View allAll Photos Tagged Rust
A detail of a rusted gate of a once proud and busy enterprise. All that is left now is decaying walls, rusting iron, and wild nature.
There are some pretty rusty vehicles driving around Puerto Vallarta. Some of them might look very road worthy, but they do make for great photos
Ancient CASCO “Canada Starch” tank cars roll into St. Thomas on the Canada Air Line (former CN Cayuga Sub) for one last time. After spending years tucked away at an industry in Tillsonburg, nature’s elements have patinated these railroad relics. Nonetheless, CSTX 33 and 36 (built 9/65 and 12/68, respectively), once again turn their wheels as the “Cayuga Clipper” clears out the remaining cars on the line. The last train between St. Thomas to Tillsonburg is planned to operate on 04/30. Sadly, the process of abandonment is to follow.
Near the Bay of Shoals is a stretch of shore littered with rusting cans and skeletal bedframes with mattresses amid the ruins of decaying shacks. It's the sort of eerie place that, especially in the evening, invites maudlin reflection on impermanence and inevitability.
This is a photo of a rusted iron panel on the wharf at Port Maitland Beach that suggests a pareidolia portrait.
Made this picture of an old rusty bolt lying in the rain. The rain worked good for the reflection and soft bokeh around it. Used my Tamron 90mm.
I used 2.8 as aperture to get an very smal DOF and focus only on the small rusty part of the bolt.
Dawn in Alliance, Nebraska. The faded block letters read “O.M. Kellogg Grain,” which apparently was something called the O.M. Kellogg Grain Elevator Co.
At the right time of year, the rising sun probably throws all that sheet metal on the north wall into dramatic relief. Not in late October. A freight train blocked my access to the sunny side.