View allAll Photos Tagged Rustic
Happy Slider Sunday Everyone! I'm so happy I found this group because it has really motivated me to learn PS!! This is a photo I took at Dallas Arboretum in the little mock houses. All of the equipment is held down with bright green wires so I had to remove those (go me!). Then I adjusted the saturation (duh) and then I layered another photo that I also took at the Arboretum and lowered the opacity to add texture.
Rustic Fireplace in Log Cabin
We offer a wide range of wood products with multiple sizes to fit various needs and budgets. The most common order is 2-5 cords delivered which will last the whole heating season for most families. However we also offer half cords, quarter cords and small bundles for the more occasional wood burner or someone who does not have the need or the space to store a large quantity of firewood.
In additional to what you see here we can also fill many special requests as we often carry specialty woods not listed on the website. Always feel free to call us at 877-312-Wood(9663) or 541-537-4890 to ask any questions, put in a special request or ask what kind of "good stuff" we have in stock. For those of us that prefer email you can also send a quick request or question to info@centraloregonfirewood.com
Rain-soaked tranquilty at the 1850's Homeplace a couple of weeks ago (9-13-2017) at Land Between the Lakes National Recreation Area. I made a brief afternoon visit while home, for after two months on the road, I needed an afternoon to wind down in peaceful surroundings. This living history farm at LBL is always a soothing and interesting place to visit.
Thanks to SkeletalMess for this texture:
www.flickr.com/photos/skeletalmess/5144524218
Thanks to Patty O'Hearn Kickham for this image:
The Flickr Lounge-Weathered & Worn
We had the arbor built back when we first moved here and the bench was built the year after. It has definitely become weathered and worn over the years.
This is the old museum we passed yesterday where we found this gorgeous, old wooden doll house on the front porch. Just sitting there, decaying. It looked like it was just waiting to be brought home by someone and brought back to life.
Here is the site to the cajun village. You can see the dollhouse on the porch here too!! www.thecajunvillage.com/15-boniblu.html
A lovely longhorned beetle called the Rustic Borer, Xylotrechus colonus. Attracted to a blacklight at night in Lenexa, Kansas. August 25, 2017.
Set of 6 connectors. I came up with the colors to match some turquoise stone I have.
Copyright © 2013 by Ginger Davis Allman The Blue Bottle Tree, all rights reserved.
Glen Creek's "Rustic Falls' - 4.7 miles south of Mammoth on the Grand Loop Road (US 89), Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming (44.933735, -110.726109)
Elevation: 7,247 feet
Drop: 47 feet
Family visit to Knox's Pumpkin Farm to choose a pumpkin to carve for Halloween. October 20, 2018. Hampton, Ontario Canada.
Knox's Pumpkin Farm is a fourth-generation family farm, it is the invaluable help of family and friends that keeps the operation, originally a dairy farm, going strong. "Many people have strong ties to this property," says Mr. Knox, "and by everyone pitching in day after day, we're able to offer the public a glimpse of life on a farm, as it was a century ago, as it is today, and as it will hopefully be a century from now."
For More Info: www.knoxpumpkinfarm.com/
Sunshine (and flare) on a characteristically rustic street in Cocentaina, a Valencian town situated in Alicante province, eastern Spain.
- www.kevin-palmer.com - There are no boardwalks out here. No crowds, fences, or signs telling you what to expect. The little information I could find was no longer accurate because places like this are always changing. Deep in the backcountry of Yellowstone National Park, it's possible to experience fascinating thermal areas as if you're the first person to discover them. But having read the book "Death in Yellowstone," I knew not to get too close. The only way to know what happens here is to watch and wait. I learned that 2 nearby geysers were linked. A smaller geyser would erupt and drain (sounding like a toilet flushing) which led to the bigger geyser erupting a minute later. Water shot upwards as high as 35 feet and each eruption lasted 1 minute. It repeated about every 25 minutes, so I stayed and watched it 5 times. Sometimes I could hear it from my campsite 1/2 a mile away.