View allAll Photos Tagged SHIFT
View of the Champs-Élysées Avenue, looking towards the Place de la Concorde and the Louvre Museum in the distance.
Not of high quality as it’s 15 years old and was taken with an old P&S camera using a long focal length and high zoom, and it has traveled through several storage media. But I still like it and hope you find it interesting.
Macro Monday theme - Transportation
The gear shift on my bicycle for Macro Monday
Happy Macro Monday!
Here is shift change at the eyrie near my home in Michigan today, March 21, 2022. The adult on the left had just returned and the other took off immediately after this exchange. It happened so quickly. I was only able to get off a couple of shots, happy with this one. They don't leave the eggs "unwarmed" for very long. I have read that a steady temperature of 99.5 degrees is required for optimal incubation. Their fealty to this process is amazing. No wonder they've survived every kind of assault man can throw at them.
Welcome to the 'Night Shift'. At 'The Rocks', Sydney.
This image is from my night-time photographic trek around Sydney.
The photograph was taken at approximately 11.10pm.
See the clock tower in the photograph.
This is the view looking over Cumberland and Argyle Streets.
At 'The Rocks', near Millers Point, in Sydney. Near the famous Glenmore Rooftop Hotel.
And here's Quarterflash with a live version of their 1982 song 'Night Shift', from the movie 'Night Shift' starring Henry Winkler & Shelley Long:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=RPHwvodJ19w
My Canon EOS 5D Mk IV with the Canon EF 16-35mm f/4L IS USM lens.
Processed in Adobe Lightroom and PhotoPad Pro by NCH software,
Mining Bee - At least I think that's what it is. But my goodness I couldn't believe it could fly away with those pollen sacs so full!
Pic was taken on a really windy day at the beach near The Entrance north of Sydney. The wind was blowing the beach sand. Lighting was tricky to catch this, as well as the wind direction that emphasised the sand being shifted. My legs were being sand blasted 😊 DSC_3418 ac
Landgoed Den Treek-Henschoten is popular with hikers. The modest variety of heath, former production forest, shifting sands, meadows and the cultural-historical country house makes the estate pleasant to explore. The landscaped marked routes meander through the estate and bring the visitors to the most beautiful places.
"Expedients are for an hour, but principles are for the ages. Just because the rains descend and winds blow, we cannot afford to build on shifting sands." ~ Henry Ward Beecher
Please enjoy the shoreline sands in Large. Thank you so much for your visit!
the sand at Spittal seems to have dropped to the lowest I've ever seen it - the groynes are more exposed than ever.
I am the drop
that ticks in your thoughts,
the shadowman
stepping above,
a root creeping deep
in your conscience,
your deepest unconfessable
desire lullaby.
The turner of shyness
into lust, sweetness
into the darkest dust.
Today I just need a fire touch
and the burning light I see
is darker than black
lavic sand on a distant beach.
Shift Change- *I created this picture at least a week ago and to be honest I have been in a weird mental space (with the rest of the world* I was inspired to create this picture buy something my sister (@CurlesueCards) was doing and this image fought me most of the way. I really struggled with what I wanted to convey. I just really want to show my appreciation for first responders and let them know that I cannot imagine what they are going through right now but I appreciate their strength to keep on showing up everyday and helping us.
NOON pinhole camera 6x12 model at 6x9. The light weather shifted fast, from almost sunlight to dark skies and heavy rain, most of the latter. The exposure coud be all from 5 to 30 minutes. I decided 22 minutes, and the result is decent. Pinhole photography is always a qualified quessing in the combination of f-stop, focal length, ISO and reciprocity.
River Mourne, Liskey & Milltown, Strabane, County Tyrone, Northern Ireland
There’s many things I love about aerial photography. Mainly it’s the ability to look down on things like a bird, shifting perspectives on our landscape. Places in which we often pass on ground, yet never realising how much they can change when viewed from the above.
From the ground it’s difficult to even see this river, unless your right next to it! but from the sky all looks completely different. I literally just let my drone hover in place for a good 10 minutes. In that window of time I watched the sun gently set behind distant hills, all whilst the sky changed from blue to amber then finally red 😍
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