View allAll Photos Tagged SERENDIPITY
Brunch at Serendipity 3 in Georgetown, Washington, D.C. Read the full review at www.BitchesWhoBrunch.com
This is Pisces 001, built by Classic Boat Shop, Bernard, Maine in 1999. She is a Chuck Paine designed, cold molded version of a Herreshoff Fish from 1916.
A masterpiece, no? And (believe it or not) it's straight out of the camera! But in all modesty, I take no credit or blame. While walking around the park on Satuday during a health fair event, I had the camera dangling from its strap. This one (Panasonic Lumix) has much too sensitive a shutter release. Reviewing what was on the memory card from Saturday, I found 40 accidental images, this among them. In the good old film days, I would not have found it at all amusing.
Hey, what if this were to make Explore, and get hundreds or even thousands of views? Guess I'd be onto something, huh?
a brief moment in time, preserved for prosperity, as 2 pictures align side by side in a tongue in cheek voting pool for low resolution capture devices called DBOLR
Nara, Japan, 2008
My internal, one-sided conversation with this deer: "Don't move until I can compose you properly. Don't move. Okay, hold it. Please, don't move. Okay, there. Whew. Thanks."
This little yellow pansy is a volunteer seedling growing in a row of red petunias, which makes for a very beautiful, serendipitous, color combination.
This was captured at the CSU Annual Flower Trial Garden in Fort Collins, Colorado. (Zuiko 50mm macro, f/2.0, 1/2000 sec., 100 ISO, handheld)
Serendipity
University of Salford 2nd year BA Visual Art exhibition.
7th February 2014
Photo courtesy of John Lynch
Serendipity Noel, Veraker's one.
I cleaned her and did a new make-up, not easy , her face is little strange.
But not so bad.
Wig Monique
eyes Volks
Dress by Veraker
Shoes Luts
This is my best butterfly photo to date and there was a long string of unlikely turns that led me to it. I was driving to Wenatchee and decided to take a different route from my original plan. I passed through a nice valley but, in my rush, passed through it without stopping. A mile later regret hit me. I did a U-turn in someone's driveway and made my way back to the perch above the valley for a proper photo. This led me to turn up a dirt road for a better angle. Then a walk still farther. I took the shot, then noticed a big flowery puffball across the road up an embankment. Okay, ... I'll take a picture of the puffball, too. As I was lining up THAT shot, feet straddling a ditch, this butterfly landed in front of me. It was a perfect shot. That's how I found this butterfly with the orange antennae tips on an embankment near a ditch on a dirt road up from a remote valley along a mountain highway miles from anywhere I planned to be. We couldn't have planned it better if he had an agent.