creating landscape photography. I've never really found sucess whilst trying to capture the atmosphere that interests me most.

 

I'm usually there walking with the family. I was this time, but I had my camera with me and found this lovely twisted tree. I couldn't resist capturing something that accentuated the shape and texture of the roots. Black and white felt right for this, I found the emphasis on the texture was lost with colour.

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Mural entitled "Rooted in Royalty" by Thomas Turner aka @thomasturner_tt for the Atlanta United Football Club, seen at 647 Reed Street SE in the Summerville area of Atlanta, Georgia.

 

Photo by James aka @urbanmuralhunter on that other photo site.

 

Edit by Teee.

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Under The Folding Branches

 

València, España.

 

Las Fallas de Valencia (Falles en valenciano) son unas fiestas que van del 14 (plantà infantil) al 19 (cremà) de marzo con una tradición arraigada en la ciudad española de Valencia. Oficialmente empiezan el último domingo de febrero con el acto de la crida (en valenciano; 'pregón o llamada', en español).

 

La fiesta de las Fallas de Valencia

Actualmente, esta festividad se ha convertido en un atractivo turístico muy importante, ya que además de estar catalogadas como fiesta de Interés Turístico Internacional, en noviembre de 2016 la Unesco las inscribió en su . Estas fiestas también son llamadas fiestas josefinas o fiestas de San José, ya que se celebran en honor de san José, patrón de los carpinteros, que era un gremio muy extendido en la ciudad cuando empezaron a celebrarse a finales del siglo xix, y que conservó hasta la actualidad, dada la importancia de la industria del mueble en la región.

 

The Fallas of Valencia (Falles in Valencian) are festivals that go from the 14th (children's plant) to the 19th (cremà) of March with a tradition rooted in the Spanish city of Valencia. They officially begin on the last Sunday of February with the act of the crida (in Valencian; 'pregón or call', in Spanish).

 

Currently, this holiday has become a very important tourist attraction, since in addition to being classified as a festival of International Tourist Interest, in November 2016 UNESCO inscribed them on its Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. These festivals are also called Josefin festivals or feasts of San José, since they are celebrated in honor of St. Joseph, patron saint of carpenters, who was a very widespread guild in the city when they began to be held at the end of the nineteenth century, and which has preserved until today, given the importance of the furniture industry in the region.

Giant tree in the facade of Ta Prohm Temple in Siem Reap, Cambodia.

Spring melt is in full swing, and the rivers are rocking in Northern Minnesota. Here's one from yesterday morning at one of the most beautiful parks in the world.

Minolta MC 100mm 2.5, edited in Photoscape X

The first snow this year and a good reason to take the camera out for a walk...

Dissolved we be,

In death our matter freed.

 

With our roots upturned,

Our lives are returned,

To fuel another fire.

 

Though we be but a memory,

Our spark forever burns.

For in each life,

We find another.

 

Collaboration with my husband Nick in Stout Grove, California.

Progreston Falls. Thick mist coming off of the lower part of the fall.

There's a lot of roots jutting out of many of the hiking trails in the area. Sometimes they provide grip and help us find our footing but, at other times, they trip us up and plot our downfall.

Die Natur hat doch immer wieder Besonderheiten zu bieten, wenn man mit offenen Augen durch den Wald geht. Dieses Wurzelwerk findet man in der Steyrer Au nahe der Kruglwehr

Old roots with good grip.

Canon EOS 5

EF 50mm f/1.8 I

Fomapan 100 @boxspeed

Stumbled onto a field of mixed sunflowers this morning. What a happy place! July 12th, 2021

While pretty much rooted to home in another lockdown I thought I'd root through my previous holiday photos and post some that haven't seen the light of day on Flickr before.

 

We had gone to Edinburgh in November 2019 to visit an American friend who was studying in Scotland. Though she was staying in Dumfries she checked into a hostel around the back of Edinburgh castle so she wouldn't have to commute to see us each day were there. After a morning doing the museums and exhibitions we all did an afternoon trip to South Queensferry and the Forth Bridge. The station, Dalmeny, is a little walk from the little fishing town of South Queensfeery (or just 'Queensferry' if you a local) but it was downhill all the way! Vicky and I had been to North Queensferry before but since then I've come to realise the best pictures can be got from the South side. It was November so the winter skies were clear and it was also very, very cold.

 

This is one of my better shots taken from the foreshore at South Queensferry. I had not long been using my new Canon 750 DSLR and I was trying out various focus settings and options. Looking back at the many, many pictures I took of the bridge that afternoon, this photo is also one of the photos in focus!

I love meeting trees like this. Yes, this tree is alive, though I don't know how. Perhaps it re-rooted where it touched the earth again, but the original base is nearly rotted through.

 

black willow, Dickerson swamp, Cuyahoga Valley National Park, Ohio.

A tree in Santa Cruz - Tenerife

Meastro shop (every sold photo helps me holding on creating new pieces!): www.shop316258.fineartprint.de

Second Photostream by Meastro on Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/132893562@N04/

Meastro on Youtube: www.youtube.com/channel/UCz1p_WgQ23DPHjEfXH8mmYQ

Meastro on Facebook: www.facebook.com/Meastrop?ref=bookmarks

Meastro on Instagram (@meastrologie): www.instagram.com/meastrologie/

Checkerboard Mesa, Zion National Park, Utah

 

Plants are the ultimate opportunists. Given enough water, sunlight, and somewhere to anchor their roots, they will grow and thrive. This little tree is growing out of a crack in the sandstone making up Checkerboard Mesa.

 

Now as to the sandstone itself, it originated in early Jurassic times (roughly 190 million years ago) in a desert on the western edge of the Pangaea supercontinent, a desert much larger than the modern Sahara. The horizontal cross-bedding of the sandstone indicates that the sand was laid down by wind. The vertical cracking comes from burial compression and release from that compression through erosion. The resulting cross-hatch, or checkerboard, effect gives the mesa its name.

One single long exposure. No photoedition : straight out of the camera except for contrast/crop.

 

Model: Tribal Lotta

Lights: Vincent Gerber

Big thanks to Vincent Michel for the location. ;)

 

Light painting session with Tribal Lotta & Vincent Gerber

 

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