View allAll Photos Tagged STELLAR
#NoAI
pose+wine+bottle+chair:[piXit] Starlet @Mainstore
skin:[Glam Affair] Liv [Lelutka EvoX] @C88
body:REBORN by eBODY @Mainstore
hair:DOUX - Rapunzel @Access
decor+photobooth:Amitie - Stellar Dome @equal10
philodendron:8f8 - When I'm Away... - Philodendron Gloriosum @Mainstore
lingerie+cardigan:
TETRA x Rebel Gal - Harmony Full Set @equal10 maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/equal10/211/119/89
Tetra Mainstore maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/TETRA%20Store/176/114/40
Stellers zeearend - Steller's sea eagle (Haliaeetus pelagicus), a juvenile, sporting the largest beak in a bird of prey.
Explore what is invisible to the eye, from the microscopic world to the vastness of outer space. This photo was taken inside the Brazil, in a place where light pollution is minimal. Two exhibitions, one for the sky and one for the waterfall. The result of the union of these images leads me to think how small we are in front of it.
Savor Serenity www.flickr.com/groups/savor_serenity/, River Hill
They are handsome, intelligent, and a bit gregarious but I never tire of watching them. They also are the first birds my almost two year old grandson can identify. That has to say something about them.
Fluffed up on a snowy branch in Big Sky MT. We have been hearing that the current major El Nino will be robbing us of a good snow fall here, but we are off to a good start with 21" so far. The stellar jay is not impressed.
Steller's Sea Eagle (Haliaeetus pelagicus), a.k.a. Pacific or White-shouldered Eagle.
Biggest beak in the eagle business.
Hi thanks for the great response to the last upload , this was taken on Skye about 3 weeks ago. Had been hoping to catch the night sky at Fairy pools but it was shrouded in cloud so this nearby falls stood in ...its a 20 second exposure with a second of head torch lumination on the falls ...thanks for looking :)
étoile binaire
[Boumsell Longchamp / double exposure / Verichrome Pan 127, expired 1980 / Adonal stand dev. / 2,5x 3,5cm excerpt / November 2016]
What a character! This stellar jay was putting on quite the show, twisting its head sideways with eyes transfixed, perched in the backyard Garry Oak tree. Just love the ruffled crest of feathers!
The official provincial bird of British Columbia, Steller’s Jays are year-round residents in British Columbia and not normally migratory.
Cool fact: Steller’s Jays exhibit intelligent behaviour and have the ability to mimic the calls of raptors such as the Red-Tailed Hawk in order to scare other birds from feeders.
This dendrite is coated in tiny ice particles, called rime. The rime gives the flake a "bubbly" appearance.
The much photographed Orion Nebula (M42) imaged with an astromodded Canon 600D through an unguided Skywatcher ED80 refractor. Image was constructed from stacking of images amounting to approx. 30 minutes of exposure in total.
I'm sure there is a better image that could be achieved with the data obtained, but this is by far the best end result I've achieved with my rudimentary image processing "skills".
Our stinging nettles are in full flower at present but I hadn't noticed how exciting the flowers are until this morning, looking like spiral galaxies of tiny white stars.
Keeping with the theme of crocuses from under my pear tree this is yet another experiment…
[Actually, I think all my images class as experiments - it saves me having to live up to my own expectations of a proper photograph :) ]
This is a handheld five-shot in-camera multiple-exposure (I shall try saying that again later after a glass of wine… just for fun, you understand ;) ) of one of the said crocuses, gently cooked in Nik Color Efex and served in a 16:10 aspect.
Happy Saturday :)
Thank you for taking the time to look. I hope you enjoy the image :)