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Lentos Kunstmuseum Linz
Bearbeitung: Jürgen Krall Photography
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Bild Nr.: _1424016_cs6
Processed with Silver Efex Pro 2
Walking the Plymouth section of the South West Coast Path
Hooe Lake, Oreston, Plymouth, Devon, UK
Camera: Yashica LM 44
Lens: Yashinon 3.5/60mm with Rolleinar 1
Film: Rollei Crossbird, developed by flash foto, München
Digitized with Sony A7RIII
A variety of fungi that digest moist dead wood, cause it to rot. These are saprophytic fungi.
My Photoblog- My Third Eye...!
July 14th 2022
Unaltered Inworld Snapshot
Windlight Sky: [TOR] Burnt Hope
Visit this location at The Wastelands : The Rot in Second Life
rotten old part of the old rotten paper mill. A calendar on the wall here was dated 1990, while calendars from 2002 were still hanging in the offices, suggesting this area was roped off and left to rot while the rest of the mill remained in operation. A real morale booster!
Die Gemeine oder Gewöhnliche Wegwarte (Cichorium intybus), auch Zichorie genannt, ist eine Pflanzenart aus der Familie der Korbblütler (Asteraceae). Sie wächst in Mitteleuropa häufig an Wegrändern. Kulturformen sind Chicorée, Radicchio und die Wurzelzichorie. Die Gemeine Wegwarte war 2005 „Gemüse des Jahres“ und 2009 „Blume des Jahres“ in Deutschland.
Camera: Yashica LM 44
Lens: Yashinon 3.5/60mm with Rolleinar 1
Film: Rollei Crossbird, developed by flash foto, München
Digitized with Sony A7RIII
The great egret was formally described in 1758 by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae under the binomial name Ardea alba. He specified the type locality as Europe.[6][7] The scientific name comes from Latin ardea, "heron", and alba, "white".[8]
Like all egrets, it is a member of the heron family, Ardeidae. Traditionally classified with the storks in the Ciconiiformes, the Ardeidae are closer relatives of pelicans and belong in the Pelecaniformes, instead. The great egret—unlike the typical egrets—does not belong to the genus Egretta, but together with the great herons is today placed in Ardea. In the past, however, it was sometimes placed in Egretta or separated in a monotypic genus Casmerodius.
The Old World population is often referred to as the "great white egret". This species is sometimes confused with the great white heron of the Caribbean, which is a white morph of the closely related great blue heron. Source: Wikipedia.
Camera: David White Stereo Realist (1956)
Lens: David White Anastigmat 3.5/35mm
Film: Agfapan 25 in Perceptol
Location: München
Dieses Bild habe ich vor vielen Jahren mit meiner Stereo Realist-Kamera gemacht und erst jetzt mit dem Programm StereoPhotoLab Lite das rechte und linke Bild zu einer anaglyphen rot/cyan Stereoaufnahme zusammengefügt.
I took this picture many years ago with my Stereo Realist camera and blended the right and left image recently into a red/cyan anaglyph picture using the app StereoPhotoLab Lite.